Introduction: This paper presents the results of a desk study of original documents on the impact of the development of a track of land for military use in Cayey, Puerto Rico. The paper is divided in four major segments: the Spanish Barracks (1897-1898), Camp Henry (1898-1909), The Cayey Naval Radio Station (1914-1932), and Henry Barracks Army Post (1910-1962). Desk Study: The investigators relied on interviews, pictures, and narratives of key informants that either lived, grew-up, or used the facilities of the Henry Barracks Army Reservation. This paper is a summary of approximately three thousand pages, pictures, and maps located in the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) as well as documents from the Library of Congress of the United States and the Museo de Historia Militar, Madrid, Spain, and Army and Navy reports, general and specific orders, and Order of Battle documents archived in the libraries of the United States War College, Carlisle, PA., West Point Military Academy (New York) and the Naval Academy (Annapolis). Limitations: Most of the original materials such as logs, order of battle, and other original information was found in repositories in the United States, and dated from 1898 to 1967. A search of the Museo de Historia Militar in Madrid, Spain only had available information on the Spanish conquest of San Juan, and only rudimentary maps were found about the rest of the island of Puerto Rico. Summary of Findings: The study concludes the Spanish Government constructed a Barracks in Cayey in 1897. The Spanish troops remained in their Barracks until they were repatriated to Spain on October 18, 1898. The original reservation was set apart by Executive Order on July 7, 1903. An additional 372 acres were purchased in December 1903. The study concludes
that the geographical evolution of this land has had a marked impact in the development of the town of Cayey and the Central Mountain Region of Puerto Rico.
References
[1]
Army Corps of Engineering (2008). FUDS Property Name: Henry Barracks Military Reservation (Property Number I02PR0979). Cayey City: Puerto Rico Property Description.
[2]
Cayey Naval Station (1925). The Map and Photos Were Obtained from NARA-28677: 470.
[3]
Chief of Naval Operations to the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation (1922). Giving the Land of Magazine Hill to the Municipality of Cayey. NARA 12479-424: 24.
Daniels, J. (1916). Letter from Secretary of Navy to the Secretary of Treasury. NARA-28677:26.
[6]
Darrach, J. M. (1898). Descriptive Account of the Operations and Skirmishes about Guayama, Puerto Rico. Harper’s Weekly, 1898, 942.
[7]
Duncan, W. (1910). Post and Reservation Map of Henry Barracks. PR Library of Congress, G-30-11-2-Mil Sta-PR.
[8]
Emerson, K. (2011). Maps of the Spanish American War: Puerto Rico, 1898. Puerto Rico Expedition. www.emersonkent.com
[9]
Executive Order #3806 Ordering the Return of Magazine Hill to the Municipality of Cayey (1923). NARA-12479-424:27-3 P.
[10]
Hartzell, C. (1903). Register of Porto Rico for 1903. San Juan: Louis E. Tuzo Press and Co.
[11]
Hooper, S. C. (1922). Developments in High-Power Radio and Its Applications in the Services of the United States Navy. Radio Broadcasters Magazine, 1, 484-489.
[12]
Knock, T. J. (1992). To End All Wars: Woodrow Wilson and the Quest for a New World Order. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
[13]
Langley, L. D. (1983). United States Intervention in the Caribbean 1898-1934. Dover: Delaware: Scholarly Resources Inc.
[14]
Lopez, P. (1972). La historia de Cayey. Cayey: Departamento de Humanidades, Colegio Universitario de Cayey.
[15]
Muwsicant, I. (1998). Empire by Default (pp. 535-536). New York: Henry Holt & Co.
[16]
Ortiz, E. (1968). A Proposal for the Continued Development of the VESPRA Program of Puerto Rico. Cayey: Fundacion de Desarrollo Comunal.
[17]
Parsons (2010). Henry Barracks Military Reservation—Cayey, Puerto Rico. Norcross, GA: US Army Corps of Engineers.
[18]
Participation of Puerto Ricans in the Armed Services with Emphasis on World War I, World War II, and the Korean War, Headquarters Antilles Command (1965). Washington DC: US Army Center of Military History.
[19]
Price, H. C., & Lopez, C. M. (1915). Description of the Puerto Rico Regular Infantry. NARA Map Collection.
[20]
Rodriguez, V. (1897). Letter Written the Mayor of Cayey, to the Captain General of Puerto Rico. Biblioteca del Centro de Estudios de Puerto Rico.
[21]
Rojas Laporte, B. (1965). La YMCA abre campamento de adiestramiento para voluntarios de los Cuerpos de Paz de Puerto Rico (pp. 7-8). Periodico El Mundo Suplemento Sabatino.
[22]
Secretary of War (1915). Descripton of 59 Acres of Land and the the Magazine Hill Letter from the Secretary of War. NARA 12479-424: 15.
[23]
The Dramatic Ending of the War in Puerto Rico (1898). Teddy Roosevelt-RareNewspapers.com.
[24]
The Framework of Hemisphere Defense (2014).
http://www.history.army.mil/books/wwii/Guard-US/ch1.htm
[25]
Trask, D. F. (1981). The War with Spain in 1898. New York: MacMillan Publishing Inc.
[26]
US Army Center of Military History (2010). Linage and Honors: 65th Infantry Regiment (The Bonriqueneers).
http://www.history.army.mil/html/forcestruc/lienages/branches/inf/oo65in.htm
[27]
US Department of the Navy (1940) Building the Navy’s Bases in World War II (Vol. 1., Chapter 18, p. 5). Washington DC: US Government Printing Service.
[28]
War Department Office of Chief Engineers (1944) Construction Completion Reports NARA: NM-19-391, Box 121.
[29]
War Department Office of Chief Engineers. (1946) Construction Completion Reports 1917-1944. NARA NM-19-391, Box 122.