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  2. Fort Holabird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Holabird

    Fort Holabird was a United States Army post in the city of Baltimore, Maryland, active from 1918 to 1973. History. Fort Holabird was located in the southeast ...

  3. United States Army Intelligence Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army...

    The center was relocated from Ft. Holabird, Maryland to Fort Huachuca, Arizona in 1971. The move involved more than 120 moving vans, a unit train and several aircraft. The initial intelligence training facilities were a World War II hospital complex that had not been occupied in several years.

  4. Military Intelligence Corps (United States Army) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_Intelligence...

    Fort Huachuca became the "Home of Military Intelligence" on 23 March 1971, and the last class graduated from Fort Holabird on 2 September 1971, almost 17 years to the day after the Army Intelligence Center was established there. USAINTCS Established at Fort. Holabird, MD

  5. List of former United States Army installations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_United...

    Fort Benjamin Harrison; Newport Chemical Depot; Kansas Camp Phillips; Louisiana Camp Claiborne; Camp Livingston; Camp Pontchartrain; Maryland Edgewood Chemical Activity (aka: Edgewood Arsenal) Fort Ritchie; Catoctin Training Center; Fort Holabird; Fort Howard (Maryland) Fort Washington; Logan Field (Airport) (USAAF and POW Camp) Massachusetts ...

  6. Activated 11 May 1951 at Fort Holabird, Maryland; Reorganized and redesignated 25 January 1958 as the 501st Military Intelligence Detachment; Inactivated 31 March 1971 at Fort Hood, Texas; Inactivated in 2007. B Co relocates to Baumholder and becomes 502d MI Co with the 2nd Brigade 1 AD. HHC and C Co deactivate. A Co joins 1st Brigade, 1 AD.

  7. Counterintelligence Corps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterintelligence_Corps

    This ended what advocates regarded as the peak of counterintelligence efficiency: "At the height of the disturbance period, a CIC agent could get a report from the street to Fort Holabird HQ in 20 minutes, from practically any city in the U.S., seconds or brief minutes later the report was in Operations Center in a lower basement of the Pentagon".

  8. Ralph Van Deman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Van_Deman

    Van Deman Street, located within the former Fort Holabird in Baltimore, MD; is named after him in honor of his service in Military Intelligence. On January 22, 1952, at the age of 86, he died in his home in San Diego .

  9. As cold war tensions rose and the Americans bolstered their intelligence apparatus, the Army reactivated the 3191st Signal Service Detachment in mid-1951 at Fort Devens, redesignating the unit the 358th Communications Reconnaissance Company. The 358th would fall under the 313th (as A Company) in 1955 before being deactivated again in late-1957.