Fort Davis is an extraordinary sight. Built near Limpia Creek, it is embraced by the Davis Mountains with their eroded sandstone knobs. Established in 1854, the historic fort today occupies a 474-acre reservation between Simmons Ridge and Sleeping Lion Mountain. Fort Davis preserves the structure of a late-nineteenth-century U.S. Army border fort. Like its counterparts—for example, Forts Duncan (EL5), Clark (EL8), Concho (SS23), and Bliss (EP49)—Fort Davis displays the organizational pattern associated with the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps’ planning standards: a broad rectangular parade ground flanked on one side by officers’ houses and on the other by enlisted men’s housing, with a small headquarters building at the head, and the post hospital off to one side. As was true of other
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Fort Davis National Historic Site
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