Page Layout and Widget GuideMain MenuBasic LayoutImage Header LayoutLorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Etiam non laoreet tortor. Nunc sagittis lectus massa, non facilisis ex dictum eget. Curabitur sit amet posuere odio. Vestibulum eget enim quam.Splash LayoutCras cursus interdum ante, a blandit nulla faucibus consectetur. Sed sed neque imperdiet, egestas lorem at, mollis ante. Etiam laoreet feugiat iaculis. Integer tempus libero eget neque efficitur, ac vehicula ex aliquet. Nunc lacus velit, vehicula at iaculis a, lacinia quis sapien. Integer ac tellus nisl. Sed molestie, orci sed varius bibendum, nulla ante bibendum quam, in egestas ante metus vel leo.Book Splash LayoutNunc consequat malesuada ante at eleifend. Praesent vel lectus risus. Nulla ornare vulputate diam ac rhoncus. In ex est, vulputate quis lobortis pellentesque, porttitor sollicitudin mauris. Suspendisse non orci luctus, euismod ex in, ullamcorper nulla. Nam varius quam dolor, sit amet consequat libero accumsan eu. Nullam aliquam at nisi quis maximus. Phasellus faucibus nunc libero, eget interdum eros dictum eu. Aliquam ultrices sed erat at dapibus.Visual Path LayoutMedia Gallery LayoutStructured Media Gallery LayoutGoogle Map LayoutTimeline LayoutBlank Slate LayoutContents Visualization LayoutConnections Visualization LayoutGrid Visualization LayoutRadial Visualization LayoutPath Visualization LayoutMedia Visualization LayoutTag Visualization LayoutTag Cloud LayoutTable of Contents LayoutResources LayoutMetadata LayoutDescriptionTimeline and Map WidgetsVisualization WidgetsCarousel WidgetCard and Summary Widgets
Main Navy and Munitions Buildings
12016-08-09T13:51:39-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e103851The Main Navy and Munitions temporary war buildings were built quickly in 1918 during World War I under the direction of Secretary of the Navy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, to provide emergency offices for wartime workers. Nearly 14,000 U.S. Navy personnel worked in these buildings, including the Secretary of the Navy and the Bureau of Navigation. FDR would later say he wanted the structures to be "of such superlative ugliness" that they would be torn down quickly. Despite their appearance and presence on parkland of the Mall, the offices proved useful for more than 50 years. President Nixon ordered them demolished in 1970. Today, the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial and Constitution Gardens occupy the same space that belonged to the Main Navy and Munitions buildings.plain2016-08-09T13:51:39-07:00mallhistory.org2012-09-12T11:43:46+00:001918 (Constructed)WWITemp.jpgghost mallwork & play38.891200095329,-77.0454828784181890-1919Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e