View allAll Photos Tagged Recruiting
A young child shows Sgt. 1st Class Jimmie Lawson from U.S. Army 2nd Recruiting Brigade a photo while Staff Sgt. David Crayle, U.S. Army Recruiting Battalion-Baltimore looks on at the Calderon Clubhouse of the Boys & Girls Clubs of San Antonio during 2018 U.S. Army All-American Bowl, Jan. 2.
Staff from Marquette Branch Prison and Alger Correctional Facility attended the Marquette Builder’s show at the Superior Dome and the career fair at Anchor Bay High School. Staff spoke to potential applicants about employment opportunities and made the community aware of MDOC’s positive impacts on the MBP prisoner population. Thank you to all staff who dedicate effort and time to recruitment activities.
Wir suchen eine/n engagierten Mitarbeiter/in im Bereich Recruiting und Personalmarketing in Jena!
Bewerbungen am besten per Mail an Frau Nadia Grötsch: n.groetsch@towerconsult.de
High school sports recruiting service that helps student athletes connect with college recruiters. RecruitLook increases athlete's chances of getting an athletic scholarship.
Staff from Marquette Branch Prison and Alger Correctional Facility attended the Marquette Builder’s show at the Superior Dome and the career fair at Anchor Bay High School. Staff spoke to potential applicants about employment opportunities and made the community aware of MDOC’s positive impacts on the MBP prisoner population. Thank you to all staff who dedicate effort and time to recruitment activities.
An M48 Medium Patton tank of the 20th Armor Regiment acts as a static display during a recruiting drive for the Maine Army National Guard in the 1960's. (Maine National Guard Archives)
High school sports recruiting service that helps student athletes connect with college recruiters. RecruitLook increases athlete's chances of getting an athletic scholarship.
Everything will be Civil War 150th anniversary events for the next few years. This was at 'Cole's Union Rangers' mustering reenactment at the Frederick Hessian Barracks today. This future soldier is Aaron of Waynesboro, MD.
February 14, 2021 - Recruit Receiving Barracks. Now the home of Columbus City Schools' Fort Hayes Metropolitan Education Center. "The Columbus Arsenal was established in 1863 as a U.S. Army arsenal for Ohio regiments during the Civil War. In 1875 it became a recruiting center and was renamed the Columbus Barracks. On December 13, 1922 it was renamed Fort Hayes in honor of former Ohio governor and President Rutherford B. Hayes.
The earliest buildings were completed from 1863-1865, with other buildings added throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Fort Hayes was declared excess property by the U.S. Government in 1965, and it now belongs to the Columbus Public Schools. At one time the facility was the oldest federal military installation in continuous use in Ohio. Columbus, Ohio." Previous text from the following website: digital-collections.columbuslibrary.org/digital/collectio...
"Fort Hayes was established in 1863 as a U.S. Army arsenal and armory for the manufacture and storage of war materials. The initial buildings were constructed from 1863–1865, and other buildings were added through the late nineteenth century and the first years of the twentieth. The facility was converted to a recruiting depot after the Civil War and was an important troop distribution center in World War I. It was declared excess property by the U.S. Government in 1965, and it now belongs to the Columbus Public Schools. The facility was the oldest federal military installation in continuous use in Ohio at the time it was closed. The main building is presented on the NRHP nomination for the Fort Hayes Historic District as the oldest major permanent military building in Ohio (Porter 1969:2–4)." Additional information in my description I found in the following document: www.dot.state.oh.us/projects/7071/environmental/Documents...