Hubbry Logo
Fort DevensFort DevensMain
Open search
Fort Devens
Community hub
Fort Devens
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Fort Devens
Fort Devens
from Wikipedia

Fort Devens is a United States Army Reserve military installation in the towns of Ayer and Shirley, in Middlesex County and Harvard in Worcester County in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. Due to extensive environmental contamination it was listed as a superfund site in 1989. Most of the fort's land was sold off in 1996, but the cantonment area of the post was retained by the Army as the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area (RFTA). Fort Devens was reactivated in May 2007, though no units of active Army have been located there. The Devens Range Complex operates on property in Lancaster, south of Route 2, for live-fire training with small arms, machine guns, grenades, and rockets.[1]

Key Information

In 2011, the fort had a population of 306 enlisted personnel, 2,151 reservists, 348 civilians, and 1,399 family members, and maintained 25 ranges, 21 training areas, and 15 maneuver areas on nearly 5,000 acres (20 km2) of land. It was home to the United States Army Base Camp Systems Integration Laboratory as well as the United States Army System Integration Laboratory.[2]

Part of the former area of the military base is now home to Federal Medical Center, Devens, a federal prison for male inmates requiring specialized or long-term medical or mental health care.[3]

History

[edit]

Establishment during World War I

[edit]

Camp Devens, named after jurist and Civil War general Charles Devens, was established on September 5, 1917, as a temporary cantonment for training soldiers during World War I. About 5,000 acres (2,000 ha) of land was leased then later purchased from 112 owners who sold 230 parcels of land in the towns of Ayer, Harvard, Lancaster and Shirley by the federal government. Some was fine farmland along the Nashua River and other was "sprout" land where trees had been cut leaving stumps.

The Fort's siting was due primarily to its location at a major hub of the rail network in New England. Construction, by the largest labor force assembled in the United States, to build an entire city for 10,000 requiring barracks, training buildings, water and sewer systems, raced at the rate of 10.4 new buildings every day.[4] It was a reception center for war selectees and became a demobilization center after the war. As one of 16 temporary cantonments, Camp Devens processed and trained more than 100,000 soldiers.[citation needed] Three divisions (the 12th, the 26th and the 76th) were activated and trained at Devens during the war.[5]

In 1918, Camp Devens, was afflicted by the late 1918 deadly second wave of the 1918 flu pandemic. Approximately 850 soldiers, mostly privates, died at the camp during 1918 from the Spanish flu.[6]

Between World Wars

[edit]

In 1918, it became a separation center for over 150,000 troops upon their return from France.[citation needed] Put on inactive status, it served next as a summer training camp for National Guardsmen, Reservists and ROTC cadets.[citation needed]

In 1920, following years of debate regarding preparedness for another global war, passage of the National Defense Act established an important role for the citizen army.

In 1927, appropriations were made for permanent construction of buildings, but the stock market crash nearly called a halt. Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers, of Lowell, recognized the economic significance of Camp Devens to this largely agricultural community.

In 1929, Robert Goddard briefly used the post for his rocket operations.

In 1931, through Congresswoman Rogers' efforts, Camp Devens became Fort Devens, a permanent US Army post in 1931. However, during the depression, construction was slow; most of the work was done by the Works Progress Administration.[7] A few years later, Fort Devens Army Airfield was established.

World War II

[edit]

In 1940, at the onset of World War II, Fort Devens was designated a reception center for all men in New England who would serve one year as draftees. A massive $25 million building project was begun, including more than 1200 wooden buildings and an airfield. The 1st, 32nd, and 45th Divisions trained at Devens during the war. Devens also housed a prisoner-of-war camp for German and Italian prisoners from 1944 to 1946. It was designated as early as 1942 for detaining enemy aliens of Italian, German and Japanese birth.[8]

Post World War II

[edit]

The 7th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division was located at Fort Devens from 1946 to 1950. Already at reduced strength, the regiment was further decimated when a battalion from Fort Devens was reflagged as the 3d Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, and sent to Korea to join the 1st Cavalry Division. The 7th Infantry deployed to San Francisco, California and sailed for Japan on 20 August 1950, arriving on 16 September 1950 to marry-up with the 15th Infantry Regiment and the division headquarters.

Fort Devens hosted the Army Security Agency Training Center & School (ASATC&S) from April 1951 to 1996.[citation needed] In the 1950s or 1960s the fort was home to the 56th Air Defense Artillery Brigade, part of 1st Region, Army Air Defense Command.

On 15 February 1958 the 2nd Infantry Brigade was reactivated at Fort Devens, Massachusetts as the Pentomic 2nd Infantry Brigade with its own shoulder sleeve insignia. It spent the next five years training in northern Massachusetts and Cape Cod. The Brigade was prepared to support the Marines landing in the 1958 Lebanon crisis but did not deploy.[9]

The 2nd Infantry Brigade was inactivated on 19 February 1963 at Fort Devens; in 1962 when it was reflagged as 2d Brigade, 5th Infantry Division. It was reactivated on 23 October 1963 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division and moved (with the rest of the Division) to Fort Riley, Kansas in January 1964.

From 1968 to 1995, Fort Devens was the home of the 10th Special Forces Group.[citation needed] It also served as a training center for members of the Army Reserve and National Guard.[citation needed]

Units remaining near base closure

[edit]

Fort Devens was the home of the 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne), less 1st Battalion based in (West) Germany, from 1968 until the Group's move to Fort Carson, Colorado in 1995. It was also the home of the 39th Engineer Battalion (CBT) until the 39th was inactivated in 1992. The 39th Engineer (CBT) was reactivated in 2014 at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The Army Security Agency Training Center & School (ASATC&S) was established at Devens in April 1951. In 1976 it became known as the U.S. Army Intelligence School, Devens, or USAISD, and was moved to Fort Huachuca, Arizona in 1996. The 36th Medical Battalion including the 595th Medical Company and the 46th Combat Support Hospital, the 46th CSH was inactivated July 15, 1994. Finally, the 624th Military Police Company was stationed until the post closed. Headquarters, Army Readiness Region I and Readiness Group Devens were also located there in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The mission was to assist the training of reserve component units, state National Guard and Army Reserve units in New York and New England. Other subordinate Readiness Groups were located at Secena Army Depot and Fort Hamilton in NYC. Exact establishment dates and/or inactivation dates could not be found.

Closure, 1996

[edit]
Barracks as seen from the air in 1995, now demolished

The U.S. Army post which resided at Fort Devens was officially closed in 1996 after 79 years of service.

The Base Realignment and Closure process for land distribution for all parcels on the former Fort Devens allowed the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Shriver Job Corps, Massachusetts National Guard, Massachusetts Veterans and MassDevelopment to acquire the land. The bulk of the land was purchased by MassDevelopment for $17 million with the aim of turning Devens into a residential and business community.[citation needed] The Bureau of Prisons used its land for the Federal Medical Center, Devens, a prison hospital.

Since the closing of the military base, many of the existing buildings have been renovated or reconstructed; housing developments now exist, along with a growing business park, a new hotel, restaurants, several public and private schools, a disc golf course,[dead link] and a golf course. Veterans of the Army Security Agency have also expressed interest[when?] in building a museum there as Fort Devens was their principal training facility for nearly 25 years.[citation needed]

More recent

[edit]

Devens became[when?] a United States Army Reserve installation under the command the Army Installation Management Command (IMCOM) with an Army Reserve, Massachusetts Army National Guard and Marine Corps Reserve presence. In 2007 the headquarters of the 94th Regional Readiness Command, which was responsible for the command and control of Army Reserve units throughout New England, as well as providing Army Reserve support for Federal Emergency Management Agency operations in the New England region, was disbanded under the consolidation of forces and buildings within the area came under the control of the 99th Regional Support Command, which is located at Fort Dix, New Jersey, and whose Commanding General serves as the Senior Commander for Ft. Devens. The units with the original 94th Regional Readiness Command were realigned with similar commands along the East Coast. The base still remained an active training site for Reserve and National Guard Forces as well as regional law enforcement agencies.

The Army announced in 2008 that it would build a new training center in the area. This was dedicated in 2011 as the David S. Connolly Armed Forces Reserve Center. The three buildings total 280,000 square feet and are on 57 acres. It also supported 650 Army Reserve and Army National Guard Soldiers and Marines, and included space to store nearly 800 military vehicles. The total cost was $100 million.[10]

In January 2011 a group of Devens residents filed a citizens' petition for Devens to become a legally incorporated town. Efforts to make Devens the state's 352nd town failed on the local level in 2006.[11] As of 2018, Devens is "a regional enterprise zone and census-designated place in the towns of Ayer and Shirley, in Middlesex County and Harvard in Worcester County," (see Fort Devens (CDP), Massachusetts).

In March 2021, Commonwealth Fusion Systems established a 47-acre commercial site within the former Fort Devens. This facility is to be used for development and manufacture of fusion power equipment and plants, none of which were yet in commercial use anywhere worldwide as of 2021.[12]

Units

[edit]

The following military units are based[when?] at this location:

  • 3411th Military Intelligence Detachment[13]
  • 3417th Military Intelligence Detachment[13]
  • 3437th Military Intelligence Detachment[13]
  • 366th Military Police Detachment (CID)[13]
  • 401st Chemical Company
  • Headquarters Company, 25th Marine Regiment
  • Headquarters and Service Company & Weapons Company 1st Battalion, 25th Marines
  • Detachment 1 J2/JT, United States Central Command, Army Reserve Element (ARE)
  • 395th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion
  • 77th Sustainment Brigade
  • 804th Medical Brigade
  • USNSCC Recruit Training Command New England (Summer only)
  • 756th Combat Engineer Company

Environmental contamination

[edit]

On December 21, 1989, Fort Devens was listed as superfund because historic underground storage tanks/fuel depots had contaminated soils with heavy metals and petroleum products.[14]

In 2016, the Army started looking for PFAS, which it detected in groundwater and in the municipal water supply wells for Devens and the Town of Ayer. In May 2021, Restoration Advisory Board community members were concerned about PFAs making their way into the Nashua River, especially with water from the river being used to irrigate crops in communities downstream. They also discussed progress of the pump and treat system to get dissolved arsenic and iron at the 84-acre Shepley's Hill landfill site out of the groundwater remediation.[15] As of 2022, there is ongoing groundwater remediation at the former Moore Army Airfield and the former Shepley's Hill Landfill in addition to long-term groundwater monitoring at four petroleum contaminated sites.[14]

Cemetery

[edit]

Fort Devens has a cemetery which has the graves of U.S. military personnel, their dependents and about 20 German and Italian prisoners of war who died there either during or shortly after World War II. A number of graves predate the fort's establishment as they were relocated after the closure of several coast defense forts in Boston Harbor after World War II.

The oldest grave is that of 1st Lieutenant Robert F. Massie of the Corps of Artillery, who was killed in a sword duel with First Lieutenant Gustavus S. Drane at Fort Independence, in Boston Harbor, on Christmas Day 1817.[16] The legend that Lieutenant Drane mysteriously disappeared after the duel and his remains were later discovered in a walled off part of Fort Independence is not true. In reality, Drane was later promoted to captain and continued to serve in the Army until his death in 1846. Massie was originally buried at Fort Independence, and his remains were relocated to Fort Devens, along with others buried at Forts in Boston Harbor, in the 1950s after the forts were closed.

Lieutenant Edward John Kent Johnson of the Confederate States Navy died as a prisoner of war at Fort Warren in 1863. He was originally buried at Fort Warren but his remains were moved to Deer Island and Governors Island in Boston Harbor before being moved to Fort Devens in 1939. In 2002 his remains were finally returned to his home state of Florida.[17]

In media

[edit]

The Jack Benny Program broadcast on December 20, 1942 was recorded at Fort Devens.

The fort is the setting for the play "Court-Martial at Fort Devens" by Jeffrey Sweet. Based on a true story, it tells of two Black WACs at the fort during World War II who went on strike after facing prejudicial treatment, and were subsequently court-martialed.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Fort Devens was a installation spanning the towns of Ayer, Shirley, Harvard, and Lancaster in , established in 1917 as Camp Devens on approximately 5,000 acres to train over 100,000 soldiers for mobilization and later redesignated as a permanent fort in 1931 through congressional advocacy. Named after Civil War General Charles Devens, the base processed draftees and supported training during , including the operation of Moore Army Airfield and a reception center for recruits, while also serving as a site of a 1945 strike by Black members protesting in facilities. Throughout the era, Fort Devens hosted the Army Security Agency Training Center from 1951 until its closure, specializing in and electronic warfare training, and contributed personnel to conflicts including the , , and the 1990-1991 deployment of over 3,000 troops. The installation was inactivated on March 31, 1996, under the Act, leading to the loss of thousands of military and civilian jobs and subsequent environmental remediation as a site due to historical contamination. Post-closure, portions of the former base were repurposed as the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area for reserve unit training and logistics support in , while other areas underwent into a mixed-use community managed by MassDevelopment, including industrial, residential, and recreational facilities. The Fort Devens Historic District, encompassing 103 contributing structures, was listed on the in 1993, preserving its architectural and military heritage. As of October 1, 2025, the Devens RFTA has ceased most operations due to federal funding constraints, with only limited services remaining active.

History

Establishment and World War I Service (1917–1918)

Camp Devens was established on September 5, 1917, as a temporary cantonment to train soldiers for the United States' involvement in World War I. Located in the towns of Ayer, Harvard, and Shirley, Massachusetts, the camp occupied approximately 5,000 acres of land initially leased and later purchased from 112 owners across 230 parcels. Construction of the majority of the facilities was completed in just 90 days between June and September 1917, reflecting the urgent mobilization efforts following the U.S. declaration of war in April. Named in honor of Brigadier General Charles Devens, a Civil War veteran and Massachusetts jurist, the camp served as the primary training center for the National Army in the Northeast Military Department. The camp was designed to accommodate and train around 10,000 soldiers initially, but by the end of the war, over 100,000 men had passed through its facilities. Key units trained there included elements of the 12th and 76th Infantry Divisions, along with artillery regiments such as the 301st and 302nd Field Artillery (light) and the 303rd Field Artillery (heavy). Training focused on preparing draftees for combat, including infantry tactics, artillery operations, and simulated battlefield conditions through controlled explosives. The 76th Division, mobilized at Camp Devens, deployed to France in July 1918 and participated in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, while the 12th Division underwent training there but did not see overseas combat before the Armistice on November 11, 1918. In 1918, Camp Devens was severely impacted by the Spanish pandemic. The first cases appeared around early , and by month's end, approximately 14,000 soldiers—over one-third of the camp's population—were ill. The base hospital, with a capacity of 1,200 beds, was overwhelmed; on September 1, only 84 beds were occupied, but within days it filled completely, leading to makeshift facilities and high mortality rates. Medical officer Victor C. Vaughan reported rapid progression to , with dozens dying daily, contributing to the broader toll of nearly 45,000 U.S. military deaths from influenza during the war. The outbreak disrupted training and highlighted logistical challenges in military camps amid the global health crisis.

Interwar Period and Pre-World War II Expansion (1919–1939)

Following the of November 11, 1918, Camp Devens transitioned into a center, processing approximately 150,000 soldiers for discharge by April . The U.S. government purchased the majority of the previously leased land in , securing ownership of the core installation, with an additional 4,800 acres acquired between and 1921 to support ongoing operations. These acquisitions stabilized the site's footprint amid post-war reductions in military spending. By September 1, 1921, the camp entered caretaker status, shifting focus to seasonal activities as a summer training facility for units, such as the 26th "Yankee" Division from , Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) cadets, and U.S. Army Reserve components. From 1922 to 1931, it hosted Citizens' Military Training Camps (CMTC), providing four weeks of basic instruction to civilian youth as a voluntary alternative to , alongside specialized programs like the Service Reserve Officers' Training Camp school. In 1926, an Army airfield was constructed as an emergency landing strip, enhancing logistical capabilities for aviation training exercises. In 1931, through advocacy by Congresswoman , Camp Devens was redesignated a permanent U.S. Army post and renamed Fort Devens, marking its evolution from temporary to enduring installation despite economic constraints of the that slowed infrastructure development. The post continued as a primary training site for , ROTC, and reserve forces through the 1930s, with additional facilities added incrementally. In 1929, the War Department authorized rocket testing by engineer on post grounds, conducting early liquid-fueled experiments that advanced propulsion technology. As tensions escalated in , preparatory expansions included the acquisition of 5,200 acres by late 1939 to accommodate anticipated growth in troop readiness.

World War II Operations (1940–1945)

In anticipation of potential U.S. involvement in the escalating global conflict, Fort Devens underwent significant expansion starting in 1940, with the acquisition of 5,200 additional acres to accommodate growing training needs. This period coincided with the implementation of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, the first peacetime draft in U.S. history, transforming the installation into a primary reception and induction center for draftees from New England, processing approximately 650,000 soldiers between 1940 and 1946. Infrastructure developments included the construction of over 1,200 temporary wooden barracks, two hospital complexes to support medical training and care, and the establishment of Fort Devens Army Airfield—later renamed Moore Army Airfield—which opened in 1941 to facilitate aviation-related operations. From 1941 onward, Fort Devens served as a critical hub for multiple divisions preparing for overseas deployment, including the 1st Infantry Division, which was stationed there from February to December 1941 and conducted intensive maneuvers such as road marches and amphibious exercises in nearby . Successive units, including the 32nd Infantry Division, 45th Infantry Division, 4th Engineer Amphibian Brigade, and 366th Infantry Regiment, underwent basic and specialized at the post, focusing on , engineering, and combat readiness. Specialized schools operated on-site for roles such as cooks and bakers, nurses, and elements of the (WAC), with segregated units for Black servicewomen who primarily served as hospital orderlies in the large medical complex; in March 1945, 54 Black WACs staged a walkout protesting discriminatory job assignments, leading to charges against four that were ultimately dismissed. The airfield supported training until August 1944, when it was temporarily transferred to the U.S. until January 1946. As Allied forces advanced in , Fort Devens assumed additional roles in 1944, establishing a that housed up to 5,000 German and Italian captives, including anti-Nazi Germans, from February 1944 through 1946; the facility experienced several escape attempts, some successful. The post continued to train troops for diverse combat and support functions amid the war's final phases, contributing to the overall mobilization effort before beginning demobilization processing for returning personnel by late 1945.

Post-World War II and Cold War Activities (1946–1991)

Following , Fort Devens functioned as a demobilization center for returning troops from , processing thousands of soldiers before transitioning to caretaker status on June 30, 1946. The installation also hosted a until May 1946, accommodating over 5,000 German and Italian prisoners who contributed to local agriculture and infrastructure projects under guard supervision. During this period, the site served as an extension campus for Massachusetts State College (predecessor to the ), operating from September 1946 to June 1949 to educate returning veterans under the ; classes began on September 5, 1946, with limited offerings in a mix of existing and new buildings to accommodate up to 1,000 students. In 1948, amid rising tensions leading to the , Fort Devens was reactivated as a reception and center, hosting the 7th (including the 7th Regiment) from 1948 to 1950; the unit, at reduced strength, underwent preparation before deploying to Korea in 1950, leaving behind base housing for anxious families. The installation supported and administrative functions, processing draftees and reservists for overseas commitments, with units from the 3rd Infantry Division conducting maneuvers on site. The 1950s marked Fort Devens' evolution into a key intelligence and specialized training hub during the . In April 1951, the Army Security Agency Training Center and School (ASATC&S) was established there, providing classified instruction in , , , and code operations to thousands of personnel annually; by the mid-1950s, it trained ASA regiments for electronic warfare and interception missions against Soviet-aligned threats. Concurrently, the post housed the 56th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade and the First Army Chemical Defense School, focusing on air defense simulations and preparedness, while elements of the 10th Special Forces Group conducted training. Operational deployments from Devens included rotations to and during heightened East-West confrontations, such as the Berlin Crisis. Through the 1960s and 1970s, Fort Devens expanded its role in support, serving as a reception center for returning personnel and training site for the 7th in tactics, including simulated village operations with systems and facilities. The ASATC&S continued as the primary venue for schooling until the ASA's transition to INSCOM in 1977, emphasizing electronic order of battle analysis and foreign language proficiency for linguists targeting communications. By the , the base supported reserve units like the 98th Division and mechanized training for tank brigades, incorporating tactical exercises with live-fire ranges for , antitank weapons, and , while maintaining readiness for potential European theater reinforcements. These activities underscored Devens' strategic value in sustaining U.S. deterrence postures until the early 1990s drawdown.

Base Closure and Transition (1991–1996)

In July 1991, the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Commission recommended the closure of Fort Devens as part of the BRAC 1991 process, citing excess capacity in Army training facilities amid post-Cold War force reductions. The recommendation was approved by Congress and signed into law, targeting the facility's Main Post and North Post for full closure while realigning portions of South Post to support limited training needs. This decision initiated a phased drawdown, reducing the base's active-duty population from approximately 3,000 soldiers and 4,000 civilians in the early 1990s. The closure process involved environmental assessments and cleanup planning under BRAC authority, with the Army issuing a BRAC Cleanup Plan in April 1994 to address contamination prior to property transfer. Local and state officials, recognizing the economic impact of losing 7,000 to 8,000 jobs in Ayer, Harvard, and Shirley, Massachusetts, formed the Devens Reuse Study Committee in 1992 to evaluate civilian redevelopment options. The committee's efforts culminated in the November 1994 Devens Reuse Plan, a blueprint for converting 4,000 acres into mixed-use development including industrial parks, housing, and commercial spaces over 20 to 40 years. Massachusetts state legislation, Chapter 498 of the Acts of 1993 (amended in 1994), established the Devens Enterprise Commission to oversee the transition, granting it authority to zone land, issue permits, and manage utilities while balancing retention and economic revitalization. Despite advocacy from congressional representatives to retain more functions, the proceeded with inactivation, transferring excess property to the federal government for disposal. By 1995, military activities had scaled back significantly, with training redirected to other regional installations. On March 31, 1996, Secretary of the Togo West signed 1996-02, officially closing Fort Devens as an active-duty installation after 79 years of operation. The area was redesignated as the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area (RFTA), preserving about 400 acres for and Reserve use, while the majority of the 9,000-acre reservation was declared excess for civilian reuse. This transition marked the end of full-time operations but laid the groundwork for subsequent , with initial focus on job replacement through private-sector incentives.

Post-Closure Developments (1997–Present)

Following the closure of Fort Devens as an active-duty installation on March 31, 1996, a portion of the site was redesignated as the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area (RFTA) in 1996, serving as a training facility for U.S. Army Reserve and units. The RFTA encompasses approximately 1,500 acres and continues to host military exercises, including training events that connect historical operations with modern capabilities, such as a 2024 commemoration involving the 10th Group. In 2009, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers renamed the military U.S. Army Garrison Fort Devens, maintaining its role in regional defense readiness without full-scale active-duty reactivation. The majority of the former base's 4,400 acres transitioned to civilian redevelopment under the oversight of MassDevelopment, a quasi-public agency established in 1999 through the merger of the Devens Enterprise Commission and the Industrial Development Authority. This effort transformed the site into Devens, a mixed-use regional enterprise zone featuring commercial, industrial, and residential development, compensating for the initial loss of over 7,000 military and civilian jobs. By 2016, the reuse plan had stabilized the regional economy through business attraction, including and climate technology firms, though full residential growth lagged behind projections. Devens has evolved into a self-sustaining with around 950 residents as of 2025, supported by infrastructure like the Devens Common Center for events and a federal correctional institution operational since 1998. Economic anchors include innovation hubs fostering clean energy and advanced manufacturing, with recent initiatives such as 2024 guidelines to minimize embodied carbon in new construction aligning with state decarbonization objectives. Proposals in 2025 advocate rezoning underutilized land for additional to capitalize on the site's potential, amid ongoing debates over balancing preservation of open space with . A proposed and expanded residential neighborhoods underscore Devens' shift toward diversified, high-tech enterprise.

Military Units and Training Activities

Major Units Stationed

Fort Devens hosted over 400 Army units throughout its 99 years of active service from 1917 to 1996. During , the post primarily trained infantry and support units for deployment to , including the 76th Infantry Division from October 1917 to June 1918, the 12th Infantry Division from 1918 to January 1919, and the 26th Infantry Division briefly in September 1917 and upon its return in July 1919; the 151st Depot Brigade organized and managed replacements there from October 1917 to September 1919. In , Fort Devens functioned as a major reception, training, and processing center, hosting the 1st Infantry Division for mobilization and exercises from February to October 1941 and December 1941 to February 1942, alongside the 32nd Infantry Division starting in April 1942 and the 45th Infantry Division in 1942; it also trained specialized elements such as the 366th Infantry Regiment from February 1941 to October 1943, the 645th Tank Destroyer Battalion in 1942, and the 601st Tank Destroyer Battalion from 1941 to 1942, while operating a 500-man German from February 1944 to May 1946. Post-World War II and into the era, the installation shifted toward specialized training and intelligence operations, with the U.S. Army Security Agency Training Center and School established in April 1951 to train personnel, remaining operational until 1994; the 56th Air Defense Artillery Brigade, part of the 1st Region Army Air Defense Command, was based there in the 1950s and 1960s. The 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne), minus its 1st Battalion which stayed in Germany, relocated from , , to Fort Devens in September 1968, conducting unconventional warfare training and operations preparation there until the unit's full redeployment to , , in 1995. In the 1970s, the post supported the U.S. Army Intelligence School, focusing on and other disciplines until its closure contributed to base realignment in the 1990s. Reserve and units, such as elements of the 174th Infantry Brigade and 1st Battalion, 25th Marines, maintained a presence into the post-closure reserve era.

Notable Training and Operational Events

During , Fort Devens expanded rapidly to serve as a key reception, processing, and facility for inductees primarily from states, accommodating basic in , duties, and operations amid preparations for overseas deployment. The post's grew to include an airfield for aviation support and a large hospital complex to handle medical needs during high-volume cycles, with over 5,200 additional acres acquired between 1931 and 1940 to facilitate maneuvers and specialized drills. Specific units, such as the 101st New York , conducted prolonged there from February 2, 1941, to March 10, 1943, focusing on armored reconnaissance and maneuvers before reassignment. In the Cold War period, Fort Devens emerged as a premier center for and cryptologic training following the April 1951 establishment of the U.S. Army Security Agency School headquarters there, which delivered specialized courses to thousands of officers and enlisted soldiers in electronic warfare, interception techniques, and language skills essential for monitoring adversary communications. This institution, renamed the U.S. Army Intelligence School, Devens, in 1976, adapted to evolving threats by incorporating tactical intelligence modules; for instance, in October 1981, incoming commander Joseph F. Short prioritized hands-on tactical training to bridge doctrinal gaps in field operations. The facility supported activations like the 104th Battalion in March 1966, enhancing operational capabilities for Vietnam-era and subsequent intelligence missions. The adjacent Sudbury Training Annex, established in , hosted live-fire exercises, demolition training, and fire control drills by units including the Military Firefighters Academy, contributing to broader operational readiness through realistic combat simulations into the late . Post-1996, as the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area, it continued facilitating annual training for , Reserve, and ROTC elements, including joint exercises for disaster response and mobilization.

Environmental Contamination and Remediation Efforts

Sources and Types of Contamination

Environmental contamination at Fort Devens stemmed primarily from decades of military operations, including fuel storage, vehicle maintenance, firefighting training, and waste management practices conducted by the U.S. Army from 1917 until base closure in 1996. Underground storage tanks (USTs) and aboveground fuel depots, used for storing gasoline, diesel, and heating oils, were major sources of petroleum hydrocarbon releases into soil and groundwater; notable incidents included leaks of 7,000 to 8,000 gallons of No. 2 heating oil in 1972 and 1978 at specific tank sites. These activities contaminated over 4,000 acres, leading to the site's designation on the National Priorities List (Superfund) in 1989 due to widespread petroleum and chemical pollution. Aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF), deployed for fire suppression and training exercises at fire stations and crash sites, introduced per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)—persistent "forever chemicals"—into groundwater, soil, and surface water across multiple areas of the former base. Potential PFAS sources extended to post-closure non-Army uses, such as at the Devens Fire Station, but historical military AFFF application remains the dominant contributor based on site assessments. Additional contamination arose from landfills like Shepley's Hill Landfill (operational until 1992), where improper disposal of wastes led to leaching of inorganic contaminants (e.g., , , iron) and organic compounds into sediments, , and downgradient . Vehicle maintenance and degreasing operations released volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as and solvents, while polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were associated with electrical equipment and industrial uses. including , , , and zinc were detected in affected media, often linked to these aggregated historical practices rather than isolated events. Site investigations under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) identified over 80 areas of concern (AOCs), with contaminants varying by location but consistently tied to operational legacies.

Remediation Actions and Superfund Designation

Fort Devens was proposed for inclusion on the U.S. Agency's (EPA) (NPL) on July 14, 1989, and finalized as a federal facility site on November 21, 1989, due to extensive contamination from historical military activities including landfills, chemical storage, and waste disposal. The site's designation under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) triggered mandatory investigation and remediation, with the U.S. Army assuming primary responsibility for all response actions under EPA oversight through a 1991 Federal Facility Agreement (FFA). The Department of participates but lacks enforcement authority under the FFA. Remediation efforts, coordinated by the Army's Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Environmental Restoration Program, addressed contaminants across 54 identified Areas of Concern (AOCs) and Study Areas (SAs), including volatile organic compounds (VOCs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), , and later per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Key actions included soil excavation from hotspots, extraction and treatment, construction of barrier walls, monitored natural attenuation, and institutional controls such as land-use restrictions to prevent exposure. For instance, at Shepley's Hill (AOC 1), a 1995 Record of Decision (ROD) mandated closure and cap installation, followed by treatment initiated in 2006 and a non-time-critical removal action (NTCRA) vertical barrier wall in 2012. The Devens Consolidation , built between 2000 and 2002 under a July 1999 ROD, received excavated soils from multiple AOCs to consolidate . Multiple RODs guided site-specific remedies, such as the March 1995 ROD for AOCs 44 and 52 involving bioremediation and monitoring, the July 1996 ROD for the South Post Impact Area emphasizing no further action with restrictions, and the September 2015 ROD for Plow Shop Pond (AOC 72) directing sediment removal and hydraulic barriers completed via 2012 NTCRA. PFAS investigations under CERCLA began in 2016, focusing on releases from aqueous film-forming foam used in firefighting training. By 2020, cleanups enabled transfer of approximately 4,000 acres for reuse, with most remaining sites in long-term monitoring; the EPA's September 2020 Five-Year Review confirmed remedies protective of human health and the environment, though ongoing groundwater plumes require institutional controls.

Ongoing Monitoring and Health Impacts

The U.S. Army, through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, conducts long-term monitoring of , , and sediments across most of the 54 identified areas of (AOCs) at former Fort Devens, with remedies including monitored natural attenuation, land-use controls, and annual inspections to ensure effectiveness. Five-year reviews of cleanup actions are mandated by the EPA, with the most recent completed in 2020 confirming that implemented remedies remain protective under current conditions. Quarterly Restoration Advisory Board (RAB) meetings, alternating between virtual and hybrid formats, provide updates on monitoring data and community involvement, with sessions scheduled through 2026. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) investigations, initiated in 2018 under CERCLA, include ongoing Phase 2 remedial investigations in PFAS Area 1, with field work from April through late 2024 encompassing seismic surveys, installation of new monitoring wells, approximately 250 soil and groundwater samples from 65 locations, vertical aquifer profiling, and fish tissue sampling from seven water bodies including Cold Spring Brook, Grove Pond, and the Nashua River. These efforts aim to delineate PFAS plumes and inform future remedy decisions in coordination with the EPA and Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection. Public health assessments by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) have concluded that former Fort Devens poses no current or future public health hazard to nearby populations, with limited exposure pathways primarily restricted to on-site military personnel and recreational users unlikely to result in adverse health effects. Primary contaminants of concern, such as arsenic in groundwater at Shepley's Hill Landfill, are managed through land-use controls, well installation moratoriums, and active extraction/treatment systems operational since 2006, reducing ingestion risks. No site-specific epidemiological studies have documented elevated health outcomes attributable to contamination among residents or veterans, though PFAS investigations continue to evaluate potential exposure risks given the substances' persistence and associations with broader health concerns in national datasets.

Facilities and Legacy Infrastructure

Devens Cemetery

The Fort Devens Post Cemetery, located in , occupies a 3.5-acre site in the southwest corner of the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area. Originally established in 1931 as the Malvern Hill Cemetery on the grounds of Camp Devens, the current cemetery was developed in 1938 to serve the post's military personnel. It includes 34 graves transferred from the original site, preserving early interments amid the installation's expansion during preparations. The cemetery holds the remains of U.S. soldiers who served at Fort Devens, including those from training and operational activities spanning multiple conflicts. Notably, it contains the graves of 20 German and 2 Italian prisoners of war who died while interned at the post during , reflecting the facility's role in POW operations. Annual commemorative events, such as wreath-laying ceremonies for POWs and observances, honor these interments and underscore the site's ongoing military remembrance function. In September 2020, the U.S. Army transferred ownership of the cemetery to the ' National Cemetery Administration, one of 11 such nationwide handovers facilitated by the General Services Administration to ensure perpetual care. The now manages operations, with the site open daily from dawn to dusk and governed by policies on floral arrangements and grounds maintenance to preserve its historical integrity. This transition aligns with broader post-closure efforts to maintain legacy infrastructure while adapting to civilian reuse in the Devens area.

Fort Devens Museum

The Fort Devens Museum, incorporated in 2000 as a private , collects, preserves, and interprets artifacts and personal stories documenting the history of Camp Devens and Fort Devens from its origins in to the present day. Located at 94 Jackson Road, Suite 305, in , the museum maintains a collection that reflects the experiences of over one million individuals who trained, lived, or worked at the site, once known as New England's largest Army base. Exhibits feature a range of military artifacts, including uniforms, equipment, deactivated inert weapons, letters, documents, and photographs, organized to trace the installation's evolution through training of over 100,000 soldiers, its permanent status in 1931, and subsequent roles in , the , the , and Operation Desert Storm. The displays emphasize the base's transition to a permanent post, its contributions to national defense, and its closure in 1996, with artifacts drawn from donations and loans to illustrate daily life, training activities, and operational history. Admission to the museum is free, with operations supported by donations and occasional fundraisers for exhibit expansions and educational programs. Beyond static displays, the facility functions as a community hub where veterans and their families can gather, reminisce, and exchange oral histories, fostering a space for personal reflection on the site's military legacy. As a private entity, it does not hold official records or comprehensive personnel databases, directing researchers to government archives for such materials.

Reuse and Economic Transformation

Initial Reuse Planning and Challenges

Following the 1991 recommendation for closure under the (BRAC) Act of 1990, initial reuse planning for Fort Devens commenced prior to the base's full inactivation in March 1996. The 1994 Devens Reuse Plan, developed by the Government Land Bank and local stakeholders, served as a blueprint for converting approximately 4,400 acres of the former military reservation to civilian uses over 20-40 years, emphasizing economic revitalization to offset the direct loss of 7,000-8,000 jobs from military and civilian operations. Key strategies included allocating over one-third of the land—roughly 1,500 acres—to natural areas, recreation, and open space, while designating zones for industrial, commercial, and limited residential development to attract investment and create comparable employment opportunities. The plan also prioritized infrastructure retention, such as railroads, for early reuse to support logistics and . State legislation in 1993 established the Devens Enterprise Commission (DEC) as the Local Redevelopment Authority to oversee implementation, streamlining permitting processes with a 75-day response and providing incentives like tax abatements, low-cost financing, and competitive utility rates to lure businesses. This framework aimed to foster an model, focusing on sustainable practices amid the base's multi-jurisdictional footprint spanning Ayer, Harvard, Shirley, and Lancaster. By 1996, early efforts targeted 78 new companies to generate over 4,000 jobs, though actual civilian job recovery lagged initially behind the 2,178 direct losses. Planning faced significant hurdles, including protracted due to extensive from decades of activities, which delayed property transfers and full redevelopment as the site required designation and cleanup prioritization. Inter-town coordination proved contentious, with municipal boundaries bisecting the base leading to disputes over , revenues, and development visions—Harvard residents expressed heightened environmental concerns, while Ayer and Shirley prioritized . Community hostility toward federal delays in cleanup and job replacement further complicated consensus, necessitating compromises like housing caps and preserved green spaces to balance growth with local quality-of-life priorities. Economic pressures from the sudden job exodus exacerbated these issues, stalling private investment until incentives took effect.

Current Economic Role and Developments

Devens, the redeveloped site of former Fort Devens, serves as a mixed-use regional enterprise zone managed by MassDevelopment, functioning primarily as a hub for commercial, industrial, and life sciences activities in north-central . It hosts over 100 businesses, including firms in advanced , , and , generating approximately 6,000 direct jobs with average annual wages exceeding the state average, particularly in high-value sectors like . These operations contribute an estimated $1.5 billion in direct economic activity annually, supporting an additional $1 billion in indirect spending and up to 14,000 total jobs when including multiplier effects from supplier chains and employee expenditures. Recent developments emphasize infrastructure enhancements and residential expansion to sustain growth. In October 2023, MassDevelopment broke ground on a $20.8 million public safety building at 270 Barnum Road, consolidating the Devens Fire Department, Massachusetts State Police barracks, and Nashoba Associated Boards of Health, with full operations anticipated by summer 2025 to improve emergency response for the expanding community. On May 23, 2025, the Devens Housing Working Group, led by MassDevelopment, released a final report outlining strategies to accelerate housing production, aiming to balance commercial vitality with residential needs amid ongoing redevelopment from the 1996 base closure. Notable private-sector expansions include Watson-Marlow Fluid Technology Solutions completing a 150,843-square-foot facility at 16 Bulge Road in 2024, bolstering biotech capabilities and regional employment. These initiatives reflect Devens' evolution into a sustainable economic engine, leveraging expedited permitting and incentives to attract firms in cell therapies and precision manufacturing.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.