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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 ...
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.
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
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 ...
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.
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".
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 .
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.