found: Bandy, J.T. Distribution of water use at representative fixed army installations, 1983:rep. doc. p. (Ft. Bragg, NC)
found: Species-habitat relationships for the breeding birds of a longleaf pine ecosystem, 2001:abstr. (Fort Bragg Military Installation, an army base in North Carolina)
found: U.S. Army Fort Liberty website, accessed Dec. 26, 2023About Fort Liberty History page (Camp Bragg created Sept. 4, 1918 as an artillery training center; construction of camp completed on Feb. 1, 1919; a tract of land on camp was designated for use as landing field and that landing field designated by War Department as Pope Field on April 1, 1919 [Pope Field later became Pope Air Force Base]; Field Artillery Board transferred from Fort Sill, Oklahoma to Camp Bragg on Feb. 1, 1922; Camp Bragg redesignated Fort Bragg on Sept. 30, 1922; various artillery units trained there or were stationed there during 1920s-1930s; during 1930s Fort Bragg was headquarters for District A, Civilian Conservation Corps and training site for National Reserve Officers Training Corps, Officers Reserve Corps and Citizens Military Training Corps; U.S. Army Airbone Command created at Fort Bragg in March 1942; 82nd Airborne Division and 101st Airborne Division moved to Fort Bragg in March 1942 and trained there; after end of World War II, the 82nd Airborne Division was permanently assigned to Fort Bragg; XVIII Airborne Corps reactivated at Fort Bragg in 1951; The Psychological Warfare Center [predecessor of U.S. Army Special Operations Command] established at Fort Bragg in 1952; Army basic combat training conducted at Fort Bragg from 1966-1970; on July 1, 1973 Fort Bragg was assigned to newly-established United States Army Forces Command; 7th Special Forces Group was assigned to Fort Bragg in 1989 [that unit later reassigned to Eglin Air Force Base, Florida]; U.S. Army Reserve Command and U.S. Army Forces Command headquartered at Fort Bragg starting in 2011 following closure of Fort McPherson, Georgia; in 2011 Pope Air Force base reverted to being an Army airfield, renaming process under 2021 National Defense Authorization Act resulted in renaming Fort Bragg to Fort Liberty) - https://home.army.mil/liberty/about/fort-liberty-history
found: Inside the Pentagon, Sept. 2, 1999:p. 9 (Ft. Bragg)