North Carolina Governor Bob Scott at Fort Bragg, c.1972. From the General Negative Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call #  N_72_12_209,  Raleigh, NC.
North Carolina Governor Bob Scott at Fort Bragg, c.1972. From the General Negative Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call # N_72_12_209, Raleigh, NC.

Fort Liberty, formerly Fort Bragg, is a 300-square-mile military cantonment and reservation in Hoke and Cumberland Counties. It was authorized in August 1918 as a World War I artillery training center for 16,000 soldiers and 5,700 horses and mules but was completed after the armistice. In 1921 the camp was named in honor of North Carolina's Braxton Bragg (1817-76), a U.S. Army captain in the Mexican War and a Confederate general during the Civil War. Pope Air Field, adjacent to the cantonment, was named for Lt. Harley Pope (1879-1919), who, with Sgt. W. W. Fleming, was killed when his plane crashed in the Cape Fear River.

Fort Liberty's complement of artillerymen included fewer than 3,000 officers and men. Pope Air Field had a small number of pilots whose mission was to observe artillery fire. The field was also a bustling fueling stop for army planes in transit to busier fields to the west and south. In the 1930s the base's dilapidated wooden buildings were mostly replaced by brick and stucco barracks, gun sheds, a chapel, a hospital, a headquarters, and family quarters for both commissioned and noncommissioned officers. This central portion of the cantonment has been preserved as Pope Air Force Base Historic District.

In 1940, when the nation began its military buildup prior to entering World War II, Fort Liberty was expanded by a one-year barracks and hospital construction program to house as many as 60,000 soldiers, making it the largest post in the army. The Ninth Infantry Division and dozens of artillery units trained there. In 1942 Fort Liberty became the home of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions; here the famous parachute and glider divisions trained for their role in the European theater.

General Braxton Bragg, CSA. From the Barden Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call # N_53_15_492, Raleigh, NC.
General Braxton Bragg, CSA. From the Barden Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call # N_53_15_492, Raleigh, NC.

The 82nd Airborne had been organized on 25 Aug. 1917 at Camp Gordon, Ga., as the 82nd Infantry Division. Consisting of troops from all 48 states, the division acquired the nickname "All-Americans," which led to its "AA" shoulder patch. After fighting in three major campaigns over five months during World War I, the division was demobilized until 25 Mar. 1942. On 15 Aug. 1942 the 82nd Infantry was redesignated the 82nd Airborne, becoming the first airborne division in the U.S. Army. It participated in campaigns in Italy and Normandy and, for its performance in the occupation of Berlin, gained the further title (from a statement by Gen. George Patton) of "America's Guard of Honor." After the war the 82nd was permanently assigned to Fort Liberty; it was the first division to integrate black soldiers into a white unit when, in 1946, the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion, the only black paratrooper outfit in the army, was disbanded and became part of the division. The 82nd became a regular army division on 15 Nov. 1948.

Fort Liberty's population shrank to fewer than 20,000 until the Korean War, when it increased to over 40,000. In the 1950s the post was the birthplace and home of the Special Forces (Green Berets). Soldiers from the base took part in missions to Vietnam (1957-75), the Dominican Republic (1965-66), Grenada (1983), Panama (1989), the Persian Gulf (1990-91), Haiti (1995), Afghanistan (2002), and Iraq (2003). 

Virtually the entire array of U.S. Army activities, other than the training of large armored forces, is displayed at Fort Liberty. Small post museums depict the history of airborne forces and Special Forces, now known as Special Operations. In recent years the army, in cooperation with the Nature Conservancy, has been involved in extensive protection and preservation of plant and animal habitats at the base.

In 2021, Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). It stipulated that the Department of Defense would remove any likeness from a military installation that honored any person affiliated with the Confederate States of America. In 2022, the U.S. Army published a public survey to choose a new name for Fort Liberty (then known as Fort Bragg). Fort leadership, along with community partners, and survey responses, selected Fort Liberty as the fort's new name. The name was approved, and the redesignation process began on the base. This process was completed in June 2023.

As of 2024, Fort Liberty is one of the largest military bases in the world. It houses 57,000 military personnel, 11,000 civilian employees and 23,000 family members across 160,789 acres. The Eighty-second Airborne Division, Eighteenth Airborne Corps, and Seventh Special Forces Group deployed from the post.

References:

"Fort Liberty History." U.S. Army Fort Liberty: Home of the Airborne and Special Operations Forces. U.S. Army. https://home.army.mil/liberty/about/fort-liberty-history (accessed December 2, 2024). 

Ruth M. Little, Fort Bragg Main Post National Register Nomination (1995-96).

Roy Parker Jr., Cumberland County: A Brief History (1990).

Additional Resources:

North Carolina Governor Bob Scott at Fort Bragg, c.1972. From the General Negative Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call #  N_72_12_209,  Raleigh, NC.

Image Credit:

North Carolina Governor Bob Scott at Fort Bragg, c.1972. From the General Negative Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call #  N_72_12_209,  Raleigh, NC. Available from https://www.flickr.com/photos/north-carolina-state-archives/3220041399/ (accessed August 30, 2012).

General Braxton Bragg, CSA. From the Barden Collection, North Carolina State Archives, call # N_53_15_492, Raleigh, NC. Available from https://www.flickr.com/photos/north-carolina-state-archives/4289914419/ (accessed August 30, 2012).