The U.S. Army Materiel Command

U.S. Army Materiel CommandThe U.S. Army Materiel Command is responsible for providing materiels to the U.S. Armed Forces. Everything from food to helicopter parts. This agency is an integral part of our Armed Forces in making sure everything needed is delivered. For more information on this agency and what it encompasses please contact: www.amc.army.mil

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Defense Threat Reduction Agency

The Defense Threat Reduction Agency is located at 8725 John J Kingman Road Stop 6201 in Fort Belvoir, Virginia. This federal agency is mainly responsible for combating weapons of mass destruction. They are alert for future threats to our country and our allies. The DTRA has several missions including Chemical and Biological Defense, Nucleur Deterrence and Forensics, and many others. Defense Threat Reduction Agency For more information please contact: 703-767-5870 800-701-5096

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Defense Logistics Agency in Fort Belvoir

Fort Belvoir Elementary School
The Defense Logistics Agency is responsible for providing the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines with logistics and technical services.  This includes everything from food, uniforms, medical supplies, and other equipment. There are offices of the DLA in 48 states and 28 countries. This federal agency is headquartered in Fort Belvoir, Virginia.

The U.S. AMC in Virginia

Fort Belvoir Elementary School
The United States Army Material Command is located Fort Belvoir,Virginia. This Federal Agency is the provider of materiel to the U.S. Army. There are 149 locations around the World with 49 of them in the States and others in 50 different countries. The AMC was created in 1962. For more information please contact: www.amc.army.mil

Woodlawn Plantation

Woodlawn Plantation is a 126-acre estate that was originally part of George Washington’s Mount Vernon Estate. Woodlawn is located at 9000 Richmond Highway, Alexandria, Virginia in Fairfax County near Fort Belvoir. Woodlawn's main Federal-style house was designed by the architect of the U.S. Capitol, Dr. William Thornton, and constructed between 1800 and 1805 for Washington’s nephew Major Lawrence Lewis and his bride, Eleanor "Nelly" Custis Lewis. During the Lewis’ years in residence, Woodlawn comprised over 2,000 acres and was worked by over 100 workers, at least 90 of whom were African American slaves. In 1846, the Lewis’s son sold the property to two families from New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the Troths and the Gillinghams, who were members of The Society of Friends (Quakers). Ethically opposed to slavery, the Troths and Gillinghams established Woodlawn as a "free labor colony," selling lots to both free black and white farmers, and employing only free laborers to demonstrate as false the argument that the abolition of slavery would mean the death of the Southern plantation economy. This belief in liberty and equality made Woodlawn a controversial social experiment in its time and place, and its residents became a target of raids and suspicion by Confederate forces during the Civil War. By the turn of the 20th century, Woodlawn was sadly deteriorated and, in 1896, severely damaged by a hurricane. In 1901, the playwright Paul Kester moved in — with his mother, brother and 60 cats — and began "restoring" the house to livable conditions. In 1905, Kester moved on to nearby Gunston Hall, and sold Woodlawn to Miss Elizabeth Sharpe, a Pennsylvania coal heiress who spent two decades lovingly rehabilitating Woodlawn and its grounds to suit contemporary views of an ideal early American estate. Woodlawn’s final private owners were Senator and Mrs. Oscar Underwood of Alabama. Following Mrs. Underwood’s death, it was purchased by a private organization to ensure its preservation. In 1952, Woodlawn became the first historic site owned by The National Trust for Historic Preservation. For more information call (703) 780-4000 or visit  www.woodlawn1805.org

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Irish Style Link Course at Hilltop Golf Club

Hole #3 was voted by Channel 8’s Capital Golf weekly viewers as “One of the 10 toughest holes in the metro area”.

Hilltop Golf Club can be found at 7900 Telegraph Rd in Alexandria Virginia 22315 just 5.5 mile south of Beltway. It is one of the most sought after driving ranges with a 2,300 yard course that was developed by Lindsay Bruce Ervin who has a history of laying out exceptionally beautiful courses as Queenstown Harbor in Maryland, Hog Neck Golf Course on the Eastern Shore and Birdwood Golf Course at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville. The courses at Hilltop Golf Club offer lovely views of the Potomac River and Maryland Shoreline. It is simply an oasis of golfing greenery accessible to everyone. Hilltop Golf Club is situated across Fort Belvoir while making the location accessible for:
Golf
late afternoon golfing
Lessons are provided for everyone both young and old instructed by USGTF, LPGA – PGA professionals. A new course that is a Scottish style link was opened with 4 sets of trees to provide exciting but challenging games.

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photo credit: dskciado

Army Alumni Program

Go Army!Soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen who are planning on, or considering, separating or retiring from U.S. military service within the next year can begin planning their Individual Transition Plan by visiting the Fort Belvoir Army Career Alumni Program Center. The ACAP center is located on Fort Belvoir in Building 1017, Room 158. For information about upcoming programs and events, servicemembers are encouraged to contact Vernita Holifield at (703) 805-9263. She can also provide information about registering online using your AKO account. Pre-separation briefings are held every weekday but Thursday from 9 to 10:30 a.m. in Barden’s Room 158. photo credit: The U.S. Army