Joint Base San Antonio Archaeology and Cultural Resources Archive

Part of: Air Force - West

Collection of documents, data, and images generated from and/or related to archaeological resource and investigations managed by the Joint Base San Antonio Air Force Base in Texas. The collection was created by tDAR under contract with the USAF and is intended to organize documents, images, and other data from Lackland Air Force Base. Some of the digital resources are organized under projects, which group together documents, etc. from particular investigations or related to certain sites or parts of the base. Other digital objects are included individually. Due to the potential sensitive information included in these documents, users that wish to access documents and images without redaction should contact the cultural resources office at Joint Base San Antonio Air Force Base.


Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1,801-1,812 of 1,812)

There are 1812 Documents within this Collection [remove this filter]


  • Volume 2, Fort Sam Houston Maintenance and Repair Plan: Cavalry and Light Artillery Post (2003)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

    Fort Sam Houston’s buildings exhibit a variety of architectural influences because of its incremental development. Its four posts, the Quadrangle and Staff Post, Infantry Post, Cavalry and Light Artillery Post, and New Post, are excellent visual records of the Army’s planning ideals and the architectural styles employed during their respective construction periods. The various architectural styles included Italianate, Colonial Revival, Mission/Spanish Colonial Revival, Greek Revival, Classical...

  • Volume 2, Fort Sam Houston Maintenance and Repair Plan: Infantry Post (2003)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

    Of all the posts at Fort Sam Houston, none is more complex stylistically than the Infantry Post. This complicated assemblage of stylistic influences is typified in the design of Long Barracks and Band Barracks, and is discussed in more detail later in this text. Less difficult to interpret are the post’s kitchens, mess halls, and latrines which were executed in a simplified form of the Colonial Revival style. The Colonial Revival style, also known as Georgian Revival, is an adaptation of the...

  • Volume 2, Fort Sam Houston Maintenance and Repair Plan: New Post (2004)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

    Fort Sam Houston’s buildings exhibit a variety of architectural influences because of its incremental development. Its four posts, the Quadrangle and Staff Post, Infantry Post, Cavalry and Light Artillery Post, and New Post, are excellent visual records of the Army’s planning ideals and the architectural styles employed during their respective construction periods. The various architectural styles include Italianate, Colonial Revival, Mission/Spanish Colonial Revival, Greek Revival, Classical...

  • Volume 2, Fort Sam Houston Maintenance and Repair Plan: Quadrangle and Staff Post (2003)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

    Fort Sam Houston’s buildings exhibit a variety of architectural influences as a result of its incremental development. Its four posts, the Quadrangle and Staff Post, Infantry Post, Cavalry and Light Artillery Post, and New Post, are excellent visual records of the Army’s planning ideals and the architectural styles employed during their respective construction periods. The various architectural styles include Italianate, Colonial Revival, Mission/Spanish Colonial Revival, Greek Revival,...

  • 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,...

  • Warehouse 1 Building 80, Blueprint, Camp Bullis, Texas (1930)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: adam brin

    This is a blueprint of Warehouse 1, building 80, at Camp Bullis, Texas. The drawing accompanies form 117 detailing building 80.

  • Warehouse 1 Building 80, Q.M.C. Form, Camp Bullis, Texas (1930)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: adam brin

    This document is a Q.M.C. Form for warehouse no. 1 (building number 80) at Camp Bullis, Texas. It details the material construction, capacity and other specs associated with the building. Additions, repairs and installations to the building(s) along with their associated cost are also recorded. This Q.M.C. Form was revised in 1924, with a building completion date recorded as 1930.

  • The West Point of the Air: In Pictures (1942)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

    A visual overview of Randolph Air Force Base in the 1940s. Acting as a yearbook, it states a hope to give a behind the scenes glimpse of life at the West Point of the Air and will be a reminder in years to come of scenes and events that enrich our memories of the fulfillment of our duty to America. The booklet is signed "Don Toeppen."

  • Wingspread Article, Oldest Courtroom, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas (1995)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Chelsea Walter

    An article from Wingspread's May 26, 1995 publication. The clipping shows Captains Chris Aluotto and Ron Ratton standing next to a plaque designating Randolph Air Force Base's courtroom as the Air Force's oldest courtroom still in use. The article goes on to give a brief historical overview of the courtroom and the award given.

  • Work Request, Building 900 Room 301, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas (1988)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Danny J. Parnell.

    A work request form for the existing ceiling and lights, of Room 301 in Building 900 at Randolph Air Force Base, to be replaced with a suspended ceiling system. To keep continuity in the building, Randolph proposes that the new ceiling should match the ceiling in the Command Section at the other end of the hall.

  • Work Request, Building 900 Room 309, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas (1991)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text John D. Jenkins.

    Work Request Form, by Randolph Air Force Base, to install a food preparation area within the existing Head Quarters ATC/CSP Facilities, Building 900, Room 309.

  • A Workshop on Predictive Modeling and Cultural Resource Management on Military Installations, Santa Fe, New Mexico (2005)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Jeffrey Altschul. Terry H. Klein. Lynne Sebastian.

    The SRI Foundation and Statistical Research, Inc. under a Legacy Resource Management Program grant, convened a workshop of national experts to examine the use of predictive modeling by military installations. The workshop was held in Santa Fe, New Mexico on November 15-16, 2004. Workshop attendees included participants with a variety of expertise in modeling, managing cultural resources on military installations, and compliance with environmental and historical preservation laws. Workshop...