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Dale Mabry. Dale Mabry (March 22, 1891 – February 21, 1922) was an American World War I aviator. Mabry, a native of Tallahassee, Florida, was the son of former Florida Supreme Court Justice Milton H. Mabry and Ella Dale Bramlett. [1] He went on to become an airship pilot and captain in the United States Army Air Service.
Mar. 3—MARIETTA — At least one skate park is planned to be built in Marietta sometime next year, and city officials may get an early start deciding what it will look like. The city has $1.5 ...
George M. Steinbrenner Field, formerly known as Legends Field, [7] is a baseball stadium located in Tampa, Florida, across the Dale Mabry Highway from Raymond James Stadium, the home of the National Football League's Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The ballpark was built in 1996 and seats 11,026 people, with an addition in right field built in 2007. [8]
Aug. 30—The Marietta City Council is considering building a park on the site of a landfill located behind Lockheed Elementary School. City staff have proposed a grant which would fund the ...
The military use of Tallahassee Dale Mabry Field began in 1938 when the United States Army Air Corps established a contract flying school at the airport. In 1940 U.S. Senator Claude Pepper and Florida Governor Spessard Holland influenced the Army to make Dale Mabry Field a United States Army Air Force airfield as part of the buildup of the military prior to the United States entry into World ...
May 20—An all-in-one dog park, coffee shop and bar is coming to Marietta, the city announced Thursday. Drafty Dane Park & Pint will be a member-only dog park selling alcohol and coffee. It will ...
The TBUF program was then discontinued. The areas of Dale Mabry Field used by these students were called "West Campus". The airport was the airline airport for Tallahassee in the 1940s and 1950s, but the encroachment of the urban area led to the need for a new airport. Tallahassee Municipal Airport opened in 1961, and Dale Mabry Field was closed.
During the Civil War, the park was used as a training ground for the militia. On the north end of the park, a well provided water to parched men and women with a trough for horses. In the early 1900s the Atlanta trolley system was extended to Marietta and the trolley would turn around by circling the park. There was a maintenance shed across ...