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Camp Colorado LbNA #60891

Owner:Baby Bear
Plant date:Feb 17, 2012
Location: Near post cemetery
City:Coleman
County:Coleman
State:Texas
Boxes:1
Found by: lionsmane
Last found:Mar 5, 2015
Status:FFF
Last edited:Feb 17, 2012
Difficulty: Easy
Distance to microbox: 20 yards

*** Part of Old Forts of Texas Series ***

The Camp Colorado box is located near the original location of this frontier fort. Here is the history from the Handbook of Texas:
CAMP COLORADO. In 1855 Camp Colorado was probably temporarily at a site near what is now Ebony, in Mills County. In August 1856, Troops A and F and United States Cavalry under Maj. Earl Van Dorn moved the camp to Mukewater Creek about six miles north of the Colorado River, on the route between Fort Belknap and Fort Mason in Coleman County. Because of sickness among the soldiers, the post was moved in July 1857 about twenty-two miles north to Jim Ned Creek. Commanders who succeeded Van Dorn included Edmund Kirby Smith, Lawrence S. (Sul) Ross, John Bell Hood, and Fitzhugh Lee.qqv Robert E. Lee visited the camp at least twice on tours of inspection. From 1857 to 1861 Camp Colorado was the center of Coleman County's settlements. The camp's buildings were of adobe with shingled roofs and pine-plank floors; the lumber, doors, and windows were hauled by ox team from East Texas. Outside communication was through a post office and a telegraph line along the Wire Road between the camp and army headquarters at San Antonio. People settled at all of the nearby waterholes. In 1857, J. C. Mullins, a graduate of Yale University, settled east of the camp and taught school under an elm tree on the post.

The camp was abandoned on February 26, 1861, by order of Gen. David E. Twiggs. With the exception of Lt. George B. Cosby, the men stationed at the camp all went into Confederate service. After the departure of United States troops, Capt. W. Pitts and later Capt. James Monroe Holmsley commanded companies of state troops at the camp until early in 1862. From 1862 to 1864 Capt. J. J. Callan and a company of Texas Rangersqv occupied the post. Texas state troops occupied the post until the end of the Civil War. Camp Colorado was not regarrisoned by United States troops after its evacuation by the Confederates. Fourteen years after the Civil War an Englishman, H. H. Sackett, purchased the land in the vicinity of the old post. The headquarters building was dismantled, and the stone was used to build a combination store and residence. Leaving the guardhouse intact, Sackett attached one wall of the residence to it. A stretch of stone corral fence remains, and a quarter of a mile to the east is the post cemetery.

Unfortunately it was dark by the time we arrived near the location on this dirt road and could not find the post cemetery. It is probably about 1/4 mile back down the road at private entry gate. Box put in front of Camp Colorado Ranch, so close.

Directions:
From Coleman, go north on Hwy 283, then right on FM206, right on FM2302, when reach FM1176, go straight across onto dirt road (CR140) and go about 5 miles to Camp Colorado Ranch entry on left. park across street from entry along road.

To the Microbox:
Go to green metal fence on your right, where pipes form H patern. Box is at base of right post under a rock.