Bandstand (Other Keyword)
1-4 (4 Records)
This project contains Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation Inventory forms and pictures for historic buildings at Fort Sam Houston and Camp Bullis, which are now part of Joint Base San Antonio, Texas. The data and information were collected as part of a project undertaken by the National Park Service, Office of Archeology and Historic Preservation (OAHP). The collection comprises data pertaining to historic structures located at both Fort Sam Houston and Camp Bullis. This project...
Buildings and Structures Eligibility Status, Fort Sam Houston, Camp Bullis, Randolph Air Force Base, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas (2011)
National Register Eligible/Listed Structures Fort Sam Houston, Camp Bullis, Randolph, Lackland. Listed is what is not already captured in existing Programmatic Agreements for Military Family Housing Privatization at Fort Sam Houston and Randolph Air Force Base.
OAHP Inventory, Building 19 Bandstand, Fort Sam Houston, Texas (1980)
An inventory form by the Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation for Building 19 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. The structure was built in the 1890s and 1956 as a bandstand. Included in the inventory are black and white photographs taken in 1980 of the structure.
Working-class culture in the urban landscape of twentieth-century Sheffield (2018)
This paper will examine the legacy of early twentieth-century working-class cultural practice encoded within the archaeology of the post-industrial landscape of Sheffield, in the United Kingdom. Sheffield was a booming industrial city, specialising in the metal trades, which underwent a considerable building boom towards the end of the nineteenth century. The north-city suburb of Firth Park saw the rapid expansion of domestic housing stock and the opening of Sheffield’s first public park in this...