
The 1st Cavalry Division — the ‘First Team’ — was born on horseback in 1921, patrolling the West Texas border, and did not give up its last horses until 1943. In 1972, with the cavalry long since riding tanks and helicopters, the division re-formed a small mounted unit at Fort Hood to keep the old heritage alive. Today the Horse Cavalry Detachment musters forty troopers and a string of dark bay horses, plus mules, a supply wagon, and an old field cannon. Its riders earn their spurs and their Stetsons, drill from the 1883 manual, and carry the division's motto wherever they parade: live the legend, and the legend is on horseback. Once a week the detachment opens its mounted drill to the public, and the crowd that gathers to watch the sabre charges is rarely small.
Then the Army arrived, and everything changed at once. In 1942, with the country at war, the War Department chose the open country west of town for a vast new training base — Camp Hood — where soldiers learned to destroy tanks. Some three hundred farming and ranching families were given little time to sell up and move off land their people had worked for generations. At its wartime peak the camp held tens of thousands of troops. Almost overnight, a sleepy cotton town found itself at the edge of one of the largest military installations in the United States.
Why People Visit Killeen
Killeen balances military storylines with relaxed outdoor time. Visitors pair the cavalry museum and the mounted drill with lakeside picnics and easy park days, then round it off with a Korean meal in one of the city's many family-run spots. It is practical, family-friendly, and close to the water, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces. History and everyday culture sit side by side here in a welcoming way.