Camp Wallace (Tex.)
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Camp Wallace, Galveston County, Texas, was designed as a training center for antiaircraft units in World War II.
It was formally opened on February 1, 1941, and named for Col. Elmer J. Wallace of the Fifty-ninth Coast Artillery, who was fatally wounded in the Meuse-Argonne offensive of 1918. For two years Camp Wallace served as an antiaircraft replacement-training center. On April 15, 1944, the camp was officially transferred to the United States Navy as a naval training and distribution center and was used as a boot camp. After the war it became the Naval Personnel Separation Center. It was declared surplus in 1946.
From the description of Camp Wallace (Tex.) World War II Collection, 1943 (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 699494927
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | Camp Wallace (Tex.). Camp Wallace (Tex.) World War II Collection, 1943 | University of Texas Libraries |
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Relation | Name |
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associatedWith | Aldridge, Grady C. |
associatedWith | Almand, Harold E. |
associatedWith | Barribeau, Norman |
associatedWith | Beckwith, Jr., Oscar |
associatedWith | Cody, Clinton Boyd |
associatedWith | Earrington, Quinton V. |
associatedWith | Edwards, Howard H. |
associatedWith | Evans, Grady C. |
associatedWith | Fritch, Jr., Eugene L. |
associatedWith | Fuller, William L. |
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Camp Wallace (Tex.)
Camp Wallace (Tex.) | Title |
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