At the beginning of August 1907,
Robert Baden-Powell, Inspector-General of Cavalry, held his
experimental camp for boys on
Brownsea Island. In October 1907, he was appointed to command the
Northumbrian Division of the newly formed
Territorial Army. His headquarters were in
Richmond Castle, which was too small to hold the garrison, so he chose as a replacement the site for the Catterick military town. The following year saw the founding of the
Scouting movement. On 12 August 1914, the order was issued for the construction of the camp, following the outbreak of the
First World War. The original intention was for Catterick to be a temporary camp to accommodate two complete divisions with around 40,000 men in 2,000 huts. The base was originally named
Richmond Camp but was changed to
Catterick Camp in 1915 and later modified to
Catterick Garrison in 1973. After serving as a
prisoner of war camp at the end of the
First World War, the idea to make Catterick a permanent military barracks was first suggested after the partitioning of Ireland in 1921, to replace
The Curragh. The required land was purchased, and building plans were put forward in 1923. Construction was undertaken by
John Laing & Son, and by the mid-1930s most of the camp's facilities were complete. During the
Second World War, the camp was once again used to house prisoners of war.
RAF Catterick closed in 1994 and was transferred to the British Army to become Marne Barracks, which falls under the command of Catterick Garrison. In 2007 an investigation began after allegations that a parachute regiment soldier was filmed being sexually assaulted in Catterick. In 2018, to celebrate the centenary of the
Armistice and the end of the
First World War, four stone monuments, depicting a steam locomotive, a likeness of Lord Baden Powell, a First World War Tommy and a pilot of the Royal Flying Corps, were erected on the town's central roundabout. == Governance ==