General Phil
Sheridan, famed Civil War Cavalry leader, reportedly
selected the picturesque site for the new post. He is said
to have ridden horseback around what became the parade
ground in the center of the 12 square mile military
reservation, pointing with his saber to where he wanted each
building to be constructed. The new post
replaced Camp J.C. Sturgis, established in July of 1878,
about two miles northwest of nearby Bear Butte. It was first
named Camp Ruhlen for Lt. George Ruhlen, 17th Infantry
quartermaster officer who supervised the building of the
post. It was subsequently renamed Fort Meade in honor of
General George Meade of Civil War frame.Its strategic
location at the mouth of the natural gap in the hogback
ridge forming the outer rim of the Black Hills, on the main
Indian trail to the favorite hunting grounds of the Sioux,
and near the confluence of the heavily-traveled Bismarck,
Fort Pierre and Sidney trails of the pioneers, enabled Fort
Meade to play a major role in maintaining peace on the
western Dakota Frontier. It was here, too,
that the "Star Spangled Banner" first became the official
music for the military retreat ceremony, long before in
became the National Anthem.




Many celebrated frontier Army units saw service at Fort Meade, including the 4th Cavalry which was headquartered there for over 20 years. It outlived all other frontier posts of the Upper Missouri West, surviving as a military installation until 1944 when in became a Veterans Administration Hospital as it remains today.
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