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Fort Sill is a United States Army post north of Lawton, Oklahoma, about 85 miles (137 km) southwest of Oklahoma City.It covers almost 94,000 acres (38,000 ha). [2]The fort was first built during the Indian Wars. [3]
Fort Gibson National Cemetery – Fort Gibson. Fort Sill Museum – Lawton. Fort Sill National Cemetery – Elgin. Fort Supply Historic Site – Fort Supply [49] Fort Towson Historic Site – Fort Towson [50] Fort Washita Historic Site & Museum – Durant [51] General Tommy Franks Leadership Institute and Museum – Hobart. [52] Historic Fort ...
Fort Sill, Oklahoma: United States Army. 1957. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 June 2016. History of the U.S. Army Field Artillery and Missile School; Volume IV 1958–1967 (PDF). Fort Sill, Oklahoma: United States Army. 1967. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 June 2016. McKenney, Janice E. (2010). Field Artillery (PDF). Army ...
Retired Army Sgt. Maj. Gary Brode, left, barber Travis Bell and Jack Cox, share stories of their 40 years of friendship with Bell at his one-chair barber studio at Fort Bragg's 18th Airborne Corps ...
Camp Gruber is an Oklahoma Army National Guard (OKARNG) training facility. It covers a total of 87 square miles (230 km 2).. The base is named after Brigadier General Edmund L. Gruber, a noted artillery officer and the original composer of the U.S. Field Artillery March, the source for the Army's official song, "The Army Goes Rolling Along".
"The Military Airship; A Bibliography" [Special Bibliography Number 47] (PDF). Fort Sill, Oklahoma: U.S. Army Field Artillery School Library. [permanent dead link ] Wikle, Thomas A. (2019). "Fort Sill and the Birth of US Combat Aviation". The Chronicles of Oklahoma. 97 (1 - Spring 2019). Oklahoma Historical Society: 4– 25. LCCN 23027299.
Mount Scott (Comanche: Pisaroya, "Big Mountain") [4] is a prominent mountain just to the northwest of Lawton, Oklahoma rising to a height of 2,464 feet (751 m) [5] and is located in the Wichita Mountains near Fort Sill Military Reservation and lies in the Wichita Mountains National Wildlife Refuge (WMWR).
Gyroscoped to Fort Sill 1958. Redesignated 1 September 1963 as the 1st Battalion, 30th Artillery. Redesignated 1 September 1971 as the 1st Battalion, 30th Field Artillery. Inactivated 15 May 1988 in Germany. Headquarters transferred 1 July 1995 to the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command and activated at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. [2]