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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Fort_Reynolds_(Colorado)
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Fort Reynolds (Colorado)
rdfs:comment
Fort Reynolds was a United States Army post near Avondale, Colorado during the Indian Wars and the Civil War. The site is about 20 miles (32 km) east of Pueblo, Colorado. Construction began in 1867 on the 23 square mile fort, which was named for John F. Reynolds. He attended West Point and was killed at the Battle of Gettysburg. Facilities included barracks, a mess hall, hospital, guardhouse, store-house, laundry, a corral, supply depot, and parade grounds. Fort Lyon, which lies 60 miles (97 km) east of Fort Reynolds was closer to the skirmishes with Native Americans, so Fort Reynolds became a supply post, staffed with about 100 soldiers. In January 1868, soldiers were called from Fort Lyon and Fort Reynolds to manage citizen unrest in Trinidad, Colorado that began with a drunken brawl. Th
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-104.3032836914062
dcterms:subject
dbc:Military_history_of_Colorado dbc:Forts_in_Colorado dbc:Government_buildings_completed_in_1867 dbc:Native_American_history_of_Colorado dbc:Colorado_in_the_American_Civil_War dbc:American_Civil_War_army_posts dbc:1867_establishments_in_Colorado_Territory dbc:Closed_installations_of_the_United_States_Army
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1102535783
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dbo:abstract
Fort Reynolds was a United States Army post near Avondale, Colorado during the Indian Wars and the Civil War. The site is about 20 miles (32 km) east of Pueblo, Colorado. Construction began in 1867 on the 23 square mile fort, which was named for John F. Reynolds. He attended West Point and was killed at the Battle of Gettysburg. Facilities included barracks, a mess hall, hospital, guardhouse, store-house, laundry, a corral, supply depot, and parade grounds. Fort Lyon, which lies 60 miles (97 km) east of Fort Reynolds was closer to the skirmishes with Native Americans, so Fort Reynolds became a supply post, staffed with about 100 soldiers. In January 1868, soldiers were called from Fort Lyon and Fort Reynolds to manage citizen unrest in Trinidad, Colorado that began with a drunken brawl. That was the extent of the action seen by the Fort Reynolds post. It closed in 1872. In the 1930s, the site had remnants of camp life, including cooking utensils, weapons, buttons, and other items. A stone marker is located on US-50 at mile marker 333, about one mile east of Avondale.
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