Ojo del Oso, in Spanish, was a Navajo place visited for good grazing and water.
19th century
1849 A hay camp was set up near Seboyeta, New Mexico and was called Fort Wingate. It was named for Major Benjamin Wingate, 5th U.S. Infantry, who died on 1 June 1862 from wounds he received during the Battle of Valverde.
1860 Fort Fauntleroy was established at Bear Springs as an outpost of Fort Defiance. General Thomas T. Fauntleroy named the fort for himself.
*1861 Fort Fauntleroy was renamed Fort Lyon for Brig. Gen. Nathaniel Lyon, a Unionist, when Fauntleroy left New Mexico to join the Confederacy. Fort Lyon was closed on 10 September 1861 at the start of the Civil War.
1862 Fort Wingate was moved near a large spring at San Rafael, New Mexico, also known as "Bikyaya" or "El Gallo". It was designed to house four companies of troops.
*1864 Edward Canby ordered Colonel Kit Carson to bring four companies of the First New Mexico Volunteers to the fort to "control" the Navajo.
* 1864-1866 It was the staging point for the Navajo deportation known as the Long Walk of the Navajo.
*1865 The New Mexico Military District had 3,089 troops, 135 of them at Fort Wingate.
1868 Fort Wingate was moved back to the former site of Fort Lyon at Ojo del Oso.
*1868 Navajo people returning from Bosque Redondo were temporarily settled at the Oso Del Ojo Fort Wingate before spreading out into the newly established Navajo Reservation.
*1873-1886 The fort's troops participated in Apache Wars with troops and recruited Navajo Scouts.
*1878 Fort Wingate had 137 troops.
, a Medal of Honor recipient, posed with his favorite horse, Blue, in front of his quarters.''
*1868-1895 Fort Wingate troops often settled disagreements between Navajo and "citizens" in New Mexico.
*1891 Fort Wingate troops assisted Arizona units against angry Hopis.
20th century
1907 Two troops of the 5th Cavalry went from Fort Wingate to the Four Corners area after some armed Navajo. This was the last armed expedition the US Government made against the Navajo. One Navajo was killed and the rest escaped.
1911 A Ft. Wingate company of cavalry went to Chaco Canyon and camped there several days to quell a possible uprising by Navajo.
1914 During the Mexican Civil War over 2,000 Mexican soldiers and their families took refuge at the fort.
1918 Fort Wingate focus turned from Navajo to World War I.
1940 Fort Wingate became an ammunition depot from World War II until 1993.
1944 Fort Wingate supplied 100 tons of Composition B high explosives to the Manhattan Project for use in the first Trinity test.
As of 2016, FWDA spread across 21,131 acres, occupied 15,280 acres of land and a BRAC acreage of 14,666.
Environmental cleanup and land transfer to the surrounding community continues to the present, through at least 2022. 5,854 acres have already been transferred to the Department of Interior. Explosives, perchlorates and nitrates are the primary contaminant in the northern groundwater plumes which have not migrated off-post, all other sites consist of relatively minor soil or building contamination without groundwater issues but with explosives, SVOCs, and metals like lead.
Famous U.S. military figures
Several famous military commanders cycled through Fort Wingate's history.
Lt. Charles B. Gatewood led many patrols out of Wingate and later convinced Geronimo to surrender