News

U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff’s push for a new elementary school to be built on post at Fort Benning cleared an early hurdle this ...
COLUMBUS, Ga. (Aug. 23, 2018) -- Military and civilian personnel from Latin America worked closely with local emergency services from Fort Benning and Columbus, Georgia, and Phenix City, Alabama ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth restored the names of Fort Benning and Fort Bragg, which were originally named for Confederate ...
COLUMBUS, Ga. (June 1, 2018) - In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of Fort Benning, the Columbus Museum in Columbus, Georgia, opened a new historic exhibition May 31 during a reception event ...
The commission tasked with renaming Fort Benning and other Department of Defense assets that commemorate the Confederacy is now deliberating what the Army post near Columbus will soon be called ...
Fort Benning, the massive U.S. Army training base near Columbus, Ga., will be formally renamed Fort Moore on Thursday after Lt. Gen. Hal Moore and his wife, Julia Moore. Fort Benning and East ...
On a day that marked the beginning of the 100th year of Fort Benning, Maj. Gen. Eric J. Wesley talked of growing the relationship of the Army post with Columbus.
COLUMBUS, Ga. (WTVM) - Fort Benning will officially become Fort Moore during a ceremony at Doughboy Stadium on May 11. The name change honors retired Lt. Gen. Harold “Hal” and Julia Moore for ...
COLUMBUS, Ga. (WTVM) - A pedestrian is dead after being struck by a vehicle in Columbus. The incident happened in the 1000 block of Fort Benning Road on January 30 in Columbus.
Fort Benning sits at the southern end of I-185, and the end of the highway is actually the main gate to the installation. Aside from Columbus, people typically live in Fort Mitchell, AL or Phenix ...
COLUMBUS, Ga. (WRBL) — Fort Benning commander Maj. Gen. Patrick Donahoe’s message to a Greater Columbus Chamber of Commerce gathering Friday morning was simple.
Fort Moore, a massive training base near Columbus, Ga. was originally named after pro-slavery and pro-secession Confederate general Henry Benning. It opened in 1918.