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Panama Fort Amador (Canal Zone) United States Data Source Smithsonian Libraries Topic Fort Grant (Canal Zone)--History Military bases, American History Armed Forces Facilities. siris_sil_524502 SIL ...
PANAMA HONORS AMADOR.; Fort to be Named After Dead ex-President, Who Was Buried Yesterday. Share full article. May 4, 1909. Credit... The New York Times Archives.
TimesMachine is an exclusive benefit for home delivery and digital subscribers. About the Archive This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s print archive, before the start of ...
Fort San Lorenzo, a ruined Spanish post high above the Canal Zone's Caribbean coast, was bright with brass one morning last week. To the strains of music from a military band some 500 senior ...
And while it’s true that racial segregation existed in the Panama Canal Zone, with separate bathrooms, water fountains, and ...
day 2: panama city / miraflores Positioned strategically to protect the southern terminus of the Panama Canal at Panama Bay, the U.S. Army Fort Amador is our first stop of the day.
Rubio, traveling to the Central American country and touring the Panama Canal on his first foreign trip as top U.S. diplomat, held face-to-face talks with Mulino, who has resisted pressure from ...
O n a sunny day last week, a group of American teen-agers marched up and raised a U.S. flag over their high school at Balboa in the Panama Canal Zone.. It seemed an everyday thing to do. But in ...
It was a territory known to some who lived there as a tropical utopia. The Canal Zone in Panama had been under U.S. control for nearly 75 years. But in 1977, President Jimmy Carter signed treaties ...
PORT EVERGLADES, FLA. (WSVN) - A cruise ship that reported four deaths and two COVID-19 cases has been denied access to cross the Panama Canal and head to Fort Lauderdale.
And while it’s true that racial segregation existed in the Panama Canal Zone, with separate bathrooms, water fountains, and schools, this is not what caused the 1964 riots. Rather, it was a ...
The Canal Zone in Panama had been under U.S. control for nearly 75 years. But in 1977, President Jimmy Carter signed treaties with Panama's leader, Gen. Omar Torrijos.