Details for Operation Long Horn

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5281013183

Data

Marker Number 13183
Atlas Number 5281013183
Marker Title Operation Long Horn
Index Entry Operation Long Horn
Address 15115 US 190
City Lometa
County Lampasas
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 558262
UTM Northing 3452358
Subject Codes Cold War; military topics
Marker Year 2003
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Lometa Regional Park, S on US 190. Marker is 0.1 mi. W of US 183 entrance on the N side of the entrance road.
Private Property
Marker Condition
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The close of World War II brought new tensions to America that led to the Cold War. Under fear of communism and nuclear assault, the U.S. Army and Air Force simulated a war in one of the largest maneuvers ever to be staged on American soil. Called Operation Long Horn, the simulation included thwarting an invasion and recovering from an atomic attack. To carry out the mock war, which began in late March 1952, ranchers between Waco and San Angelo signed easements to their land. Several Lometa-area ranches became sites of battles and campgrounds as more than 115,000 troops came to Texas for maneuvers. The town's population grew from 900 to 22,000, and the troops and supporting civilian staff members faced life in a small town. Local residents cooperated and participated by rationing and trading with troops, offering facilities for a mock U.S.O. (United Service Organizations) facility and attending programs and presentations given by soldiers. Such programs included an airdrop of 2,500 troops, as well as weapons, equipment and rations, in a training maneuver that pitted the 31st Infantry, 47th Infantry, and 1st armored division against the 82nd Airborne Division out of Fort Bragg, North Carolina. In a nationally publicized event, aggressor forces captured and occupied Lampasas (17 mi. SE), establishing mock control of media and setting curfews. The city was liberated near the end of the simulation on April 9, 1952. The $3,300,000 exercise left local residents with damaged ranch land, outbuildings, fences and gates, as well as spooked livestock, but also gave them an opportunity to experience war in their own community. (2004)

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