Fort Eustis | |
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Newport News, Virginia | |
Coordinates | 37°09′33″N 76°34′31″W / 37.1593°N 76.5752°WCoordinates: 37°09′33″N 76°34′31″W / 37.1593°N 76.5752°W |
Type | Army post |
Site information | |
Controlled by | United States Army |
Site history | |
Built | 7 March 1918 |
In use | 7 March 1918 – present |
Garrison information | |
Garrison | 7th Sustainment Brigade U.S. Army Transportation Center & School |
Fort Eustis is a United States Army installation located near Newport News, Virginia. In 2010, it was combined with nearby Langley Air Force Base to form Joint Base Langley–Eustis.
The post is the home to the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command, and also home to the U.S. Army Aviation Logistics School.
Fort Eustis is the home of the Army Aviation Logistics School and 7th Transportation Brigade. Other significant tenants include the Army Training Support Center (ATSC) and the Army Aviation Applied Technology Directorate (AATD). At Fort Eustis and Fort Story, officers and enlisted soldiers receive education and on-the-job training in all modes of transportation, aviation maintenance, logistics and deployment doctrine and research.
The headquarters of the Army Transportation Corps was located at Fort Eustis until 2010 when it moved to Fort Lee.
Much of the low-lying land along the James River which now constitutes Fort Eustis was known in colonial times as Mulberry Island, and was first settled by the English colonists shortly after Jamestown was established in 1607. An important event in Virginia's history occurred in the James River off Mulberry Island in the summer of 1610. Survivors of the ill-fated Third Supply mission from England and the Starving Time in the Colony had boarded ships intent upon abandoning the floundering Colony of Virginia and were met off Mulberry Point by Lord Delaware with a fleet of ships headed upriver bringing supplies from England and a fresh determination to stay. He literally turned the situation around by convincing the colonists, who had just abandoned Jamestown, to turn their ships around and go back to colonizing in the area, rather than return to England.