It was established June 10, 1930, as Camp Evangeline, named for the Evangeline District of the
Kisatchie National Forest, where it was situated. It was later renamed for the Governor of the Territory of Orleans and first governor of the State of Louisiana,
William C.C. Claiborne. In 1939, construction crews were sent to expand the camp, and it was activated in 1940. From 1939 to 1946, over half a million men went through Camp Claiborne. The camp was mainly used for basic training and artillery practice, which included the nearby Winn District-Kisatchie Precision Bombing Range. It was also home to the Engineering Unit Training Command (EUTC). Special service forces training was also conducted there, including railroad battalion training. The
34th Infantry Division came to Claiborne for its basic training and would be the first American force sent to the
European Theater of Operations (ETO). In 1941, prior to the
United States declaring war, the camp was used as part of the
Louisiana Maneuvers, a 400,000-man training exercise involving two imaginary countries fighting each other. The two armies faced each other across the Red River, over of land, part of which was in East Texas. Near the end of the war, German
prisoners of war (POW) were held at the camp. Many of the men, like the ones from the
32nd and 34th Infantry Divisions who were mostly from
Iowa,
Minnesota,
Michigan,
North Dakota,
South Dakota, and
Wisconsin, had never been to the South. Not only did they have to get used to basic training, they had to get used to the hot, humid, low-lying Camp Claiborne as well as nearby
Camp Beauregard. Camp Claiborne was deactivated and dismantled in 1945, and the land returned to
Kisatchie National Forest, as part of the
National Forest System, administered by the
U.S. Forest Service. ==Units serving==