Military Science Tour, photo 5
 

http://contentdm.library.appstate.edu:81/cgi-bin/showfile.exe

Citation

“Military Science Tour, photo 5,” Appalachian State University Libraries Digital Collections, accessed December 22, 2024, https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/items/show/11879.


Comments

Harvey Durham

The woman standing in the background is Ms. Mary Ellen Horine, second grade teacher in the Watauga County public school system.  

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Title

Military Science Tour, photo 5

Description

This image shows Chairman William Palmer giving a tour of the Department of Military Science at Appalachian State University (1967-current) to a group of elementary school students in the 1970s. Another faculty member can be seen in uniform on the right. Rifles can be seen in gun racks in the background. The Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) began in the fall of 1969 and is housed in the Department of Military Science in the College of Fine and Applied Arts. It offers two-year programs in leadership and military training with no obligation of future military service, and an additional two-year program that results in a commission as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserve or the Army National Guard. The woman standing in the background is Ms. Mary Ellen Horine, second grade teacher in the Watauga County public school system.

Subject

Students
Student Activities
Military Education
Faculty
Appalachian State University

Source

General Picture Files, 2004.040, Box 30, ROTC F1, C14.2.5.6.

Publisher

University Archives, Appalachian State University

Format

JPEG
Photographs

Language

English

Type

Image

Corporate Names

Appalachian State University. Reserve Officer Training Corps. Department of Military Science and Leadership. College of Fine and Applied Arts

Date Range

1970-1979

Series

Series 6 -- Colleges, Departments, Offices, and Centers. Series 8 -- Military

File name

4586_2004_040_A.jpg

Sponsors

The Appalachian State University Historical Photographs Digitization Project is supported with federal Library Service and Technology Act (LSTA) funds made possible through a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, administered by the State Library of North Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources through the North Carolina ECHO, 'Exploring Cultural Heritage Online' Digitization Grant Program.

Tag

contact sheet