Troop Support Subsistence Prime Vendor Program

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Troop Support Subsistence Prime Vendor Program PRIME VENDORS • DLA Troop Support • Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support Subsistence Prime Vendor Program prime vendor agrees to provide customers a broad range of price advantages and ordering efficiency for customers. Afood-related items under either a standardized or custom- All contract dollar values are the best current estimates. ized catalog that contains a listing of items requested by the For those original contracts that have expired, a “bridge con- customers. Each prime vendor contract requires a level of supply tract” was awarded to sustain customer food support while new availability (fill rate), provisions for surge support and provides follow-on solicitations and proposal evaluations are underway. Note: Several prime vendors listed here hold multiple contracts. There are instances within a contract where separate catalogs Defense Logistics Agency have been established due to variations in offerings. For example, food products and produce are in separate catalogs, in Troop Support the areas and for the bases and facilities enumerated. The locations listed may include more than one supported activity - for 700 Robbins Ave. instance, child development centers (CDCs) or youth centers - which are not always separately identified. All contract values Philadelphia, Pa. 19111-5092 shown here are the best current estimates, updated as of (month, day, year). All contract values shown here are the best current (215) 737-2000 estimates, updated as of August 2016. Fax: (215) 737-2228 All DSN numbers: 444-xxxx through March 4, 2017, est. $1.1 million) www.troopsupport.dla.mil WEST REGION (15 Prime Vendors) Solicitations Pending Award Locations Served: Montana (Zone 1) — Malmstrom AFB, Commander Alaska: SPM300-14-R-0002 Mont. (Elkhorn DFAC, Central Distribution Site, CDC, Youth Brig. Gen. Charles R. Texas/New Mexico: SPE300-15-R-0010 Center); Montana National Guard, Anaconda Job Corps Center Hamilton, USA (215) 737-2300 1. US FOODS NORTH DAKOTA (DBA GFG 3. REINHART INSTITUTIONAL FOODS Deputy Commander FOODSERVICE) Richard Ellis 6720 N. 9th St. (215) 737-2308 4601 32nd Ave. South Omaha, Neb. 68112 Grand Forks, N.D. 58201-3302 Contact: Stephanie Hart 402-457-3671 Executive Director, 3500 Saratoga Drive [email protected] Contracting and Acquisition Bismarck, N.D. 58051 Management Contract Number: SPM300-14-D-3682; SPM300-13-D-3645; William Kenny 800-762-1591 SPM300-08-D-3072; SPM300-08-D-3277 (Admin Produce); (215) 737-2304 Contact: Kelsi Brorby 701-795-5454 SPM300-10-D-3352 (Bridge Contract); SPM300-11-D-3353 [email protected] (Bridge Contract). Contract Number: SPE300-14-D-3026 Award Value: $1.2 million SUBSISTENCE SUPPLY CHAIN Award Value: $4.6 million (24-month base period, $4.6 https://www.dla.mil/ Award Date: March 7, 2014 (March 2, 2016: First 12-month TroopSupport/Subsistence/ million; 12-month option period one, $2.3 million; 24-month option exercised for March 6, 2016, through March 4, 2017, option period two, $4.6 million.) est. $600,000.) Director of Subsistence Award Date: Aug. 22, 2014 Locations Served: Iowa, Nebraska (Zone 3) — Offutt AFB, Capt. Chris Mosher, SC, USN Locations Served: North Dakota (Zone 4) — Minot AFB, N.D. (215) 737-2900 Neb.; 155th ARW ANG Nebraska; 132nd Fighter Wing FSS, (Dakota Inn, Flight Kitchen, CDC); Grand Forks, AFB N.D. Iowa; 185th Refueling Wing ANG, Iowa; 114th Fighter Wing Deputy Director of (Airey Dining Hall, CDC); 119th Fighter Wing, Fargo, N.D. ANG Sioux Falls, S.D.; Nebraska National Guard GreenLief Subsistence Training Site, Neb. Richard Faso (215) 737-2904 2. SYSCO FOOD SERVICES OF MONTANA 1509 Monad Rd. 4. US FOODS INC. SUBSISTENCE CUSTOMER Billings, Mont. 59101 4601 32nd Ave. OPERATIONS DIRECTORATE Contact: Rianna Forshee 406-247-1996 South Grand Forks, N.D. 58201 [email protected] 701-795-6000 Director, Customer Contract Number: SPE300-14-D-3681; SPE300-14-D-3016; Operations - Subsistence Contact: Kelsi Brorby 701-795-5454 John Sheehan SPE300-14-D-3004; SPM300-13-D-3635; SPM300-08-D-3073; Contract Number: SPE300-14-D-3027 (215) 737-2952 SPM300-08-D-3260 (Admin Produce); SPM300-10-D-3346 Award Value: $2,400,000 (Two-year base period; one-year, (Bridge Contract); SPM300-11-D-3447 (Bridge Contract). Option 1; two-year, Option 2) (Option 1 exercised Aug. 2, Award Value: $2,200,000 (One, 24-month base period 2016, for the period Aug. 7, 2016, through Aug. 5, 2017, SUBSISTENCE SUPPLIER effective March 9, 2014, until March 5, 2016; 12-month OPERATIONS DIRECTORATE est. $1.2 million.) option period one, est. $1.1 million, extends performance Award Date: Aug. 8, 2014 Director, Supplier from March 6, 2016, through March 4, 2017; 24-month Locations Served: South Dakota (Zone 2) — Ellsworth AFB Operations - Subsistence option period two, est. $2.2 million.) (Bandit Inn DFAC, Flight Kitchen, CDC, Youth Center, Dakota Gina Vasquez Award Date: March 7, 2014 (Option One exercised March (215) 737-2902 Club, lodging) 3, 2016, extends the performance period to March 6, 2016, —Continued GOVERNMENT FOOD SERVICE • SEPTEMBER 2016 PRIME VENDORS • DLA Troop Support • Subsistence Prime Vendor CONUS Locations SYSCO Kent, WA US FOODS SYSCO SYSCO Grand Forks, ND Westbrook, ME SYSCO Post Falls, ID Wilsonville, OR SYSCO RENZI BROS. Billings, MT Watertown, NY SYSCO HARTFORD PROVISION Boise, ID S. Windsor, CT SYSCO Baraboo, WI POCONO PROFOODS Stroudsburg, PA REINHART NICHOLAS Omaha, NE US FOODS Salt Lake City, UT Severn, MD SHAMROCK SYSCO Commerce Pocomoke City, MD City, CO SYSCO SYSCO SYSCO Suffolk, VA US FOODS Olathe, KS Louisville, KY Livermore, CA US FOODS REINHART US FOODS US FOODS Salem, MO Zebulon, NC N. Las Vegas, NV Bowling Green, KY SYSCO Selma, NC US FOODS US FOODS US FOODS SYSCO Lexington, SC La Mirada, CA Oklahoma City, OK Little Rock, AR US FOODS Phoenix, AZ SYSCO Calera, AL REINHART Valdosta, GA MERCHANTS SYSCO Hattiesburg, MS US FOODS LABATT New Braunfels, TX Port Orange, FL San Antonio, TX SYSCO Ocoee, FL 5. US FOODS Award Date: Jan. 24, 2014 (24 months through Feb. 8, 3, 2015, to Feb. 2, 2017; and one 24-month option 1685 West Cheyenne Ave. 2016, with a 24-month option period.) (The 24-month period, Feb. 3, 2017, to Feb. 2, 2019.) North Las Vegas, Nev. 89032-7764 option period exercised on Feb. 4, 2016, extends Locations Served: Arizona, California — NAB Coronado Contact: Toni Cole 702-636-3310 performance from Feb. 9, 2016, to Feb. 3, 2018, est. Galley, Calf.; NALF San Clemente Galley, Calf.; Naval [email protected] $1.9 million.) Station Galley SD, Calif.; Naval Medical Ctr., SD, Calif.; Contract Number: SPE300-14-D-3037; SPE300- Locations Served: Utah — Hill AFB, Utah (Fast Eddies ASWTC Point Loma, Calif.; Marine Corp Recruit Depot, 14-D-3021 (Bridge Contract); SPM300-13-D-3660 Flight Kitchen, Oasis DFAC, CDCs) Utah Air National SD, Calif. (Mess Hall, Recruit Mess Hall, Food Service (Bridge Contract); SPM300-08-D-3123; SPM300- Guard; Utah Army National Guard Office); MCAS Miramar, Calif. (Mess Hall); Naval 10-D-3388 (Bridge Contract). Brig Miramar, Calif.; LAX Yth. Ctr., San Pedro, Calif.; Award Value: $17,108,775 Yuma Mess Hall, Ariz.; IMEF at Yuma, Ariz.; Camp Award Date: Sept. 3, 2014 (22-month base period 7. US FOODS LOS ANGELES (LA MIRADA Pendleton, Calif. (ACU-5, I MEF, Mess Halls, Hospital, includes 30-days implementation period, Sept. 30, DIVISION) Fleet Hospital); Twentynine Palms, Calif. (Mess Halls, 2014, through Sept. 3, 2016; one 12-month option 15155 Northam Street Field Unit, Naval Hospital, CDC); Edwards AFB, Calif. period, Sept. 4, 2016, through Sept. 2, 2017; and La Mirada, Calif. 90638-5754 (DFAC, CDC); Fort Irwin, Calif. (TISA, DFACs); IMEF at one 24-month option period, Sept. 3, 2017, through 847-720-2722 Bridgeport, Calif. (Mess Hall); NAS Lemoore Galley, Aug. 31, 2019. 714-670-3500 Calif.; Fresno ANG, Calif.; Vandenberg AFB, Calif. Locations Served: Nevada — Nellis AFB, Nev.; Mike Contact: Edith Contreras (ext. 1798) (DFAC, CDC, Youth Center); Port Hueneme Galley, O’Callaghan Federal Hospital, Nellis AFB, Nev.; Creech [email protected] Calif.; ANG Channel Islands, Calif.; San Nicholas Island AFB, Indian Springs, Nev.; Dept. of Energy/Nevada Contract Number: SPE300-15-D-3127; SPE300- Galley, Calif.; LAX CDC, Calif.; Long Beach Job Corps, Test Site, Nev.; Various Marine Reserves Units 15-D-3124 (Dec. 6, 2014, through Feb. 7, 2015); Calif.; USCG San Pedro, Calif.; El Centro Detention SPE300-14-D-3038 (Bridge Contract); SPM300- Center, Calif. 13-D-3700 (Bridge Contract); SPM300-12-D-3567 6. NICHOLAS AND COMPANY (Bridge Contract); SPM300-11-D-3472 (Bridge Contract); 5520 Harold Gatty Drive SPM300-06-D-3206). Salt Lake City, Utah 84116 Award Value: $245,716,983.24 Contact: Jake Box 801-530-5180 Award Date: Dec. 5, 2014 (A two-month Contract Number: SPM300-14-D-3710 implementation period beginning with the award date and ending Feb. 2, 2015; a 24-month base period, Feb. Award Value: $1.9 million ($3.8 million with option) —Continued GOVERNMENT FOOD SERVICE • SEPTEMBER 2016 PRIME VENDORS • DLA Troop Support • 8. US FOODS LOS ANGELES (LA MIRADA Bay, Calif.; USCGC Sherman; USCGC Morgenthau; 12. SYSCO SPOKANE INC. DIVISION) USCGC Walnut; USCGC Boutwell; USCGC Aspen; 300 N. Baugh Way 15155 Northam Street USCGC Munro; USCGC Alert; USCGC Waesche; USCG Post Falls, Idaho 83854-5224 La Mirada, Calif. 90638-5754 Center Stratton; Coast Guard Island, Alameda, Calif.; 208-777-9511 847-720-2722 USCG Center Aspen, San Francisco, Calif.; NOAA Contact: Andrea Williams 208-777-6224 714-670-3500 Miller Freeman Ship; NOAA Bell Shimada Ship [email protected] Contact: Edith Contreras (ext. 1798) Alternate Contact: Jim Thiel 208-777-6232 [email protected] [email protected] Contract Number: SPE300-15-D-3107 10.
Recommended publications
  • Coast Guard Festival
    the QUARTERDECK LOG Membership publication of the Coast Guard Combat Veterans Association. Publishes quarterly— Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter. Not sold on a subscription basis. The Coast Guard Combat Veterans Association is a Non-Profit Association of Active Duty, Retired, Reserve and Honorably Discharged Former Members of the United States Coast Guard who served in, or provided direct support to, combat situations recognized by an appropriate military award while serving as a member of the United States Coast Guard. Volume 33, Number 3 Fall 2018 USS SERPENS (AK 97) SUNK BY ENEMY ACTION OR THROUGH ACCIDENT THE SINGLE LARGEST LOSS OF COAST GUARD PERSONNEL OF ANY WAR In This Issue: On Monday, January 29, 1945, the USS SERPENS (AK 97), Cover Story Pages 1, 8-10 an EC-2 Liberty-type vessel, blew up at 2318 local time while From The President Page 2, 3 moored at Berth Number 24, Lunga Point, Guadalcanal, From the Vice President Page 4 British Solomon Islands. 197 Coast Guardsmen, six Army and From the Secretary/Treasurer Page 5 one Public Health Service personnel lost their lives as the Auxiliary News Page 6-7 result of the explosion, the single largest loss of Coast Guard Convention information Pages 12-17 personnel of any war. First believed that the sinking was from Notices & Association News Pages 18-24 Featured Articles Pages 25-28 enemy action, it was later concluded that the explosion was Sea Stories Page 29 possibly the result of the rough handling of high explosive Ship’s Store Page 30 cargo. There remains unanswered questions that have some CGCVA Membership Form Inside back-cover rethinking this decision.
    [Show full text]
  • A Resource INSTITUTION Army Public Affairs, Washin
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 299 182 SO 019 306 TITLE Bicentennial of the Constitution: A Resource Guide. INSTITUTION Army Public Affairs, Washington, DC. PUB DATE 88 NOTE 168p.; Appendixes contain some marginally legible material. AVAILABLE FROMSuperintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. PUB TYPE Guides Classroom Use Guides (For Teachers) (052) Guides - Non-Classroom Use (055) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC07 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Constitutional History; Legislators; *Program Content; Resource Units; Songs; United States History IDENTIFIERS Army; Art Reproductions; *Bicentennial; Eighteenth Century; Military Curriculum Materials; Military History; *United States Constitution; Washington (George) ABSTRACT This guide contains resources gathered by the Department of the Army to celebrate the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. Within the document, there are brief historical facts about: (1) the Constitutional Convention; (2) the early years of the Constitutional government; and (3) the U.S. Army of the 1780s and 1790s. There are also condensed versions of 23 soldier/statesmen pamphlets, five speeches on the U.S. Constitution, and statements and quotations on civilian control, national security, and George Washington. The appendices contain: (1) the complete text of the U.S. Constitution and its amendments; (2) popular 18th century songs with music and lyrics; (3) an ARNEWS artwork supplement of artwork and drawings; (4) a chronology of events from 1783 to 1803; and (5) a 10-page list of resources for teaching about the U.S. Constitution. (DJC) XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document. X XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 11'04P:roll."'"fr!!:1,7 .. ... Rohr.. Lsmnm..
    [Show full text]
  • Coast Guard Awards CIM 1560 25D(PDF)
    Medals and Awards Manual COMDTINST M1650.25D MAY 2008 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK. Commandant 1900 Half Street, S.W. United States Coast Guard Washington, DC 20593-0001 Staff Symbol: CG-12 Phone: (202) 475-5222 COMDTINST M1650.25D 5 May 2008 COMMANDANT INSTRUCTION M1625.25D Subj: MEDALS AND AWARDS MANUAL 1. PURPOSE. This Manual publishes a revision of the Medals and Awards Manual. This Manual is applicable to all active and reserve Coast Guard members and other Service members assigned to duty within the Coast Guard. 2. ACTION. Area, district, and sector commanders, commanders of maintenance and logistics commands, Commander, Deployable Operations Group, commanding officers of headquarters units, and assistant commandants for directorates, Judge Advocate General, and special staff offices at Headquarters shall ensure that the provisions of this Manual are followed. Internet release is authorized. 3. DIRECTIVES AFFECTED. Coast Guard Medals and Awards Manual, COMDTINST M1650.25C and Coast Guard Rewards and Recognition Handbook, CG Publication 1650.37 are cancelled. 4. MAJOR CHANGES. Major changes in this revision include: clarification of Operational Distinguishing Device policy, award criteria for ribbons and medals established since the previous edition of the Manual, guidance for prior service members, clarification and expansion of administrative procedures and record retention requirements, and new and updated enclosures. 5. ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS/CONSIDERATIONS. Environmental considerations were examined in the development of this Manual and have been determined to be not applicable. 6. FORMS/REPORTS: The forms called for in this Manual are available in USCG Electronic Forms on the Standard Workstation or on the Internet: http://www.uscg.mil/forms/, CG Central at http://cgcentral.uscg.mil/, and Intranet at http://cgweb2.comdt.uscg.mil/CGFORMS/Welcome.htm.
    [Show full text]
  • A Closer Look at the Japanese American National Museum
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Departmental Papers (SPP) School of Social Policy and Practice February 2001 A Closer Look at the Japanese American National Museum Damon W. Freeman University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/spp_papers Recommended Citation Freeman, D. W. (2001). A Closer Look at the Japanese American National Museum. Retrieved from https://repository.upenn.edu/spp_papers/35 Reprinted from OAH Newsletter, Volume 29, Issue 1, 2001, 4 pages. Publisher URL: http://www.oah.org/pubs/nl/ NOTE: At the time of publication, author Damon Freeman was affiliated with Indiana University. Currently December 2006, he is a faculty member in the School of Social Policy and Practice at the University of Pennsylvania. This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/spp_papers/35 For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Closer Look at the Japanese American National Museum Abstract Los Angeles has prided itself as a city living on the edge, always setting the trend for the rest of America. Indeed, it became a magnet for many Americans fleeing Midwestern farms, southern plantations, Indian reservations, and east coast cities searching for a new life. Perhaps more than any other metropolis, L.A. is a city of neighborhoods defined by foreign immigration. One such neighborhood, Little Tokyo, has become the center of an effort to preserve the story of Japanese Americans. Comments Reprinted from OAH Newsletter, Volume 29, Issue 1, 2001, 4 pages. Publisher URL: http://www.oah.org/pubs/nl/ NOTE: At the time of publication, author Damon Freeman was affiliated with Indiana University.
    [Show full text]
  • Center for Public History
    Volume 8 • Number 2 • spriNg 2011 CENTER FOR PUBLIC HISTORY Oil and the Soul of Houston ast fall the Jung Center They measured success not in oil wells discovered, but in L sponsored a series of lectures the dignity of jobs well done, the strength of their families, and called “Energy and the Soul of the high school and even college graduations of their children. Houston.” My friend Beth Rob- They did not, of course, create philanthropic foundations, but ertson persuaded me that I had they did support their churches, unions, fraternal organiza- tions, and above all, their local schools. They contributed their something to say about energy, if own time and energies to the sort of things that built sturdy not Houston’s soul. We agreed to communities. As a boy, the ones that mattered most to me share the stage. were the great youth-league baseball fields our dads built and She reflected on the life of maintained. With their sweat they changed vacant lots into her grandfather, the wildcatter fields of dreams, where they coached us in the nuances of a Hugh Roy Cullen. I followed with thoughts about the life game they loved and in the work ethic needed later in life to of my father, petrochemical plant worker Woodrow Wilson move a step beyond the refineries. Pratt. Together we speculated on how our region’s soul—or My family was part of the mass migration to the facto- at least its spirit—had been shaped by its famous wildcat- ries on the Gulf Coast from East Texas, South Louisiana, ters’ quest for oil and the quest for upward mobility by the the Valley, northern Mexico, and other places too numerous hundreds of thousands of anonymous workers who migrat- to name.
    [Show full text]
  • BERNAL-THESIS-2020.Pdf (5.477Mb)
    BROWNWOOD: BAYTOWN’S MOST HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOOD by Laura Bernal A thesis submitted to the History Department, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in History Chair of Committee: Dr. Monica Perales Committee Member: Dr. Mark Goldberg Committee Member: Dr. Kristin Wintersteen University of Houston May 2020 Copyright 2020, Laura Bernal “A land without ruins is a land without memories – a land without memories is a land without history.” -Father Abram Joseph Ryan, “A Land Without Ruins” iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS First, and foremost, I want to thank God for guiding me on this journey. Thank you to my family for their unwavering support, especially to my parents and sisters. Thank you for listening to me every time I needed to work out an idea and for staying up late with me as I worked on this project. More importantly, thank you for accompanying me to the Baytown Nature Center hoping to find more house foundations. I am very grateful to the professors who helped me. Dr. Monica Perales, my advisor, thank you for your patience and your guidance as I worked on this project. Thank you to my defense committee, Dr. Kristin Wintersteen and Dr. Goldberg. Your advice helped make this my best work. Additionally, I would like to thank Dr. Debbie Harwell, who encouraged me to pursue this project, even when I doubted it its impact. Thank you to the friends and co-workers who listened to my opinions and encouraged me to not give up. Lastly, I would like to thank the people I interviewed.
    [Show full text]
  • SDSU Template, Version 11.1
    COAST GUARD PUBLIC AFFAIRS PROGRAM HISTORY: THE SEARCH FOR SYMMETRY _______________ A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of San Diego State University _______________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts in Communication _______________ by Matthew M. Kroll Spring 2017 iii Copyright © 2017 by Matthew M. Kroll All Rights Reserved iv DEDICATION I would like to dedicate this thesis to the men and women of the United States Coast Guard and their families. Specifically, those who continue to educate the public on the service’s value to our nation by documenting and sharing the heroic efforts of its members. Without these men and women, the accomplishments of the United States Coast Guard would be lost. The origins of this thesis come from the desire to tell the story of these storytellers. Thank you for sharing the United States Coast Guard with the world and for inspiring current and future service members v ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS Coast Guard Public Affairs Program History: The Search for Symmetry by Matthew M. Kroll Master of Arts in Communication San Diego State University, 2017 The origins and history of the United States Coast Guard public affairs program remain generally unknown in both the military and civilian public relations communities. This gap in the historical record contributes to the misunderstanding of what the Coast Guard public affairs program is and what it should provide for the service. Moreover, the combination of military and law enforcement missions complicates how the service implements its public affairs program. This research used qualitative methods to analyze past public affairs policy and organization to discover and construct the history of the Coast Guard public affairs program.
    [Show full text]
  • ASME National Historical Mechanical Engineering Landmark Program 1975
    Form No. 10-300 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOW TO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS NAME HISTORIC U.S.S. Texas AND/OR COMM Battleship Texas LOCATION -T& NUMBER San Jacinto Battleground State Park STREETea. &NUr "2? mi. east of Houston on Tex. 13* _NOTFORPUBL1CAT10N CITY, TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT VICINITY OF Houston STATE CODE COUNTY CODE Texas Harris 201 CLASSIFICATION CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE _DISTRICT —XPUBLIC .XOCCUPIED _AGRICULTURE X_MUSEUM _BUILDING(S) —PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED —COMMERCIAL _ PARK' —STRUCTURE . —BOTH —WORK IN PROGRESS .XEDUCATIONAL —PRIVATE RESIDENCE —SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS ^•.OBJECT _IN PROCESS .XYES: RESTRICTED —GOVERNMENT -^SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED — YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION —NO —MILITARY —OTHER: OWNER OF PROPERTY Contact: C.H. Taylor, Chairman NAME State of Texas, The Battleship Texas Commission STREET & NUMBER EXXON Building; Suite 2695 CITY, TOWN STATE Houston VICINITY OF Texas LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS,ETC. The Battleship Texas Commission STREET & NUMBER EXXON Building. Suite 26QR CITY, TOWN STATE Houston Texas REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE ASME National Historical Mechanical Engineering Landmark Program DATE 1975 —FEDERAL —STATE —COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS ASME United Engineering Center CITY. TOWN New York DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE —EXCELLENT —DETERIORATED —UNALTERED —ORIGINAL SITE X_GOOD —RUINS X_ALTERED X_MOVED DATE 1948 —FAIR — UNEXPOSED DESCRIBE THE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company built Texas (BB35) in 1911-14. Upon her completion she measured 573 feet long, was 94 3/4 feet wide at the beam, had a normal displacement of 27,000 tons and a mean draft of 28 1/2 feet, and boasted a top speed of 21 knots.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record United States Th of America PROCEEDINGS and DEBATES of the 106 CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION
    E PL UR UM IB N U U S Congressional Record United States th of America PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 106 CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION Vol. 146 WASHINGTON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2000 No. 115 Senate (Legislative day of Friday, September 22, 2000) The Senate met at 12 noon and was We offer our prayers from the dif- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The dis- called to order by the President pro ferent faith traditions in which we live, tinguished Senator from Nevada is rec- tempore [Mr. THURMOND]. and as a Christian I pray in Jesus' ognized. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. To- name. Amen. Mr. REID. I also enjoyed the prayer. day's prayer will be offered by our f f guest Chaplain, Dr. James D. Miller, First Presbyterian Church of Tulsa, PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE RESERVATION OF LEADER TIME OK. The Honorable PAT ROBERTS, a Sen- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under We are pleased to have you with us. ator from the State of Kansas, led the the previous order, leadership time is Pledge of Allegiance, as follows: reserved. PRAYER f The guest Chaplain, Dr. James D. I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the Miller, offered the following prayer: United States of America, and to the Repub- MORNING BUSINESS Let us pray together. lic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under Almighty God, who flings galaxies f the previous order, there will now be a into space, who plays with quarks and period for the transaction of morning quasarsÐhow stunning it is, as the RECOGNITION OF THE ACTING business not to extend beyond the hour prophet Isaiah puts it: that You call us MAJORITY LEADER of 2 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Modern History of Hawaiʻi
    MODERN HISTORY OF HAWAIʻI Anchor Standard Grades 9-12 Inquiry Standards The student demonstrates Therefore, the student is able to an understanding of Anchor Standard 1 Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.1.1 Developing Questions and Create compelling questions representing key ideas of the disciplines Planning Inquiries Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.1.2 Critique compelling questions that reflect an enduring issue in the field Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.1.3 Create supporting questions that address key ideas identified in compelling questions Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.1.4 Explain how new compelling and supporting questions emerge Anchor Standard 2 Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.2.1 Gathering and Evaluating Evaluate the credibility of a source by examining its origin, author, context, content, and corroborative value Sources Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.2.2 Gather relevant information from credible sources representing a wide range of views, and note any inconsistencies in the information Anchor Standard 3 Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.3.1 Creating Claims Develop claims and counterclaims using evidence that draws directly and substantively from multiple sources while pointing out the strengths and limitations of both Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.3.2 Analyze evidence to detect inconsistencies within the evidence in order to revise or strengthen claims Anchor Standard 4 Inquiry Standard SS.9-12.4.1 Communicating Construct arguments and explanations using sound reasoning, appropriate structure, and examples and Conclusions details while acknowledging counterclaims and evidentiary
    [Show full text]
  • Japanese Americans in World War Ii
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior National Historic Landmarks Program JAPANESE AMERICANS IN WORLD WAR II National Historic Landmarks Theme Study Cover photo Farm families of Japanese ancestry wait for a bus that will take them to the Tanforan Assembly Center, along with 595 others removed from the area near Centerville, California, under Civilian Exclusion Order No. 34. WRA photo by Dorothea Lange, May 9, 1942, courtesy of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration JAPANESE AMERICANS IN WORLD WAR II A National Historic Landmarks Theme Study Edited by Barbara Wyatt National Historic Landmarks Program Based in part on Confinement and Ethnicity by Jeffery F. Burton Mary M. Farrell Florence B. Lord Richard W. Lord NPS Western Archeological and Conservation Center Tucson, Arizona, 1999 With Contributions from S. Curtis Breckenridge Marilyn Harper Produced by the National Historic Landmarks Program National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Washington, DC August 2012 ii TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD................................................................................................................................. 1 PART 1, INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................ 3 Table 1. Wartime Properties Identified in Public Law 102-248 ................................................ 7 PART 2. HISTORIC CONTEXT ............................................................................................... 9 THE PRELUDE TO RELOCATION
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 Summer the Medallion
    SUMMER 2016 Waco’ s Awakening Burgeoning Brazos Trail City A New Hot Spot for Cultural Tourism CONTENTS SUMMER 2016 TEXAS HISTORICAL COMMISSION John L. Nau, III, Chair John W. Crain, Vice Chair THC OUTREACH Robert K. Shepard, Secretary 10 History Afloat East Texas Paddling Earl Broussard, Jr. Trail Lets Visitors Float Thomas M. Hatfield Through the Past. Wallace B. Jefferson Tom Perini Gilbert E. “Pete” Peterson Judy C. Richardson 11 Cemetery Queries Daisy Sloan White Three Frequently Asked Questions Answered by THC Staff. Executive Director: Mark Wolfe FEATURE Medallion Staff: 6 Waco’s Awakening Chris Florance Burgeoning Brazos Trail Division Director City a New Hot Spot Andy Rhodes Managing Editor for Cultural Tourism. Judy Jensen Senior Graphic Design Coordinator ISSN 0890-7595 Vol. 54, No. III thc.texas.gov [email protected] ON THE COVER: Waco’s historic suspension bridge. Photo: Andy Rhodes. VISIT US ON THE WEB FAST FACTS thc.texas.gov These numbers show the significant economic impact Learn more about the real places telling the real stories of Texas. of cultural travel in Waco. texastimetravel.com The Texas Heritage Trails Program’s travel resource texashistoricsites.com 1.3 6,300 $26.4 The THC’s 20 state historic properties thcfriends.org MILLION VISITORS JOBS SUPPORTED MILLION VISITOR Friends of the Texas Historical Commission ANNUALLY TO WACO’S BY WACO TOURISM CONTRIBUTION TO WACO’S SILO DISTRICT STATE TAX REVENUE Source: Waco Convention & Visitors Bureau TEXAS HISTORICAL COMMISSION thc.texas.gov 2 LEADERSHIP LETTER My Fellow Texans, Senate District 22 in the heart of Texas is a perfect microcosm of our state: part rural, part suburban, part urban.
    [Show full text]