Around 100 CE, the Romans built the first stone fort on the site- a strategic location on the
Neckar River with road connections to
Mainz,
Augsburg and
Strasbourg. It is thought to have been an administrative district capital. The Romans left the area around 259/260 CE. In 1908 the
German Army built a Cavalry Barracks (Dragoner Kaserne/Reiter Kaserne) on the site which is the basis for the buildings on the site today. From that time until the end of World War II, the site hosted units of the
Reichswehr and
Wehrmacht (German Army). Among the units assigned during that time were units of Cavalry Regiment 18.
Cold War era During the Cold War various Army units were located at Wallace Barracks, named for posthumous Medal of Honor recipient PFC
Herman C. Wallace. The
66th Counter Intelligence Corps Group used the installation during the 1950s and referred to it as Hallschlag University. The unit was later reorganized as the 66th Military Intelligence Group (66thMI Gp) in the 1960s. The Army relocated the MI operations to Munich in 1968 from Stuttgart. Late in the US use of the site it was used as a storage facility.
1992 to present After the withdrawal of US forces from Wallace Barracks with the withdrawal of
VII Corps from Germany, the site was returned to the German government. It has been retained in its former, historic form and has been redeveloped as Römerkastell- a mixed use development. ==See also==