Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, 17 July 1994 [97] 95th Evacuation Hospital. Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, 3 December 1945 [98] ... 801st Station Hospital, Fort Sheridan, ...
Fort Leonard Wood is a U.S. Army training installation located in the Missouri Ozarks.The main gate is located on the southern boundary of the city of St. Robert.The post was created in December 1940 and named in honor of General Leonard Wood (former Chief of Staff) in January 1941.
The 61st Surgical Hospital was a 100-bed field hospital. It was converted in 1942 to a 400-bed semi-mobile evacuation hospital with a staff of 40 doctors, 43 nurses, and 6 administrative officers and organized as the 93rd Evacuation Hospital (Motorized).
Pulaski County's earliest settlers were the Quapaw, Missouria and Osage Native Americans. After the Lewis and Clark Expedition of the early 19th century, white settlers came to the area, many from Kentucky, Tennessee and the Carolinas; the earliest pioneers appeared to have settled as early as 1818, and the town of Waynesville was designated the county seat by the Missouri Legislature in 1833.
Fort Leavenworth: Kansas Fort Leonard Wood: Missouri Fort Lewis: Washington Located between Olympia and Tacoma, Washington. www.fortlewispowcamp.com Fort McClellan: Alabama Calhoun County: Fort Meade: Maryland Fort Meade housed about 4,000 German and Italian World War II POWs. Thirty-three German POWs and two Italian POWs are now interred in ...
The body of a missing U.S. Army Sgt. Sarah Roque of Ligonier, Ind., was found in a dumpster on Oct.21, 2024 at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri and a person of interest has been arrested in ...
South of Interstate 44, Highway 17 hugs the western edge of Fort Leonard Wood, passes near Laquey, and circles south of the post until it runs out of the county and eventually joins Highway 32 in Roby. Highway T which runs north from Highway 17 at Waynesville to Swedeborg, where it meets and ends at Highway 133 about halfway between Richland ...
The separation document of Burt Lancaster, one of the publicly accessible records at the National Archives. The burned edges are the result of the 1973 fire. The losses to federal military records collection included: 80% loss to records of U.S. Army personnel discharged November 1, 1912, to January 1, 1960; [2]