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The Mountain Branch, National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers was an old soldiers' home opened in 1904 in Mountain Home, Johnson City, Tennessee.Its site has since been taken over by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, and is home to the Mountain Home National Cemetery and the James H. Quillen VA Center.
Battle Mountain Sanitarium in Hot Springs, South Dakota. The National Asylum for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers was established on March 3, 1865, in the United States by Congress to provide care for volunteer soldiers who had been disabled through loss of limb, wounds, disease, or injury during service in the Union forces in the American Civil War.
Folksinger Jim Ratts read some of Service's poetry for his 1993 studio album, "Buckwheat at Your Service: The Readings of Robert Service." Raven Records RVNCD9303. The Canadian whisky Yukon Jack incorporated various excerpts of his writings in their ads in the 1970s, one of which was the first four lines of his poem “The Men Who Don't Fit In”.
National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; Battle Mountain Sanitarium; National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Marion Branch; Mountain Branch, National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; Northwestern Branch, National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers Historic District; Naval Square, Philadelphia; New York State Veterans' Home ...
Veterans Memorial Home, Menlo Park, New Jersey [62] Home for Disabled Soldiers, Newark, New Jersey [63] Veterans Memorial Home, Vineland, New Jersey [64] New York State Soldiers' and Sailors' Home a.k.a. Bath Branch National Military Home, Bath, New York [37] State Women's Relief Corps Home a.k.a. New York State Veterans Home, Oxford, New York [65]
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During the late 1920s and 1930s, instances of lines from the poem on markers throughout national cemeteries were removed, leaving only fourteen with "Bivouac of the Dead" verses on tablets. In 2001, the National Cemetery Administration began returning the first stanza to any national cemetery in which the poem is missing. [ 2 ]
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