BOOK SEARCH



Tell A Friend
To: Name:
E-mail:
From: Name:
E-mail:
  Message:
San Diego's Naval Training Center



Bookmark and Share
San Diego's Naval Training Center
Author(s): Jennifer A. Garey

ISBN: 9780738559582

# of Pages: 128
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
On Sale Date: 09/29/2008

Price:
$19.99
Quantity:

Click on the state flag for other books located in "California"
Book Description:
San Diego’s Naval Training Center (NTC) was commissioned on June 1, 1923, and for 70 years served as a young recruit’s introduction to a naval career, beginning with nine weeks of basic orientation and organization training (BOOT) camp. Originally consisting of 135 acres adjacent to San Diego Bay, NTC eventually expanded to almost 550 acres with 300 buildings, landscaped promenades, parade grounds, and a concrete training “non-ship,” the USS Recruit (a.k.a. USS Neversail), where recruits learned their first duties of seamanship. Advanced training schools were later added for military personnel learning specialized duties. After training hundreds of thousands of recruits, NTC was officially closed on April 30, 1997, and has since been transformed into San Diego’s new and vibrant cultural center, Liberty Station.

Author Bio: Jennifer A. Garey is president of Arts & Antiquities, Inc., which provides consultations, collections management, and exhibitions for museums, corporations, and private collectors. Her professional museum experience spans over 25 years with institutions such as the San Diego Historical Society, the J. Paul Getty Museum, and the Smithsonian Institution. She has compiled here a brief pictorial history of the recruits, schools, and community, which grew and trained together in what was once the highlight of the U.S. Navy, the San Diego Naval Training Center.

Arcadia Pressroom Arcadia Catalog Search New and Coming Soon
Keeping Evansville's past in focus
Thanks to Ruth Ann Montgomery, Evansville residents should know practically everything they ever...
'Franco-Americans of Maine' Author Dyke Hendrickson captures their 'great passion for life'
“Much more than millworkers” is the concise and heartfelt description Dyke Hendrickson uses when he...
SEARCH BY KEYWORD:

SEARCH BY ZIP:

SEARCH BY TITLE: