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Camp Navajo is an industrial park, munitions storage facility, and regional training site overseen by the Arizona Army National Guard, and managed by the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs. Units located on base include: Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Camp Navajo; 362nd Ordnance Company (Explosive Ordnance Disposal)
The Ammo Bunker (S-1007) is located Southwest of Vosler Dr. (formerly Alaska Dr.), at Arizona State University at the Polytechnic campus . Built in 1925 by Webb, Del E., Construction Company. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places ref: 95000748. The Ammo Bunker (S-1008) also located Southwest of Vosler Dr. (formerly Alaska Dr ...
Holbrook Radar Bomb Scoring Site (call sign Holbrook Bomb Plot) is a Formerly Used Defense Site of 8 acres (3.2 ha) [1] near Winslow, Arizona, that was used as a Cold War Strategic Air Command radar station for the Holbrook Radar Bomb Scoring Range.
WASHINGTON — An Arizona man charged in connection with threatening to kill FBI agents had 5,000 rounds of ammunition, an AR-15-style rifle and six loaded magazines when the FBI showed up to ...
Ammo Bunker (S-1007) Southwest of Vosler Dr. (formerly Alaska Drive), at Arizona State University at the Polytechnic campus in the grounds that once was a part of Williams Air Force Base. 33°17′43″N 111°40′43″W / 33.29528°N 111.67861°W / 33.29528; -111.67861 ( Ammo Bunker
Four ordnance-related structures were also identified, as well as two ammunition storage facilities. The Hereford AAF had housing capacity for 598 troops. According to the 2011 Archive Research Site Summary, historic construction maps of the airfield depict a skeet range southeast of the runways.
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The base was named in honor of World War I pilots Lieutenants Samuel H. Davis (1896–1921) and Chief Engineer Oscar Monthan (1885–1924), both Tucson natives. [3] Monthan enlisted in the Army as a private in 1917, was commissioned as a ground officer in 1918, and later became a pilot; he was killed in the crash of a Martin B2 bomber in Hawaii on March 27, 1924.