Harbor Defense Command
A Harbor Defense Command was a military organization of the United States Army Coast Artillery Corps designated in 1925 from predecessor organizations dating from circa 1895.[ 1] [ 2] It consisted of the forts, controlled underwater minefields , and other coastal defenses of a particular harbor or river. Harbor Defense Commands, along with the similar Coast Artillery Corps, were disestablished in 1950.
History
These commands originated as Artillery Districts, to control groups of forts constructed under the Endicott Program beginning in 1895.[ 3] A 1909 reference shows that districts could include (depending on size) a Battle Command (later Fort Command), Fire Command, Mine Command, and Battery Commands.[ 4] [ 5] Mine planter vessels were also attached to these commands to plant and maintain controlled minefields. In 1913 the districts were redesignated as Coast Defense Commands , called "Coast Defenses of..." the area protected.[ 3] [ 6] At this time Coast Artillery Districts became regional commands, each controlling several Coast Defense Commands.[ 7] Several of these commands were disarmed and disestablished between World War I and World War II, although minefield defenses may have been retained (references are unclear). Some of the disarmed commands were rearmed in World War II with "Panama mounts ", circular concrete platforms for towed 155 mm guns . Some of these rearmed commands and other hastily-armed areas were designated as "Temporary Harbor Defenses". In 1925 the Coast Defense Commands were redesignated as Harbor Defense Commands, called "Harbor Defenses of..." the area protected.[ 8] [ 9] After World War II all of these commands were disarmed within a few years, and they and the Coast Artillery Corps were disestablished in 1950.
Harbor Defense Command areas
The major Harbor Defense Commands in the Continental United States (CONUS ) were:[ 6] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
Name
State(s)
Forts
Years active in coast defense
Notes
The Kennebec
Maine
Fort Baldwin , Fort Popham
1899-1924
Probably merged with Coast Defenses of Portland prior to 1917 (not listed in Rinaldi WWI),[ 13] rearmed with Panama mounts in World War II
Portland
Maine
Fort McKinley , Fort Lyon , Fort Levett , Fort Preble , Fort Williams , Peaks Island Military Reservation
1898–1948
Portsmouth
New Hampshire , Maine
Fort Foster , Fort Constitution , Fort Stark , Fort Dearborn
1898–1948
Boston
Massachusetts
Fort Ruckman , Fort Banks , Fort Heath , Fort Dawes , Fort Warren , Fort Standish , Fort Strong , Fort Andrews , Fort Duvall , Fort Revere , East Point Military Reservation
1896-1948
New Bedford
Massachusetts
Fort Rodman
1899-1946
Narragansett Bay
Rhode Island
Fort Adams , Fort Church , Fort Wetherill , Fort Getty , Fort Burnside , Fort Greble , Fort Kearny , Fort Varnum , Fort Greene
1898–1947
Long Island Sound
New York , Rhode Island
Fort Mansfield , Fort H. G. Wright , Fort Michie , Fort Terry , Fort Tyler , Camp Hero
1900-1948
Eastern New York
New York
Fort Slocum , Fort Schuyler , Fort Totten
1897-1935
Anti-aircraft training center in World War II[ 14]
Southern New York
New York , New Jersey
Fort Tilden , Fort Hamilton , Fort Wadsworth , Fort Hancock , Sandy Hook Proving Ground , Highlands Military Reservation
1890-1948
Also separate Harbor Defenses of Sandy Hook since at least World War I, merged in World War II as Harbor Defenses of New York[ 15]
Sandy Hook
New Jersey
Fort Hancock, Sandy Hook Proving Ground, Highlands Military Reservation
1915?-1942
Probably split from HD Southern New York 1915,[ 16] merged with HD Southern New York in World War II as Harbor Defenses of New York[ 15]
The Delaware
Delaware , New Jersey , Philadelphia
Fort Mott , Fort Delaware , Fort DuPont , Fort Saulsbury , Fort Miles , Cape May Military Reservation
1899-1948
Baltimore
Maryland
Fort Howard , Fort Carroll , Fort Armistead , Fort Smallwood
1899-1927
The Potomac
Maryland , Virginia
Fort Washington , Fort Hunt
1898–1929
Chesapeake Bay
Virginia
Fort Monroe , Fort Wool , Fort John Custis , Fort Story
1897-1948
Beaufort
North Carolina
Fort Macon
1941-1945
Temporary in World War II with 155 mm GPF guns
The Cape Fear
North Carolina
Fort Caswell
1899-1925
Wilmington
North Carolina
Kure Beach Military Reservation
1940-1945
Temporary in World War II with Panama mounts
Charleston
South Carolina
Fort Moultrie , Fort Sumter
1898–1947
Port Royal Sound
South Carolina
Fort Fremont
1897-1914
Savannah
Georgia
Fort Screven , Fort Pulaski
1898–1928
rearmed with Panama mounts in World War II
Key West
Florida
Fort Taylor
1900-1946
Tampa Bay
Florida
Fort Dade , Fort DeSoto
1899-1926
rearmed with Panama mounts in World War II
Pensacola
Florida
Fort Pickens , Fort McRee
1898–1947
Mobile
Alabama
Fort Morgan , Fort Gaines
1898–1928
rearmed with Panama mounts in World War II
The Mississippi
Louisiana
Fort St. Philip , Fort Jackson
1898–1920
rearmed with Panama mounts in World War II as Temporary Harbor Defenses of New Orleans
Galveston
Texas
Fort Travis , Fort San Jacinto , Fort Crockett
1898–1946
San Diego
California
Fort Rosecrans , Fort Emory
1900-1946
Los Angeles
California
Fort MacArthur , White Point Military Reservation , Bolsa Chica Military Reservation
1917-1948
San Francisco
California
Fort Funston , Fort Miley , Presidio of San Francisco , Fort Winfield Scott , Fort McDowell , Fort Baker , Fort Barry , Fort Cronkhite
1894-1948
The Columbia
Oregon , Washington
Fort Stevens , Fort Columbia , Fort Canby
1898–1947
Puget Sound
Washington
Fort Ward , Fort Whitman , Fort Flagler , Fort Casey , Fort Worden , Fort Ebey
1899-1943
Cape Flattery
Washington
Camp Hayden , Cape Flattery Military Reservation
1942-1948
The major Harbor Defense Commands in US territories were:[ 10] [ 11]
Name
Territory
Forts
Years active in coast defense
Notes
Honolulu
Hawaii
Fort Ruger , Fort DeRussy , Fort Armstrong
1910-1946
Coast Defenses of Oahu divided into Honolulu and Pearl Harbor in March 1921
Pearl Harbor
Hawaii
Fort Barrette , Fort Weaver , Fort Kamehameha
1914-1948
Coast Defenses of Oahu divided into Honolulu and Pearl Harbor in March 1921
Kaneohe Bay and the North Shore
Hawaii
Fort Hase
1940-1946
Manila and Subic Bays
Philippines
Fort Mills , Fort Drum , Fort Frank , Fort Hughes , Fort Wint
1910-1942
Cristobal
Panama Canal Zone
Fort Randolph , Fort De Lesseps , Fort Sherman
1912-1948
Atlantic side
Balboa
Panama Canal Zone
Fort Kobbe , Fort Amador , Fort Grant
1912-1948
Pacific side
Sitka
Alaska
Fort Babcock , Fort Peirce , Fort Rousseau
1944-1950
Seward
Alaska
Fort McGilvray , Fort Bulkley
1941-1945
Only Panama mounts completed
Kodiak
Alaska
Fort J.H. Smith , Fort Tidball , Fort Abercrombie
1944-1950
Dutch Harbor
Alaska
Fort Learnard , Fort Schwatka
1944-1950
Vieques Sound
Puerto Rico /Virgin Islands
Fort Segarra , Fort Charles W. Bundy
1944-1948
Protected the approaches to Roosevelt Roads Naval Station
San Juan
Puerto Rico
Fort Amezquita , Fort Mascaro , Fort Brooke
1941-1948
The Harbor Defense Commands established as a result of the 1940 Destroyers for Bases Agreement with the United Kingdom were:[ 9] [ 10] [ 11]
See also
References
^ Kaufmann, J. E. (2007). Fortress America . Da Capo Press . ISBN 9780306812941 . Retrieved 2013-03-07 . Harbor Defense Command was the name given after 1925 to the coastal...
^ Berhow, p. 432
^ a b Coast Artillery Organization: A Brief Overview at the Coast Defense Study Group website
^ Berhow, p. 421
^ Hines, Frank T.; Ward, Franklin W. (1996). The Service of Coast Artillery . CDSG Press. pp. 75– 78.
^ a b Rinaldi, pp. 165-166
^ Confusingly, circa 1914-1924 several groups of National Guard coast artillery companies were designated as "Coast Defense Commands" (CDC), such as the 8th CDC and 13th CDC in the New York National Guard. National Guard coast artillery regiment histories at the CDSG
^ Berhow, p. 430
^ a b Stanton, pp. 477-481
^ a b c Berhow, pp. 200-231
^ a b c List of all US coastal forts and batteries at the Coast Defense Study Group, Inc. website
^ These are arranged in the traditional order of US Army reports, starting in Maine and working clockwise around the US.
^ "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service . July 9, 2010. (entry for Fort Baldwin mentions garrisoned by CD Portland in WWI)
^ Stanton, p. 479
^ a b Stanton, p. 480-481
^ National Archives and Records Administration, RG 392 index
Berhow, Mark A, ed. (2015). American Seacoast Defenses, A Reference Guide (Third ed.). McLean, Virginia: CDSG Press. ISBN 978-0-9748167-3-9 .
Conn, Stetson; Engelman, Rose C.; Fairchild, Byron (2000) [1964]. Guarding the United States and Its Outposts . United States Army Center of Military History . ISBN 978-14102019-2-8 . Archived from the original on 2007-12-25. Retrieved 2018-07-27 .
Lewis, Emanuel Raymond (1979). Seacoast Fortifications of the United States . Annapolis: Leeward Publications. ISBN 978-0-929521-11-4 .
Rinaldi, Richard A. (2004). The U. S. Army in World War I: Orders of Battle . General Data LLC. ISBN 0-9720296-4-8 .
Stanton, Shelby L. (1991). World War II Order of Battle . Galahad Books. pp. 477– 481. ISBN 0-88365-775-9 .
A Short History of US fort construction at the Coast Defense Study Group, Inc. website
List of all US coastal forts and batteries at the Coast Defense Study Group, Inc. website