The outline of the camp's plan was made by W. Morgan Schuster, secretary of the Bureau of Public Instruction on January 18, 1908.
[3] The camp opened as a training center and vacation site for teachers and employees of the Insular government a few months later on April 6, 1908.
[3] The PMA also moved backed to Camp Allen within the same year prior to transferring to Fort Gregorio del Pilar in 1950.
[5] On January 1, 1971, the Pangasinan Police Academy (now the Cordillera Administrative Region Training Center) moved in to Teachers Camp.
[9] In 2008, renovations were made on the Teachers Camp's seminar halls and cottages which were completed as part of the facility's centenary.
The center hosts classrooms, dormitories, cottages, dining areas, assembly halls and administrative offices.
[6] The Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) also maintains their own facilities within the Teachers Camp, including an athletic oval.
[14][15] From 1976 to 1989, track and field athletes under the government initiated, Gintong Alay sports program trained at Teachers Camp.