Directory: U.S. Army Museums

Directory: U.S. Army Museums
Author: United States. Department of the Army. Office of Military History
Publisher:
Total Pages: 112
Release: 1968
Genre: Military museums
ISBN:

The Guide to U. S. Army Museums

The Guide to U. S. Army Museums
Author: Center of Center of Military History United States Army
Publisher: CreateSpace
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2015-01-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9781506152226

The Guide to U.S. Army Museums, originally published as a directory in 1968 and 1975 but then as a narrative in 1992, underscores both the institutional history and the scope of the U.S. Army Historical Property Collection. Changes in Army force structure and the closure of selected military installations affected several Army museums, making an updated version necessary. In this well-designed, well-written, and well-organized revised and expanded edition, R. Cody Phillips highlights not only the collections of rare artifacts carefully preserved in more than a hundred Army museums around the country and overseas, but also the respective museum professional development training and educational programs available to the Army and the general public.

The U.S. Military Online

The U.S. Military Online
Author: William M. Arkin
Publisher: Potomac Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1997
Genre: Internet (Computer network)--Directories
ISBN: 9781574881431

The first directory of its kind, The U.S. Military Online contains pointers to well over 2,000 official military Internet sites and resources at the Pentagon and at more than 200 installations throughout the world. Revised to include a new chapter on doing business with the Department of Defense and over 300 new Web sites, this unique guidebook enables you to: download Pentagon press conferences, speeches, testimony, statistics, and fact sheets; follow developments in international hot spots; find resources for tracking the defense budget and the Defense Department's research, development, test, evaluations, and contracting activities; track U.S. military units around the world and locate military personnel; read and save military magazines and journals, official manuals, and regulations; connect with military research sites dealing with weapons, cyberwar, modeling and simulation, intelligence, telecommunications, space, and future warfare; access Pentagon think tanks, schools and war colleges, libraries, military history resources, and museums; learn about weapons, from small arms to next-generation systems; and eavesdrop on, and participate in, warfighting studies and exercises.