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the home for disabled soldiers.; annual report of the board of managers no charitable institution inthe country conducted at so smallan expense. share full article. april 19, 1875.
Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, National Asylum for. Send any friend a story. As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share.
Officially it was the Pacific Branch of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. Locals knew it simply as the Sawtelle Soldiers’ Home.Either way, the complex, part of a national chain ...
The barracks at what was called the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers at Togus are depicted on a postcard from the early 1900s. Courtesy of the Kennebec Historical Society.
May 2, 1888: Unwilling to put up with another cold East Coast winter, a Civil War veteran, Pvt. George Davis of New York became the first ex-soldier to arrive at the new National Home for Disabled ...
That last effort, called "Veterans Villages," recalls the old Danville Branch, National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, known locally as the Soldiers Home.
A grotto surrounded by acres of elegantly landscaped gardens was a sanctuary for soldiers and a focal point of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. The home, now known as the Dayton ...
The Dayton National Cemetery opened in 1867 as a burial site on the grounds of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers on Dayton’s west side. It now contains more than 51,000 graves ...
The cemetery is part of the Northwestern Branch-National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers National Historic Landmark district, designated on June 6, 2011.