Two specialized agencies evolved into integral parts of the Army War College: the Strategic Studies Institute, first formed in 1954; and the Military History Institute, established in 1967.
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A brief 1756 encampment at Carlisle preceded the more permanent settlement in May 1757, when Colonel John Stanwix marched upstream with British regulars and provincials during the Seven Years War (also known as the French and Indian War).
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When the Medical Field Service School departed in 1946 for Fort Sam Houston at San Antonio, Texas after World War II, educational innovation continued.
Similarly, he holds a Masters in strategic planning from the United States Army War College at Carlisle Barracks in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and holds a Bachelor of Arts with a concentration in economics of the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez.
Carlisle | Carlisle, Pennsylvania | Carlisle, Cumbria | Carlisle United F.C. | Earl of Carlisle | City of Carlisle | Belinda Carlisle | Carlisle Indian Industrial School | barracks | Drum Barracks | Clarke Carlisle | Carlisle railway station | Carlisle Cathedral | Bishop of Carlisle | Barracks | Simpson Barracks | Carlisle Floyd | Carlisle Castle | Marine Barracks | Kitty Carlisle | Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery | Jefferson Barracks Military Post | Giant-Carlisle | George Howard, 7th Earl of Carlisle | Carlisle, South Carolina | Woodside Barracks | Victoria Barracks | Selimiye Barracks | Royal Artillery Barracks | Robert Carlisle (ranchero) |
located in areas including Camp Zachary Taylor (Kentucky), Camp Grant (Illinois), Fort Leavenworth (Kansas), Fort Benjamin Harrison (Indiana), Harvard University (Massachusetts), Fort Devens (Mass.), Fort Oglethorpe (Georgia), Carlisle Barracks (Pennsylvania), Fort Slocum (New York) (1951–62), Fort Hamilton (N.Y.) (1962–74), Fort Wadsworth (N.Y.) (1974–79), and Fort Monmouth (New Jersey) (1979–95).