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After the Civil War ended, the
Barracks lost their usefulness as one company posts were giving way to larger installations. Its location at the confluence of the Licking and Ohio Rivers subjected it to frequent flooding, especially during the floods of 1882, 1883 and 1884. In light of that factor,
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across the Ohio River to
Newport, Kentucky. The post was 4 acres (16,000 m) in the original tract, purchased from old Colonel Taylor estate for $ 1. In 1806, two additional acres were bought for $ 47. Taylor was hired as the superintendent of the construction of the barracks. He was to erect
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In 1842 Taylor asked the government for $ 20,000 to make improvements at the
Barracks. After 35 years of use they were in need of repair. Not only was it approved but Captain J R Irwin of the Quartermaster Department who was sent to Newport to hasten the undertakings, requested money to purchase
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three buildings. John
Metcalf of Fleming County and Dan Mayo of Newport contracted for the brick and stone work at $ 7 per thousand bricks and 75 cents per perch of stone. Stephen Lyon did most of the carpentry and Amos B. Watson of New York was the joiner.
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Colonel
William Boyd arrived in Newport in March 1811 with 600 men who pitched their tents in the fields adjacent to the Barracks. Newport was an infantry recruiting center for Ohio and Kentucky and furnished equipment and soldiers for the newly acquired
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137:. These waterfronts included several acres and were given free to the government, with the stipulation that in case the barracks was ever abandoned the property would revert to the city.
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110:. At these schools, they trained drummer boys the techniques needed to drum. Little more is known about the school at Newport Barracks, as there are few surviving records, but
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that the new hospital was ready for patients, the enlisted men were in their barracks and two sets of officers quarters needed only a stockade to finish them.
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Newport
Barracks became a depot of the Eastern Department of the Recruiting Service until 16 July 1859 when it was made an independent department. During the
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the
Secretary of War purchased 112 acres (0.5 km) on a hill above the Ohio River three miles (5 km) east of Newport which became
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94:(School of Practice for U.S.A. Field Musicians) were established at Newport in the 1830s. The two schools, the other being located at
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and a politically divided border state, it remained in the Union. Wounded and dying from the war were brought to
Newport as well as
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some additional land, erect officers and laundress quarters and build a hospital. On 7 January 1845 Irwin informed
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In 1848 the city of
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214:"City of Newport Kentucky in Campbell Was Once Known as Sin City County KY"
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For the barracks of the same name in North
Carolina, see
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Buildings and structures in Campbell County, Kentucky
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38:on the Ohio River, across from Cincinnati, Ohio in
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800:Timeline of Kentucky in the American Civil War
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243:Newport Barracks from the Kentucky Post, 1894
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164:did tours of duty at the Newport Barracks.
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248:A Short History of the Newport Barracks
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265:Climate Fact Sheet: Newport Barracks
74:Army at Licking River, from Harpers
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521:Kentucky in the American Civil War
54:solicited the help of his cousin,
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152:prisoners. It is also said that
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572:Confederate Heartland Offensive
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877:American Civil War army posts
912:American Civil War hospitals
199:Mississippi State University
892:Kentucky in the War of 1812
316:Kentucky in the War of 1812
124:General Thomas Sidney Jesup
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144:, although Kentucky was a
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174:General James Taylor Park
742:Monuments and memorials
340:Benjamin Franklin Graves
446:The Hunters of Kentucky
360:Richard Mentor Johnson
270:Our Army at Cincinnati
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853:39.09111°N 84.50056°W
275:Newport Barracks 1851
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725:Union fortifications
441:Battle of Frenchtown
415:Great Saltpetre Cave
345:Nathaniel G. S. Hart
195:"Hell on the Wabash"
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535:Slavery in Kentucky
479:Kentucky portal
92:Schools of Practice
81:Louisiana Territory
160:and Union General
108:American Civil War
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887:Forts in Kentucky
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746:List of monuments
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608:Rowlett's Station
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766:Pewee Valley
683:Salyersville
638:Munfordville
628:Mill Springs
618:Middle Creek
603:Ivy Mountain
598:Camp Wildcat
593:Barbourville
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420:Mammoth Cave
380:John Simpson
375:Isaac Shelby
222:. Retrieved
218:the original
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757:Cemeteries
751:Camp Nelson
703:Involvement
663:Tebbs' Bend
556:Confederacy
170:Fort Thomas
150:Confederate
146:slave state
85:War of 1812
871:Categories
844:84°30′02″W
841:39°05′28″N
720:Louisville
648:Perryville
623:Lucas Bend
613:Sacramento
544:Combatants
335:John Allen
330:John Adair
280:Flood 1884
237:References
224:2007-03-20
156:, General
112:Dan Emmett
795:See also:
761:Cave Hill
736:Aftermath
715:Lexington
693:Cynthiana
653:New Haven
565:Campaigns
142:Civil War
50:In 1803,
812:Category
658:Somerset
633:Richmond
463:See also
36:barracks
823:Commons
678:Paducah
668:Lebanon
643:Augusta
586:Battles
528:Origins
46:History
408:Places
323:People
551:Union
180:Notes
102:, in
211:See
133:and
131:Ohio
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