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U.S. Army Signals Intelligence Service personnel at Arlington Hall (c. 1943) A DIA office at Arlington Hall Station (c. 1970s). Arlington Hall was founded in 1927 as a private post-secondary women's educational institution, which by 1941, was on a 100-acre (0.40 km 2) campus and was called the Arlington Hall Junior College for Women.
The National Museum of the United States Army is the official museum for the history of the United States Army. It opened on November 11, 2020. [1] Its stated objectives are to honor America's soldiers, preserve Army history, and educate the public about the Army's role in American history.
The National Medal of Honor Museum is a museum that honors United States Armed Forces Medal of Honor recipients, founded and funded by the National Medal of Honor Museum Foundation. [1] The museum is scheduled to open on March 25, 2025 [2] in Arlington, Texas, with groundbreaking beginning in March 2022. [3]
It was renamed the Signal Security Agency in 1943, and in September 1945, became the Army Security Agency. [1] For most of the war it was headquartered at Arlington Hall (former campus of Arlington Hall Junior College for Women), on Arlington Boulevard in Arlington, Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington (D.C.).
The U.S. Army Women’s Museum has covered a storyboard honoring the history of transgender soldiers in the wake of President Donald Trump’s anti-DEI push.. The display is the only one of its ...
Arlington’s National Medal of Honor Museum welcomed its largest artifact at an event Thursday night.. A fully restored Vietnam-era Huey helicopter will be a centerpiece of the future museum’s ...
A military museum or war museum is an institution dedicated to the preservation and education of the significance of wars, conflicts, and military actions. These museums serve as repositories of artifacts (not least weapons), documents, photographs, and other memorabilia related to the military and war.
In 1995, officials of the United States Department of the Interior and the United States Department of the Army signed an agreement to transfer from Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial, to the Army a part of Arlington Woods, which was located in Section 29 of the NPS at Arlington National Cemetery between Arlington House and Fort Myer. [45]