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Fort Stanton

Fort Stanton
Officers Quarters Fort Stanton New Mexico.jpg
Officers Quarters at Fort Stanton
Fort Stanton is located in New Mexico
Fort Stanton
Fort Stanton is located in the US
Fort Stanton
Location 7 mi. SE of Capitan near U.S. 380
Nearest city Capitan, New Mexico
Coordinates 33°29′40″N 105°31′35″W / 33.49444°N 105.52639°W / 33.49444; -105.52639Coordinates: 33°29′40″N 105°31′35″W / 33.49444°N 105.52639°W / 33.49444; -105.52639
Area 195 acres (79 ha)
Built 1855 (1855)
Architectural style Colonial Revival, Mission/Spanish Revival
NRHP Reference # 73001142 (original)
99001679 (increase)
NMSRCP # 60
Significant dates
Added to NRHP April 13, 1973
Boundary increase January 14, 2000
Designated NMHS August 9, 2007
Designated NMSRCP May 23, 1969

Fort Stanton (built 1855) was a U.S. military fort built in New Mexico in the United States. It was established to protect settlements along the Rio Bonito in the Apache Wars. Kit Carson, John "Black Jack" Pershing, Billy the Kid, and Buffalo Soldiers of the 9th Cavalry all lived here.

Confederate forces occupied the outpost in the beginning of the American Civil War after the post was abandoned with the withdrawal of U.S. forces in the region.

The fort was originally established in part as the Mescalero Apache reservation. In 1873 the reservation was moved 30 miles southwest to its current location. In 1899, President William McKinley transferred Fort Stanton property from the War Department to the Marine Hospital Service, converting the military reservation to America's first federal tuberculosis sanatorium.

During World War II, Fort Stanton was used as a detention center for German and Japanese Americans arrested as "enemy aliens," and 411 German nationals taken from the luxury liner Columbus in 1939 (officially recorded as "distressed seamen paroled from the German Embassy" since the U.S. was still technically neutral at the time of their capture). The "enemy aliens" were mostly immigrant residents of the U.S. who had been taken into custody as suspected saboteurs shortly after the U.S. entered the war, despite a lack of supporting evidence or access to due process for most internees. The 31 German American internees, labeled "troublemakers" by the Department of Justice, were kept separate from the 17 Japanese Americans (also deemed "troublesome" by authorities) who were transferred to Fort Stanton on March 10, 1945. These new arrivals were deported to Japan later that year.


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