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Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center

The Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center, formerly the Battle Creek Federal Center, is a complex of federal buildings located in Battle Creek, Michigan.[3]

Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center
Location in Michigan
Location in United States
Location74 North Washington Street
Battle Creek, Michigan
Coordinates42°19′37″N 85°11′16″W / 42.32694°N 85.18778°W / 42.32694; -85.18778
Built1903
ArchitectFrank Mills Andrews
Merritt Morehouse
Architectural styleItalian Renaissance Revival
NRHP reference No.74000980[1] (original)
11001060 (increase)
Significant dates
Added to NRHPJuly 30, 1974
Boundary increaseJanuary 27, 2012
Designated MSHSSeptember 7, 1989[2]

History edit

The facility has a colorful history intertwined with notable Americans. The property successively served as a sanitarium, military hospital, and offices. The center consists of 22 buildings on 24 acres, all of which were recently added to the National Register of Historic Places.[4]

The Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center is among one hundred properties featured in the General Service Administration's Public Buildings Heritage Program.[5]

Western Health Reform Institute edit

In 1866 the Seventh-day Adventists established the Western Health Reform Institute on eight acres of land, the former residence of Benjamin Graves, a judge of the Michigan Superior Court. H. S. Lay, the first physician in charge, and James and Ellen White, early founders of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, were instrumental in founding this health institution. The goals of the institution were to teach the Adventists' version of holistic medicine, which stressed the importance of temperance and preventive medicine, taking in visitors and advocating the use of Graham bread and counseling eight hours of sleep at night. From this farmhouse the institution struggled to live up to its name but there were ideas and propositions for a building that would lead to a worldwide reputation.[3]

Battle Creek Sanitarium edit

In 1876, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg, medical director, renamed the property and expanded the facility to include a hospital, central building, and other cottages.[3] Much of the original sanitarium burned down in 1902.[3] A large building by architect Frank Mills Andrews opened in 1903 at a cost of $1 million and was considered a marvel of modern planning and medical technology.[3] Under Kellogg's auspices, the sanitarium expanded, and a tower addition was completed in 1928.[3] The tide turned, however, in 1929 when the economy collapsed and the nation entered into the depression. Within four years, the sanitarium had gone into receivership.[6]

Percy Jones Army Hospital edit

 
Postcard from hospital era

With the outbreak of World War II, local builder Floyd Skidmore proposed that the near-vacant sanitarium be converted into a military hospital.[7] Upon this recommendation, in August 1942, the United States Army bought the buildings for $2.25 million and FJ Skidmore & Son rebuilt the derelict structure in six months (working around the clock), enlarging the capacity of the hospital from 1,000 beds to 1,500, and constructing rails and ramps throughout the facility.[8][9][3]

On Feb. 22, 1943, the hospital was officially dedicated by its first commander, Colonel Norman T. Kirk. He was the former chief of surgical services at Walter Reed General Hospital in Washington, D.C. The new hospital was named after Colonel Percy L. Jones, US Army, a pioneering military surgeon who developed modern battlefield ambulance evacuation.[3][10]

The hospital grew as the flow of casualties increased. In 1944, W.K. Kellogg donated his mansion on nearby Gull Lake to the Army, which assigned it to Percy Jones as a convalescent center. The Fort Custer Reception Center was also used by Percy Jones for patients on “casual duty.”[11] The Percy Jones hospital complex was massive, self-contained, and fully integrated. It had its own water supply and power generation. It also had its own bank, post office, public library and radio station "KPJ". The Percy Jones Institute was an accredited high school, with dozens of educational and training programs for patients ranging from photography to business to agriculture.[12]

At the height of the war, more than two thousand people visited the hospital on a daily basis, including celebrities such as Bob Hope, Jimmy Stewart, Ed Sullivan, Gene Autry, and Roy Rogers.[13]

In 1945, Percy Jones became the largest medical installation of any kind in the world. Following V-J Day (victory over Japan) in 1945, the hospital population peaked with 11,427 patients assigned to its three area sites. Percy Jones specialized as an Army center for neurosurgery, amputations and handicapped rehabilitation, deep x-ray therapy and plastic artificial eyes. In one month alone, 729 operations were performed.[14][15]

After a short deactivation period, the hospital reopened only a few days after hostilities broke out in Korea in the summer of 1950. In 1951, about 1,000 patients were at Percy Jones, many of them with frostbite caused by the bone-chilling Korean weather.[16] In 1954, after treating more than 100,000 patients, the Percy Jones Hospital was permanently closed and the building was placed under the control of the General Services Administration.[17]

In the decade it was open, the hospital made a lasting impact on the city. Battle Creek was the first city in America to install wheelchair ramps in its sidewalks, to accommodate the Percy Jones patients when they visited downtown.[6][18]

Battle Creek Federal Center edit

In 1954, the GSA moved the National Federal Civil Defense Administration (from Washington D.C.) and the Staff College of the National Civil Defense Training Agency (from Olney, Maryland) to the retired hospital in Battle Creek. The facility was again rebuilt to prepare it for atomic attack. The civil defense operations at the facility included coordinating government and private technical services, volunteer and shelter deployment, public education, and emergency communications. In recognition of the facility's new purpose, the building was renamed the Battle Creek Federal Center.[12]

Five years later, in 1959, the GSA began using facility space for other federal organizations, and by 1962, twenty-eight different agencies were housed there. The Office for Civil Defense was moved from the Battle Creek Federal Center in late 1962 and the Sixth Corps of the U.S. Fifth Army and Defense Logistics Services Center (DLSC) were transferred in.

Currently, the Defense Logistics Agency (Defense Logistics Information Service (DLIS) and Systems Integration Office (DSIO-J)) remains as the principal tenant of the Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center, along with the DLA Disposition Services, and the Air Force Cataloging and Standardization Center (CASC).[3]

Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center edit

In 2003, the building was re-dedicated as the Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center in honor of three U.S. senators who had met as wounded servicemen while they were being treated at the hospital during WWII: Philip Hart of Michigan, who had been wounded during the Normandy Landings at Utah Beach on D-Day, Bob Dole of Kansas, who was wounded in combat over Italy, and Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, who had been wounded while engaged in combat in Italy.[3]

Architecture edit

The Center includes 21 buildings on 24 acres.[3] Building types include offices, a power plant, workshops, and storage buildings. The main 1903 sanitarium building has a rectangular footprint with three wings radiating out from the main block. It is now referred to as Building 2, with the wings designated as Buildings 2A, 2B, and 2C.[3] It is designed in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, which was commonly used for academic buildings in the early twentieth century. This was a logical choice for the sanitarium since Kellogg sought to educate his patients in the ways of healthy living.[3]

The facade is composed of buff-colored brick with decorative details such as piers, belt courses, and quoins (corner blocks) executed in gray brick. Decorative pediments (triangular gables) are above entrances. Concrete columns mark the main entrance bay and are topped with plaster Ionic (scrolled) capitals. Arched openings form loggias, which are roofed spaces with open sides. The monumental building occupies a high point in the city and was originally five stories in height, with a compatibly designed sixth story added in 1920. Despite the changes in use, the building's exterior has not been altered substantially.[3]

The first-floor lobby has an ornate plaster ceiling. The east wall of the lobby contains a tripartite leadedglass window; the center portion bears the inscription "He is Thy Life." The stairway to the mezzanine has a cast-iron balustrade with a wood railing and marble steps. The newel post contains classically inspired ornamentation appropriate to the building style.[3]

The sixth-floor lobby contains four murals painted by J. J. Haidt in 1922. They are located on the coved ceiling and depict serene landscape scenes in pastel colors. Other interior spaces have changed dramatically. The solarium, gymnasium, and swimming pool have been demolished.[3]

The most prominent feature of the complex is the 15-story tower that was added to the south side of Building 2 in 1928. The tower, currently designated as Building 1, was designed to complement the existing main sanitarium building. The exterior remains unchanged and is clad in stone and different shades of brick. The facade is dominated by a two-story colonnade with 32 Ionic columns. Porte cochere pavilions are located at each end of the colonnade. The tower originally contained more than 265 hotel-like guest rooms and suites, most of which had private bathrooms. These spaces have been altered to accommodate government offices. The luxurious two-story lobby of the tower has twelve massive marble columns with imported Italian marble bases. The columns are topped with Corinthian capitals that feature acanthus leaf designs. The ceiling in the lobby is coffered (recessed) and detailed with floral motifs executed in rich colors. The lobby walls are covered with pink-gold marble, and gold chandeliers illuminate the space. Tall windows open to the colonnade. Building 1A was originally the sanitarium's lavish dining room. It retains many original features including large chandeliers and murals of Oriental scenes. Draperies, doors, and decorative moldings have been restored. The room retains much of its original character and serves as a cafeteria today.[3]

Significant events edit

  • 1866: Western Health Reform Institute opens
  • 1902: Fire destroys earliest buildings
  • 1903: New five-story building completed
  • 1920: Sixth story added to main building
  • 1928: Tower completed
  • 1942: U.S. Army purchases site for use as hospital
  • 1954: Federal Civil Defense Administration moves into complex
  • 1974: Buildings 2, 2A, 2B, and 2C listed in the National Register of Historic Places
  • 1996: Interior renovation completed
  • 2003: Complex renamed Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center

Building facts edit

  • Location: 74 North Washington Street
  • Architects: Frank M. Andrews; Merritt Morehouse
  • Construction Dates: 1902-1903; 1920; 1928
  • Landmark Status: Buildings 2, 2A, 2B, and 2C listed in the National Register of Historic Places; Buildings 1 and 1A eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places
  • Architectural Style: Italian Renaissance Revival
  • Primary Material: Buff-Colored Brick
  • Prominent Features: 15-Story Tower Ionic Colonnade

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ State of Michigan (2009). . Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved June 26, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q U.S. General Services Administration page on the Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center.
  4. ^ "NPGallery Asset Detail". npgallery.nps.gov. Retrieved 2021-01-07.
  5. ^ "Historic Buildings Heritage Program". General Services Administration. U.S. General Services Administration.
  6. ^ a b "Hart–Dole–Inouye Federal Center". GSA Historic Buildings. U.S. General Services Administration.
  7. ^ Richmond, Jim (November 18, 2002). "Neighbors - Whose idea to convert the Battle Creek Sanitarium into Percy Jones Hospital was just one of this master builder's achievements?". Battle Creek Enquirer & News. Battle Creek Enquirer & News.
  8. ^ "News From The Home Front - Percy Jones General Accepts First Military Patients". Battle Creek Enquirer & News. Battle Creek Enquirer & News. February 21, 1943.
  9. ^ "SERVING OUR WW II AND KOREAN WAR VETERANS" 2015-07-09 at the Wayback Machine, Defense Logistics Agency, Disposition Services
  10. ^ "History of Surgeon Generals - Norman T. Kirk". U.S. Army Medical Department, Office of Medical History. United States Army.
  11. ^ Camden, Nancy (20 March 2014). "Federal Center Housed Famous Americans as Army Hospital". WMUK - Western Michigan University Public Radio. Western Michigan University.
  12. ^ a b "Hart–Dole–Inouye History". Defense Logistics Agency / MWR. Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services.
  13. ^ "The history behind the Battle Creek federal building". Fox17 Television. Fox17 West Michigan. 9 June 2015.
  14. ^ "History of the Hart–Dole–Inouye Center". Defense Logistics Agency / MWR Battle Creek. Defense Logistics Agency.
  15. ^ "Indoor Swimming Pool, Bowling Alleys Help Wounded Vets of Percy Jones Regain Health". Battle Creek Enquirer & News. Battle Creek Enquirer & News. January 20, 1946.
  16. ^ "Farewell To Hospital; Battle Creek Gives a Party for closing Percy Jones". New York Times. New York Times. May 27, 1950.
  17. ^ "Records of the Office of the Surgeon General (Army) Record Group 112". Publications, Dairies, and Other Records 1942-1953. United States Army. 15 August 2016.
  18. ^ Ware, J. Gabriel (July 2015). "Creating Curb Cuts". encore Kalamazoo - Southwest Michigan's Magazine. Encore Publications, Inc.

Attribution edit

  • Material on this page was initially produced by the U.S. General Services Administration, an agency of the United States government, and is reproduced with the express permission of that agency. All works derived from this material must credit the U.S. General Services Administration. The original text produced by the General Services Administration is available here.

See also edit


hart, dole, inouye, federal, center, formerly, battle, creek, federal, center, complex, federal, buildings, located, battle, creek, michigan, national, register, historic, placesmichigan, state, historic, sitelocation, michiganshow, michiganlocation, united, s. The Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center formerly the Battle Creek Federal Center is a complex of federal buildings located in Battle Creek Michigan 3 Hart Dole Inouye Federal CenterU S National Register of Historic PlacesMichigan State Historic SiteLocation in MichiganShow map of MichiganLocation in United StatesShow map of the United StatesLocation74 North Washington StreetBattle Creek MichiganCoordinates42 19 37 N 85 11 16 W 42 32694 N 85 18778 W 42 32694 85 18778Built1903ArchitectFrank Mills AndrewsMerritt MorehouseArchitectural styleItalian Renaissance RevivalNRHP reference No 74000980 1 original 11001060 increase Significant datesAdded to NRHPJuly 30 1974Boundary increaseJanuary 27 2012Designated MSHSSeptember 7 1989 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Western Health Reform Institute 1 2 Battle Creek Sanitarium 1 3 Percy Jones Army Hospital 1 4 Battle Creek Federal Center 1 5 Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center 2 Architecture 3 Significant events 4 Building facts 5 References 6 Attribution 7 See alsoHistory editThe facility has a colorful history intertwined with notable Americans The property successively served as a sanitarium military hospital and offices The center consists of 22 buildings on 24 acres all of which were recently added to the National Register of Historic Places 4 The Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center is among one hundred properties featured in the General Service Administration s Public Buildings Heritage Program 5 Western Health Reform Institute edit In 1866 the Seventh day Adventists established the Western Health Reform Institute on eight acres of land the former residence of Benjamin Graves a judge of the Michigan Superior Court H S Lay the first physician in charge and James and Ellen White early founders of the Seventh day Adventist Church were instrumental in founding this health institution The goals of the institution were to teach the Adventists version of holistic medicine which stressed the importance of temperance and preventive medicine taking in visitors and advocating the use of Graham bread and counseling eight hours of sleep at night From this farmhouse the institution struggled to live up to its name but there were ideas and propositions for a building that would lead to a worldwide reputation 3 Battle Creek Sanitarium edit Main article Battle Creek Sanitarium In 1876 Dr John Harvey Kellogg medical director renamed the property and expanded the facility to include a hospital central building and other cottages 3 Much of the original sanitarium burned down in 1902 3 A large building by architect Frank Mills Andrews opened in 1903 at a cost of 1 million and was considered a marvel of modern planning and medical technology 3 Under Kellogg s auspices the sanitarium expanded and a tower addition was completed in 1928 3 The tide turned however in 1929 when the economy collapsed and the nation entered into the depression Within four years the sanitarium had gone into receivership 6 Percy Jones Army Hospital edit nbsp Postcard from hospital eraWith the outbreak of World War II local builder Floyd Skidmore proposed that the near vacant sanitarium be converted into a military hospital 7 Upon this recommendation in August 1942 the United States Army bought the buildings for 2 25 million and FJ Skidmore amp Son rebuilt the derelict structure in six months working around the clock enlarging the capacity of the hospital from 1 000 beds to 1 500 and constructing rails and ramps throughout the facility 8 9 3 On Feb 22 1943 the hospital was officially dedicated by its first commander Colonel Norman T Kirk He was the former chief of surgical services at Walter Reed General Hospital in Washington D C The new hospital was named after Colonel Percy L Jones US Army a pioneering military surgeon who developed modern battlefield ambulance evacuation 3 10 The hospital grew as the flow of casualties increased In 1944 W K Kellogg donated his mansion on nearby Gull Lake to the Army which assigned it to Percy Jones as a convalescent center The Fort Custer Reception Center was also used by Percy Jones for patients on casual duty 11 The Percy Jones hospital complex was massive self contained and fully integrated It had its own water supply and power generation It also had its own bank post office public library and radio station KPJ The Percy Jones Institute was an accredited high school with dozens of educational and training programs for patients ranging from photography to business to agriculture 12 At the height of the war more than two thousand people visited the hospital on a daily basis including celebrities such as Bob Hope Jimmy Stewart Ed Sullivan Gene Autry and Roy Rogers 13 In 1945 Percy Jones became the largest medical installation of any kind in the world Following V J Day victory over Japan in 1945 the hospital population peaked with 11 427 patients assigned to its three area sites Percy Jones specialized as an Army center for neurosurgery amputations and handicapped rehabilitation deep x ray therapy and plastic artificial eyes In one month alone 729 operations were performed 14 15 After a short deactivation period the hospital reopened only a few days after hostilities broke out in Korea in the summer of 1950 In 1951 about 1 000 patients were at Percy Jones many of them with frostbite caused by the bone chilling Korean weather 16 In 1954 after treating more than 100 000 patients the Percy Jones Hospital was permanently closed and the building was placed under the control of the General Services Administration 17 In the decade it was open the hospital made a lasting impact on the city Battle Creek was the first city in America to install wheelchair ramps in its sidewalks to accommodate the Percy Jones patients when they visited downtown 6 18 Battle Creek Federal Center edit In 1954 the GSA moved the National Federal Civil Defense Administration from Washington D C and the Staff College of the National Civil Defense Training Agency from Olney Maryland to the retired hospital in Battle Creek The facility was again rebuilt to prepare it for atomic attack The civil defense operations at the facility included coordinating government and private technical services volunteer and shelter deployment public education and emergency communications In recognition of the facility s new purpose the building was renamed the Battle Creek Federal Center 12 Five years later in 1959 the GSA began using facility space for other federal organizations and by 1962 twenty eight different agencies were housed there The Office for Civil Defense was moved from the Battle Creek Federal Center in late 1962 and the Sixth Corps of the U S Fifth Army and Defense Logistics Services Center DLSC were transferred in Currently the Defense Logistics Agency Defense Logistics Information Service DLIS and Systems Integration Office DSIO J remains as the principal tenant of the Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center along with the DLA Disposition Services and the Air Force Cataloging and Standardization Center CASC 3 Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center edit In 2003 the building was re dedicated as the Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center in honor of three U S senators who had met as wounded servicemen while they were being treated at the hospital during WWII Philip Hart of Michigan who had been wounded during the Normandy Landings at Utah Beach on D Day Bob Dole of Kansas who was wounded in combat over Italy and Daniel Inouye of Hawaii who had been wounded while engaged in combat in Italy 3 Architecture editThe Center includes 21 buildings on 24 acres 3 Building types include offices a power plant workshops and storage buildings The main 1903 sanitarium building has a rectangular footprint with three wings radiating out from the main block It is now referred to as Building 2 with the wings designated as Buildings 2A 2B and 2C 3 It is designed in the Italian Renaissance Revival style which was commonly used for academic buildings in the early twentieth century This was a logical choice for the sanitarium since Kellogg sought to educate his patients in the ways of healthy living 3 The facade is composed of buff colored brick with decorative details such as piers belt courses and quoins corner blocks executed in gray brick Decorative pediments triangular gables are above entrances Concrete columns mark the main entrance bay and are topped with plaster Ionic scrolled capitals Arched openings form loggias which are roofed spaces with open sides The monumental building occupies a high point in the city and was originally five stories in height with a compatibly designed sixth story added in 1920 Despite the changes in use the building s exterior has not been altered substantially 3 The first floor lobby has an ornate plaster ceiling The east wall of the lobby contains a tripartite leadedglass window the center portion bears the inscription He is Thy Life The stairway to the mezzanine has a cast iron balustrade with a wood railing and marble steps The newel post contains classically inspired ornamentation appropriate to the building style 3 The sixth floor lobby contains four murals painted by J J Haidt in 1922 They are located on the coved ceiling and depict serene landscape scenes in pastel colors Other interior spaces have changed dramatically The solarium gymnasium and swimming pool have been demolished 3 The most prominent feature of the complex is the 15 story tower that was added to the south side of Building 2 in 1928 The tower currently designated as Building 1 was designed to complement the existing main sanitarium building The exterior remains unchanged and is clad in stone and different shades of brick The facade is dominated by a two story colonnade with 32 Ionic columns Porte cochere pavilions are located at each end of the colonnade The tower originally contained more than 265 hotel like guest rooms and suites most of which had private bathrooms These spaces have been altered to accommodate government offices The luxurious two story lobby of the tower has twelve massive marble columns with imported Italian marble bases The columns are topped with Corinthian capitals that feature acanthus leaf designs The ceiling in the lobby is coffered recessed and detailed with floral motifs executed in rich colors The lobby walls are covered with pink gold marble and gold chandeliers illuminate the space Tall windows open to the colonnade Building 1A was originally the sanitarium s lavish dining room It retains many original features including large chandeliers and murals of Oriental scenes Draperies doors and decorative moldings have been restored The room retains much of its original character and serves as a cafeteria today 3 Significant events edit1866 Western Health Reform Institute opens 1902 Fire destroys earliest buildings 1903 New five story building completed 1920 Sixth story added to main building 1928 Tower completed 1942 U S Army purchases site for use as hospital 1954 Federal Civil Defense Administration moves into complex 1974 Buildings 2 2A 2B and 2C listed in the National Register of Historic Places 1996 Interior renovation completed 2003 Complex renamed Hart Dole Inouye Federal CenterBuilding facts editLocation 74 North Washington Street Architects Frank M Andrews Merritt Morehouse Construction Dates 1902 1903 1920 1928 Landmark Status Buildings 2 2A 2B and 2C listed in the National Register of Historic Places Buildings 1 and 1A eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places Architectural Style Italian Renaissance Revival Primary Material Buff Colored Brick Prominent Features 15 Story Tower Ionic ColonnadeReferences edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 State of Michigan 2009 Battle Creek Sanitarium Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Retrieved June 26 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q U S General Services Administration page on the Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center NPGallery Asset Detail npgallery nps gov Retrieved 2021 01 07 Historic Buildings Heritage Program General Services Administration U S General Services Administration a b Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center GSA Historic Buildings U S General Services Administration Richmond Jim November 18 2002 Neighbors Whose idea to convert the Battle Creek Sanitarium into Percy Jones Hospital was just one of this master builder s achievements Battle Creek Enquirer amp News Battle Creek Enquirer amp News News From The Home Front Percy Jones General Accepts First Military Patients Battle Creek Enquirer amp News Battle Creek Enquirer amp News February 21 1943 SERVING OUR WW II AND KOREAN WAR VETERANS Archived 2015 07 09 at the Wayback Machine Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services History of Surgeon Generals Norman T Kirk U S Army Medical Department Office of Medical History United States Army Camden Nancy 20 March 2014 Federal Center Housed Famous Americans as Army Hospital WMUK Western Michigan University Public Radio Western Michigan University a b Hart Dole Inouye History Defense Logistics Agency MWR Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services The history behind the Battle Creek federal building Fox17 Television Fox17 West Michigan 9 June 2015 History of the Hart Dole Inouye Center Defense Logistics Agency MWR Battle Creek Defense Logistics Agency Indoor Swimming Pool Bowling Alleys Help Wounded Vets of Percy Jones Regain Health Battle Creek Enquirer amp News Battle Creek Enquirer amp News January 20 1946 Farewell To Hospital Battle Creek Gives a Party for closing Percy Jones New York Times New York Times May 27 1950 Records of the Office of the Surgeon General Army Record Group 112 Publications Dairies and Other Records 1942 1953 United States Army 15 August 2016 Ware J Gabriel July 2015 Creating Curb Cuts encore Kalamazoo Southwest Michigan s Magazine Encore Publications Inc Attribution editMaterial on this page was initially produced by the U S General Services Administration an agency of the United States government and is reproduced with the express permission of that agency All works derived from this material must credit the U S General Services Administration The original text produced by the General Services Administration is available here See also editList of former United States Army medical units Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hart Dole Inouye Federal Center amp oldid 1141777182 Percy Jones Army Hospital, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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