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  1. Tiger Village was the large training village on Peason Ridge where thousands of infantry recruits took Advanced Infantry Training (AIT) at Fort Polk, La. during the Vietnam War. It was a fortified village that trainees had to attack and capture during training.

  2. Vietnam Era. In 1962, Fort Polk began converting to an infantry training center. A small portion of Fort Polk is filled with dense, jungle-like vegetation, and this helped commanders prepare their units for battle in Southeast Asia. This training area became known as Tigerland.

  3. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › TigerlandTigerland - Wikipedia

    Tigerland was the name of a U.S. Army training camp during the mid-1960s to early 1970s, located at Fort Polk, Louisiana as part of the U.S. Army Advanced Infantry Training Center.

  4. Close Combat Course, Ft. Polk (1965) We spent our fifth week on bivouac, during which time we learned such things as how to make tents by combining two of our ponchos, and how to dig a foxhole according to army regulations, which included digging a grenade stump in the bottom corner of the hole.

  5. An open group for veterans who experienced Tigerland at Fort Polk, LA. Tigerland was the part of Fort Polk where U.S. Army soldiers were trained infantry tactics. Those who successfully completed...

  6. May 10, 2010 · Fort Polk was home to Tigerland, an advanced infantry training center during the Vietnam War, from 1962-1973. This period of Fort Polk's history was recounted in the 2004 movie...

  7. Jul 28, 2014 · A recent report from the Department of the Army details proposed personnel reductions at several installations. In a worst-case scenario, Fort Polk could lose up to 6,500 of its current...

  8. May 24, 2001 · Tigerland: Directed by Joel Schumacher. With Colin Farrell, Matthew Davis, Clifton Collins Jr., Tom Guiry. A group of recruits go through Advanced Infantry Training at Fort Polk, Louisiana's infamous Tigerland, last stop before Vietnam for tens of thousands of young men in 1971.

  9. Yes, Louisiana. And it was a place called Tiger Land at Fort Polk. As America began to send large numbers of troops into Vietnam in 1965, infantry training centers began to train infantrymen for combat. As recruits arrived at Fort Polk, Louisiana they found a hot, humid, dusty, muddy, post where tough basic and advanced training was given.

  10. This mission was to begin training new infantry recruits and to give them intensive Advanced Infantry Training (AIT) in preparation for war, whether in Europe or in the jungles of Southeast Asia. As the draft intensified, literally thousands of recruits were bused into Fort Polk.

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