Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant, formerly known as the Louisiana Ordnance Plant or as The Shell Plant, is an inactive 14,974-acre (60.60 km 2) plant to load, assemble and pack ammunitions items. During production from 1942 to 1994, the Army disposed of untreated explosives-laden wastewater in on-site lagoons, contaminating soil, sediments ...
War Department Supply Manual ORD-11 SNL Group T (Small Arms Ammunition) Department of the Army Supply Bulletin SB 9-AMM5 Ammunition Identification Code (AIC) Department of the Army Supply Manual SM 9-5-1305, Stock List of Current Issue Items, Ammunition and Explosives, AMMUNITION – THROUGH 30 MILLIMETER, Federal Supply Class 1305, April 1958.
Pages in category "Military installations in Louisiana" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. ... Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant;
LOP Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant (1942–1996) – Doyline, Webster Parish, Louisiana, USA. LS Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant (1941–2009) – Texarkana , Texas, USA. M Milwaukee Ordnance Plant (August 1942 to December 1943) – Milwaukee, Wisconsin : Operated by US Rubber Co.
HW Hawthorne Army Ammunition Plant (HWAAP) [1977-1995] / Hawthorne Army Depot (HWAD) [1996–Present] - Hawthorne. LC Lake City Army Ammunition Plant - Independence, Missouri, USA: a sub-contractor owned by Alliant Techsystems (ATK). LOP Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant (1942–1996) - Doyline, Webster Parish, Louisiana, USA. LS Lone Star Army ...
The biggest news from the bill for Louisiana is the money appropriated for four bases, totaling $276 million in funds for construction. The bill would alloc (The Center Square) — The U.S. fiscal ...
Underwater dump sites off the Los Angeles coast contain World War II-era munitions including anti-submarine weapons and smoke devices, marine researchers announced Friday. A survey of the known ...
Robert F. Broussard, United States Senator from Louisiana, urged Quartermaster General of the United States Army Henry Granville Sharpe to consider New Orleans as a location for a new supply depot to equip Gulf Coast military regiments that had formed in response to the 1917 outbreak of World War I. [2] Construction was completed in 1919, making it one of thirteen Army supply depots in the ...