place

United Presbyterian Church, Summerset

1853 establishments in Iowa19th-century Presbyterian church buildings in the United StatesCarpenter Gothic church buildings in IowaCentral Iowa Registered Historic Place stubsChurches completed in 1885
Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in IowaIowa church stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Warren County, IowaPresbyterian churches in IowaReligious organizations established in 1853Scotch-Irish American historyScottish-American culture in Iowa
United Presbyterian Church
United Presbyterian Church

Scotch Ridge United Presbyterian Church is a historic structure located in rural Warren County, Iowa, United States. It was built in 1883 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. The founders of the church were Scotch-Irish immigrants who could trace their ancestry to Scotland and were proud of their Scottish heritage. Scotch Ridge United Presbyterian Church was established on August 13, 1853. On that day Robert McElroy went to Chariton, Iowa to get the charter. The first church building was built in 1857 for $1,000. Pete Schooler and his wife sold two acres of the land for $30 on January 3, 1865, for a new Presbyterian Churchyard. On April 28 of the same year William Hastie and his wife sold one acre of adjacent land for $25 for a cemetery. The present frame church building was built in 1883 for $4,000 in the Gothic Revival style. Additional land for the cemetery was added in 1898 and 1971. An additional fellowship hall wing was added in 2010.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article United Presbyterian Church, Summerset (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

United Presbyterian Church, Summerset
US 65;US 69,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: United Presbyterian Church, SummersetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.471111111111 ° E -93.560555555556 °
placeShow on map

Address

US 65;US 69
50047
Iowa, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

United Presbyterian Church
United Presbyterian Church
Share experience

Nearby Places

Distributed Training Operations Center

The Distributed Training Operations Center (DTOC) also known as Detachment 1, 132nd Wing (132 WG), Iowa Air National Guard, is the "support nexus" of the Air National Guard's Distributed Mission Operations (DMO). It is the only U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) unit providing daily tactical distributed mission training (DMT) events for Active, Guard, Reserve, and joint operations.The DTOC is located at Des Moines Air National Guard Base in Des Moines, Iowa. The primary mission of the DTOC is to provide persistent DMO capability, expertise and staffing for the execution of DMO events consisting of realistic, relevant training opportunities to warfighters in a networked environment. It also conducts tests and provides technical and analytical expertise in support of networked operations.DMO is a component of the Air Force Training Transformation initiative, which is part of the larger DoD Training Transformation (T2) initiative. The DTOC organizes DMO events primarily for Air National Guard (ANG) and Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC) pilots, combat systems officers, air battle managers, and enlisted aircrew, as well as ground-based tactical air control parties (TACP) and special tactics squadrons (STS). It enables flight crews and tactical ground personnel from throughout the United States and the world to train together in a virtual world for combat missions. The DTOC facilitates training between Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve pilots and flight crews, and other warfighters in the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, and other aviation and non-aviation forces. The National Guard and Reserve Equipment (NG&RE) Report for Fiscal Year 2008, reported that the, "...ANG established the first Distributed Warfare Detachment in the Air Force at the [then-]132nd Fighter Wing (132 FW) to house the Distributed Training Operations Center (DTOC). The DTOC’s one-of-a-kind capabilities and mission will grow to keep pace with the scope of Distributed Mission Operations (DMO) in the Air Force over the next four years. As the Guard’s DMO lynchpin, the DTOC will provide the operational environment for a virtual battlespace linking a wide array of high fidelity flight and mission crew simulators. The DTOC is responsible for all network management, event control, scenario development, unit DMO scheduling, remote maintenance, remote instruction, and realistic threat insertion. In addition, the DTOC manages the distributed network called ARCNET. The Mission Training Engineering Center (MTEC), collocated with the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) in Mesa, Arizona, coordinates technology programs with AFRL, and acts as the engineering focal point for the Air Reserve Component (ARC, i.e., the combination of the ANG and AFRC) to exploit and transition leading edge technology into hardware or software solutions." Previously known as ReserveNet when it was limited to AFRC, ReserveNet was renamed the Air Reserve Component Network (ARCNET) in 2009 when ANG units were incorporated into the network and the DTOC assumed its management.