Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Camp Bowie, named in honor of the Texas patriot James Bowie, was a military training facility during World War II, and was the third camp in Texas to be so named. From 1940 to 1946, it grew to be one of the largest training centers in Texas. In 1940, the war situation in Europe caused the United States Congress to determine that the time had ...
www.vanderbilthealth.com. The Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) is a medical provider with multiple hospitals in Nashville, Tennessee, as well as clinics and facilities throughout Middle Tennessee. VUMC is an independent non-profit organization, but maintains academic affiliations with Vanderbilt University.
Now they are on display for all to see at the Military Museum of Fort Worth, in Ridgmar Mall, at 1888 Green Oaks Road. The exhibit was put in place a few months ago as part of the museum’s ...
Campus. Urban, 33.5 acres (13.6 ha) Website. www.unthsc.edu. The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth – HSC, Health Science Center, Health Science Center at Fort Worth – is an academic health science center in Fort Worth, Texas. It is part of the University of North Texas System and was founded in 1970 as the Texas ...
Sept. 19, 2007: Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief drives a excavator to start the demolition of the gasoline station at the corner of Camp Bowie Boulevard and West Seventh Street that had been there ...
After the Mexican–American War. In January 1849, U.S. Army General William Jenkins Worth, a veteran of the Mexican–American War, proposed building ten forts to mark and protect the west Texas frontier, situated from Eagle Pass to the confluence of the West Fork and Clear Fork of the Trinity River. Worth died on 7 May 1849 from cholera. [4]
A two-screen movie theater is being developed on Camp Bowie Boulevard, according to city records. Plans for a 9,683-square-foot movie theater at 6905 Camp Bowie Blvd. were approved by Fort Worth ...
Harry R. Jacobson (born June 21, 1947) is an American physician executive and entrepreneur who served as the vice chancellor for health affairs and CEO of Vanderbilt University Medical Center from 1997 to 2009.