visibility Similar

code Related

U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class David Banaszak, of

description

Summary

U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class David Banaszak, of Port Hueneme, Calif., steel worker, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 40, hammers a nail into a set of 2 inch by 6 inch studs intended for perimeter guard towers at the Russian Silo Combat Outpost, Afghanistan. The COP is the future site of a 10 mega watt power plant intended to power the western side of Kandahar, Afghanistan. Banaszak is deployed to Kandahar Air Field, Afghanistan.

label_outline

Tags

seabees seabee work russian nmcb silo nmcb 40 nmcb 18 navy afghanistan kandahar 18 united states navy russian grain silo russian silo 40 forty tech sgt samuel padilla isaf joint command cop built from history dvids high resolution us navy contractors building construction carpenters man in a hat naval mobile construction battalion war in afghanistan 2001 2021
date_range

Date

16/11/2010
place

Location

create

Source

Defense Visual Information Distribution Service
link

Link

https://www.dvidshub.net/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain Dedication. Public Use Notice of Limitations: https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright

label_outline Explore Russian Grain Silo, Russian Silo, Cop Built From History

A service member from the Malaysia Armed Forces helps

Exterior of Leslie Elston house; Larry Sanders with model, Newport, Rhode Island

Walter M. Gaylord syruping off the maple sap has finally boiled down in the King evaporator to the correct syrup consistancy. He averages about 150 gallons annually, but this year tapped only 600 of his 1000 trees because of unusually deep snow and late spring. He owns several farms; in this particular unit there are eighty acres. It has been in his family for three generations. He has about forty head of cattle, raises poultry and potatoes

Airman Spenser Hood communicates with a fuel pump room

2011 Adult/Family Group Entry #40

Calipatria, Imperial Valley. In FSA (Farm Security Administration) emergency migratory labor camp. Left Oklahoma December 11, 1937 with husband and two children and son-in-law. Ex-tenant farmers on third and fourths in cotton. Had fifty dollars when set out. Went to Phoenix, picked cotton and pulled bolls, made eighty cents a day with two people picking bolls. Stayed until school closed. Went to Idaho, picked peas until August, left McCarl with forty dollars "in hand." Went to Cedar City and Parowan, Utah, a distance of 700 miles. Picked peas through September. Went to Hollister, Calipatria. Picked peas through October. Left for Calipatria for early peas which froze. Now receiving FSA food grant and waiting for work to begin. "Back in Oklahoma we was sinkin.' You work your head off for a crop and then see it burn up. You live in debts that you can never get out of. This isn't a good life, but I say it's a better life than that was."

[Assignment: 48-DPA-N_OSM_IL_10-18-05] Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation, and Enforcement staff [working at site of abandoned coal mine, the Horse Creek Mine, near Pinckneyville,] Illinois [48-DPA-N_OSM_IL_10-18-05_DSC_0070.JPG]

U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Joseph Valence, of

Seabees of Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 40 from

Tech. Sgt. Christopher McShan II, 341st Civil Engineer

RIGA, Latvia — Thirty-four Alaska Air Guardsmen from

A black and white photo of a man in a hat, Kentucky coal miner, Jenkins, Kentucky

Topics

seabees seabee work russian nmcb silo nmcb 40 nmcb 18 navy afghanistan kandahar 18 united states navy russian grain silo russian silo 40 forty tech sgt samuel padilla isaf joint command cop built from history dvids high resolution us navy contractors building construction carpenters man in a hat naval mobile construction battalion war in afghanistan 2001 2021