[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/Jump to content

Arsenal Academy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arsenal Academy
Officers' Quarters
(Currently South Carolina Governor's Mansion)
Location
Columbia
,
South Carolina
Information
Other nameSouth Carolina Military Academy
School typeMilitary academy
Established1842 (1842)
Closed1865
Feeder toThe Citadel Academy (from 1845)

The Arsenal Academy was a military academy in Columbia, South Carolina, originally established in 1842 as an independent school by the state of South Carolina. In 1845, the academy became a component of the South Carolina Military Academy (now The Citadel), in which first year cadets underwent their initial year of training before completing their studies at the larger Citadel Academy in Charleston, South Carolina. The school was burned by Sherman's forces in 1865 and never reopened.

History

[edit]

At the outset of the Civil War in 1861, the South Carolina Military Academy consisted of two institutions, both built in the 1820s as state arsenals, specifically to have the state prepared in the event of a slave revolt like that planned by Denmark Vesey (who was from Charleston). This process consolidated a number of smaller arsenals around the state to two locations, which would in 1855 be converted to military academies. The Arsenal Academy, or Arsenal Military Academy, or The Arsenal, was in Columbia, and the Citadel Academy, or Citadel Military Academy, or The Citadel (due to the appearance of its building) in Charleston. The Arsenal in Columbia was burned by Union General William Sherman's troops in 1865; in fact, destroying it was one of his objectives. It was never rebuilt. The only surviving building from The Arsenal is the current Governor's Mansion.[1]

The Citadel suffered no damage and, after serving as housing for Federal forces during the Reconstruction Era, reopened as the South Carolina Military Academy or commonly The Citadel Academy in the 1880s.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ The Citadel Alumni Association History Committee (Spring 2007). "Brief History of The Citadel". The Citadel. Archived from the original on 17 May 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2018.