41BX1066 (Site Name Keyword)

1-7 (7 Records)

1995-01-07, Response from James E. Bruseth and Timothy K. Perttula to Steve DeVore, Housing Expansion Project (F2, F14), Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, Signed (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text James E. Bruseth. Timothy K. Perttula.

This letter of correspondence was written on behalf of the Texas Historical Commission to the National Park Service. It addresses and provides additional information on NRHP eligibility of sites included in the Housing Expansion Project at Lackland Air Force Base. Included in correspondence was Robert Hard from The University of Texas at San Antonio.


1995-01-25, Letter from Steven L. DeVore to Gabriel Gonzales, Texas Historical Commission on 41BX1065-1066 and Receipt Monthly/Quarterly Report for "Archeological Survey of Lackland and Laughlin Air Force Bases, Texas," Signed (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Steven De Vore.

The staff of the Texas State Historic Preservation Office has responded to the need for additional testing to determine the National Register status of Site 41BX1066. They agree that additional testing will be necessary when there will be an undertaking that will impact the site. The staff has also reviewed the proposal for testing at Site 41BX1065 and believes that the proposed testing is an appropriate quantity of work to determine the site's eligibility.


Archaeological Site Eligibility Status and Recommendations, Fort Sam Houston, Camp Bullis, Lackland Air Force Base (2012)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

A list of archaeological sites at Fort Sam Houston, Camp Bullis, and Lackland Air Force Base. Included are site numbers, components, brief description, eligibility status for National Register of Historic Places/Historic, eligibility status for National Register of Historic Places/Prehistoric, and additional recommendations. This eligibility status and recommendations mentioned in this document may be out of date. Refer to the most recent Archaeological Site Eligibility Status and...


Archaeological Survey of Lackland Air Force Base, Bexar County, Texas (1997)
DOCUMENT Full-Text David L. Nickels. David W. Pease. C. Britt Bousman.

The Center for Archaeological Research of The University of Texas at San Antonio conducted a pedestrian cultural resources survey on 3,860 acres of land at Lackland Air Force Base and Medina Base Annex in Bexar County, Texas. Limited surveys and shovel testing began in the spring of 1994 in areas slated for development. These were followed by a 100-percent-pedestrian survey with limited shovel testing of the remaining undisturbed and undeveloped areas during the fall of 1994 and spring of 1995....


Letter Report: Space Command Area, Housing Area, Leon Creek Area, Road Projct Area, Lackland Air Force Base (1994)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Steven De Vore.

Correspondence from the National Park Service in response to the letter report regarding the Space Command Area, Housing Area, Leon Creek Area, and Road Project Area at Lackland Air Force Base. More information is requested before determination. In August 1994 staff archaeologists from the Center for Archaeological Research (CAR) of The University of Texas at San Antonio, under contract with the National Parle Service (NPS), conducted an intensive archaeological study of two tracts of land on...


SHPO: Correspondence Regarding Sites at Lackland Air Force Base, Bexar County, Texas (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text James E. Bruseth. Timothy K. Perttula.

SHPO correspondence regarding evaluation and determination for sites 41BX1066 and 41BX1065 located in Lackland Air Force Base.


Site Records for the Lackland Air Force Base Survey Project 1994-1995, Volume I (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text David L. Nickels. David W. Pease. Robert R. Rector.

A compilation of records for 35 sites on Lackland Air Force Base that were part of the 1994-1995 survey project. For each site there is a State of Texas archaeological site data form, site map, charts for surface artifacts and shovel tests, and a number of site photographs. All of the forms verify the survey being conducted by the Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio, and project funding provided by the U.S. Air Force through the National Park Service.