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  2. Military Personnel Records Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_Personnel_Records...

    In 2011, the Military Personnel Records Center moved to a new facility in Spanish Lake, Missouri. Beginning in 2015, the designation "Military Personnel Records Center" was dropped from most official correspondence, with the military records building in Spanish Lake thereafter referred to as the "National Personnel Records Center".

  3. John T. Hughes (Confederate officer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_T._Hughes...

    John T. Hughes (July 25, 1817 – August 11, 1862) was a Confederate military officer who served as a colonel in the Missouri State Guard and Confederate Army during the American Civil War. He might also have been a brigadier general at the time of his death but documentation of the appointment is lacking. [1]

  4. National Personnel Records Center fire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Personnel_Records...

    The National Personnel Records Center fire of 1973, [1] also known as the 1973 National Archives fire, was a fire that occurred at the Military Personnel Records Center (MPRC) in the St. Louis suburb of Overland, Missouri, from July 12–16, 1973. The fire destroyed some 16 million to 18 million official U.S. military personnel records.

  5. National Personnel Records Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Personnel_Records...

    The National Personnel Records Center(s) (NPRC) is an agency of the National Archives and Records Administration, created in 1966. It is part of the United States National Archives federal records center system and is divided into two large Federal Records Centers located in St. Louis, Missouri, and Valmeyer, Illinois.

  6. List of Missouri Confederate Civil War units - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Missouri...

    At the Battle of Pea Ridge in March 1862, Price commanded a mixed force that contained both Confederate soldiers from Missouri and elements of the Missouri State Guard. [5] By July 1862, almost all of the Missouri State Guard had left the unit to join Confederate States Army units. [6] The list of Missouri Union Civil War units is shown separately.

  7. Missouri State Guard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missouri_State_Guard

    The Missouri General Assembly passed the "Military Bill" on May 11, 1861, in direct response to the Camp Jackson Affair in St. Louis the previous day. The final version of the act approved on May 14 authorized the Governor of Missouri, Claiborne Fox Jackson, to disband the old Missouri Volunteer Militia and reform it as the Missouri State Guard to resist a feared invasion by the Union Army.

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