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Camp Collier LbNA #60892

Owner:Baby Bear
Plant date:Feb 16, 2012
Location: Trickman Cemetery
City:Trickman
County:Coleman
State:Texas
Boxes:1
Found by: Miss Moon
Last found:Oct 28, 2018
Status:FFF
Last edited:Feb 16, 2012
Difficulty: Easy
Distance to microbox: 40 yards

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

The Camp collier box is located near the original location of this frontier fort. Here is the history from the Handbook of Texas:
CAMP COLLIER. Camp Collier, located at Vaughan's Springs on Clear Creek in southwestern Brown County, was one of eighteen frontier posts established in March 1862 by Col. James M. Norris who on January 29, 1862, had assumed command of a new frontier regiment of rangers, now called the Frontier Regiment commissioned by the Ninth Texas Legislature on December 21, 1861. The purpose of the legislative act was to protect the northern and western frontiers of Texas from Comanche and Kiowa Indian raids that were devastating frontier settlements in 1861. The Indian raiders were taking full advantage of the absence of many young men of fighting age that had been drawn out of the settlements at that time and into the Civil War.

The eighteen settlements, commanded by nine ranger captains in the regiment, were intended to provide a cordon of protection on a line running from the Red River in North Texas to the Rio Grande at what is now Eagle Pass. Each ranger captain commanded two posts, one named for him and one for the locale of the camp or for some feature of the locale. Camp Collier was named for Captain Frank M. Collier, who assumed command of Camp Collier, and Camp Pecan was located further north on Pecan Bayou in Callahan County, in late March of 1862. Captain Collier resigned in July of 1862 due to a back injury. Company elections were held on July 25, 1862, at both Camp Collier and Camp Pecan, and Sergeant Maj. James Joseph Callan was elevated to the rank of captain.

Camp Collier served as the summer regimental headquarters for the Frontier Regiment from June 1862 to late October 1862. In April 1862 Captain Callan, representing the state-sponsored Frontier Regiment, relieved Confederate Captain James M. Holmsley of the command at Camp Colorado, a well-established, former Union fort located between Camp Collier and Camp Pecan. Holmsley's unit had been ordered redeployed. On October 27, 1862, Colonel Norris moved his regimental headquarters to Camp Colorado and ordered Captain Callan to remove all equipment from Camp Collier and Camp Pecan and to consolidate both halves of his company at Camp Colorado. Camp Colorado remained the headquarters for the Frontier Regiment until its incorporation into the Confederate Army on March 1, 1864.

No trace of Camp Collier remains today. A historical marker erected in 1963 on the Brown County courthouse square in Brownwood commemorates its location some thirteen miles to the southwest.

Trickman cemetery was closest safe place to put box to actual location (which was probably back down the road toward Brownwood).

Directions:
Trickman Cemetery is off FM 1176 from Brownwood. Look for signs that lead you to cemetery on left side of FM1176 on dirt road, then right through entry gate and park near historical marker.

To the Microbox:
From Historical marker, walk down roadway into cemetery for 35 steps. Turn right at C. Storm headstone and go to iron spike fenced grave of WB Walters. Continue on to upright marker for JA Blackwell. Look left at slab grave,with small stoned base. See hole in that side base with loose stone in middle. Box is behind that loose stone's left side.