Camp Horn, Arizona Explained

Camp Horn
Location:Camp Horn, Arizona
Coordinates:32.95°N -113.53°W
Built:fall of 1943
Architect:US Army

The Camp Horn was a sub camp of the US Army, Desert Training Center in Riverside County, California. The main headquarters for the Desert Training Center was Camp Young, this is where General Patton's 3rd Armored Division was stationed. Camp Horn was near Camp Hyder about 6miles miles west of Hyder, Arizona. Camp Horn was just north of the Gila River. Camp Horn was 54miles miles east of Yuma, Arizona. Most troop arrived at Camp Horn from the train station at Camp Hyder or the train station at Sentinel, Arizona south of the camp.Over 13,000 troops were trained at Camp Horn and Camp Hyder. The 81st Infantry Division trained at Camp Horn was from June 1943 to November 1943.[1] [2] [3] [4]

See main article: Desert Training Center. Camp Horn was built in the fall of 1943. Camp Horn was built to prepare troops to do battle in North Africa to fight the Nazis during World War II. When completed the camp had shower buildings, latrines, wooden tent frames, outdoor theater, firing ranges, water storage tanks and water treatment plant. Near the camp in Agua Caliente, Arizona the army built the Agua Caliente natural hot spring for the troops to use, this in on the land of the Agua Caliente Ranch. The only remains of Camp Horn are rock lines walkways and road.[5] [6] [7]

Camp Horn Army Airfield

Just to the east of the Camp Horn was built the Camp Horn Army Airfield. It had single 4,500 runway. The Camp Horn Army Airfield in 1944 at the same time the camp closed. The air landing strip was used to support camp's training activities. The runway was from use for small planes, like the L-4 Piper Aircraft so the vast training grounds could be watched from the air. The runway runs in a northeast–southwest direction, from the air the faint outline of the runway can still be seen.[8]

Dateland Air Force Auxiliary Field

See main article: Dateland Air Force Auxiliary Field. Near Camp Horn also was the Dateland Air Force Auxiliary Field, named after the Dateland, Arizona road stop. It was also used to support Camp Horn. The runway was long enough for large planes to use in training exercises also. The United States Army Air Forces opened on 1 January 1943. It was also used for Air Forces training by the 3037th Army Air Force Base Unit. The landing strip was under the direction of the Yuma Army Airfield, Arizona.

Markers

Marker at the site reads:

The Camp Horn Monument or Fort Horn Monument Marker, in memory of seven servicemen killed in a training accident, at the site read:

Marker at the Dateland Air Force Auxiliary Field site reads:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMYY7_hyder-divisional-camp-horn-divisional-camp-desert-training-center_Dateland-AZ.html historicalmarkerproject.com Camp horn
  2. https://www.atec.army.mil/ypg/outpost/2017/15May2017.pdf US Army, Camp Horn and Camp Hyder, Arizona, Once prominent, now forgotten:In the desert they sleep
  3. http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM8VKN_Camp_Horn_Monument_Dateland_AZ waymarking.com Camp Horn
  4. https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a175813.pdf US Army, Historic Properties Report: Yuma Proving Ground, Yuma, Arizona, 1984
  5. http://discipleup.org/dtc-cama/ The Desert Training Center, “The Place that God Forgot”
  6. Arizona Goes to War: The Home Front and the Front Lines During World War II, page 195
  7. https://www.spl.usace.army.mil/Portals/17/docs/FUDS/Kofa_FactSheet.pdf US Army, Kofa National Wildlife Refuge, Arizona 2010
  8. http://www.members.tripod.com/airfields_freeman/AZ/Airfields_AZ_Yuma.htm Airfields in Yuma, AZ, Camp Horn Army Airfield
  9. https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=78546&Result=1 Marker Data Base, Camps Hyder & Horn
  10. https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=78546&Result=1 Marker Data Base, The 81st Infantry Division, Camp Horn