Open Air Theater (Other Keyword)

1-3 (3 Records)

Historic Photographs Taken by Captain Norfleet Bone, Randolph Air Force Base
PROJECT Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

Captain Norfleet Bone was Randolph Field's landscape architect and engineer from 1929-1933. This collection of black and white photographs was taken of Randolph Field in the 1930s and document Randolph's greenhouse, fields, barns, warehouses, the post exchange, administration building, school building, cadet barracks, the building area for the officers' quarters, noncommissioned quarters, the beginnings of Washington Circle with the star, and numerous images of Randolph's progress of...


A Spin Around the Field, The Service News, Randolph Field Edition (1931)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Norfleet G. Bone.

An article by Lieutenant Norfleet G. Bone, Army Landscape Expert, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. The article touts the completion of Randolph Field - the newest, largest, and most modern air field in the world. It gives an overview of the buildings and grounds of Randolph Air Field, as well as the landscape development throughout the property.


Volume 2: Camp Bullis Maintenance and Repair Plan (2004)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

From an architectural perspective, buildings and structures at Camp Bullis are utilitarian in character. Some Craftsman and Bungalow stylistic influences can be seen in building proportions and detailing. Buildings were built economically to house, feed, and train troops; to administer training programs, and to maintain the military hardware used in training. Although the edifices of Fort Sam Houston project permanence and the public face of the Army as an enduring institution of the government,...