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Camp Thomas A. Scott, located in Fort Wayne, Indiana, was a Railway Operating Battalion training center for the Pennsylvania Railroad from 1942 to 1944 and a prisoner of war camp during World War II. It was named for Thomas A. Scott , who served as the fourth president of the Pennsylvania Railroad from 1874 to 1880.
Fort Wayne, Indiana: Along the St. Marys River [38] Indianapolis: downtown Indianapolis [39] Bernalillo County, New Mexico: Parts of International District [40] Camp Hope, Las Cruces, New Mexico [41] Minneapolis, Minnesota: 2020 Minneapolis homeless encampments on park property [42] [43] Ogden, Utah
Sixteen of the men were killed or died as a result of an accident on 31 October 1945. Fort Devens: Massachusetts Devens: One of first camps (3) designated for de-Nazification: Camp Campbell and Camp McCain, Mississippi. [8] Fort Dix: New Jersey Harry Girth escaped in June 1946 and surrendered to authorities in New York City in 1953. Fort DuPont ...
Aug. 4—HENDERSON — After 15 years of serving some of Henderson's homeless population, the Men's Shelter at First Presbyterian Church, 222 Young Street, is hoping to move and expand. The ...
A homeless father of five from Michigan is having trouble finding a place for him and his family to stay, amid the lack of shelters that take men with children, WJBK reports. Joseph Cantu, of ...
Fort Wayne is a city in and the county seat of Allen County, Indiana, United States. [10] Located in northeastern Indiana, the city is 18 miles (29 km) west of the Ohio border [11] and 50 miles (80 km) south of the Michigan border. [12]
The Beaux-Arts architecture-style structure includes such features as four 25-by-45-foot (7.6 m × 13.7 m) murals by Charles Holloway, twenty-eight different kinds of scagliola covering 15,000 square feet (1,400 m 2), bas-reliefs and art glass.
Historic Fort Wayne, seen here in 2014, is a recreation of the 1815 garrison. Fort Wayne was a series of three successive military log stockades existing between 1794 and 1819 on the confluence between the St. Mary's and St. Joseph Rivers in northeastern Indiana, in what is now the city of Fort