embarkation note - meaning and definition. What is embarkation note
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What (who) is embarkation note - definition

UNITED STATES ARMY COMMAND
New York Port Of Embarkation; Hoboken Port of Embarkation; New York port of embarkation
  • 86th division troops arriving at New York are met by the "Welcome Home" boat.
  • Barricaded storage track near Caven Point explosives pier in New York Harbor.
  • Brooklyn Army Base, New York, between the wars.
  • Contemporary view of Brooklyn Army Terminal
  • Troops from camps disembarking at Hoboken piers to board transports to Europe.
  • USAHS ''Thistle'']].
  • Map, Port of Embarkation Hoboken (1917–18).
  • Army ports: Passengers and tons of cargo embarked during the period December 1941 – August 1945.
  • Sorting mail at the New York Port of Embarkation.
  • The Port of Embarkation in the Overseas Supply System: 1942.
  • Typical Organization for Ports of Embarkation 1 July 1945.

Musical note         
  • Names of some notes
SIGN USED IN MUSICAL NOTATION, A PITCHED SOUND
Note (music); Musical notes; Natural E; Music notes; Music note; Musical Notes; Musical Note; Note music; 🎵; 🎶; 🎜; 🎝; Note names; Boethian notation; CDEFGAB
In music, a note is a symbol denoting a musical sound. In English usage, a note is also the sound itself.
Jean Noté         
  • Noté singing "[[La Marseillaise]]" in 1907
BELGIAN OPERA SINGER
Jean-Baptiste Noté; Jean Note
Jean-Baptiste Noté (6 May 1858 in Tournai – 1 April 1922 in Brussels) was a Belgian operatic baritone. He graduated from the Royal Conservatory of Ghent in 1884 with first prizes in singing and lyrical declamation.
Treasury Note (1890–1891)         
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AMERICAN CURRENCY
Treasury (Coin) Note; Coin Note; Treasury Note (1890-91); Grand Watermelon; Treasury Note (1890–91); Treasury Note (1890-1891)
The Treasury Note (also known as a Coin Note) was a type of representative money issued by the United States government from 1890 until 1893 under authority of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act in denominations of , , , , , , and .Hessler, Gene and Chambliss, Carlson (2006).

Wikipedia

New York Port of Embarkation

The New York Port of Embarkation (NYPOE) was a United States Army command responsible for the movement of troops and supplies from the United States to overseas commands. The command had facilities in New York and New Jersey, roughly covering the extent of today's Port of New York and New Jersey, as well as ports in other cities as sub-ports under its direct command. During World War I, when it was originally known as the Hoboken Port of Embarkation with headquarters in seized Hamburg America Line facilities in Hoboken, New Jersey, the Quartermaster Corps had responsibility. The sub-ports were at Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia and the Canadian ports of Halifax, Montreal and St. Johns. The World War I port of embarkation was disestablished, seized and requisitioned facilities returned or sold and operations consolidated at the new army terminal in Brooklyn. Between the wars reduced operations continued the core concepts of a port of embarkation and as the home port of Atlantic army ships. With war in Europe the army revived the formal New York Port of Embarkation command with the New York port, the only Atlantic port of embarkation, taking a lead in developing concepts for operations.

In World War II the NYPOE, now under the new Transportation Corps, was the largest of eight Port of Embarkation commands, the second largest being the San Francisco Port of Embarkation and the second largest on the East Coast being Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation. Originally it had the army facilities in Charleston, South Carolina as a sub-port until it was elevated to the Charleston Port of Embarkation as a separate command. The cargo sub-port at Philadelphia remained under the command of NYPOE throughout the war. By the end of the war 3,172,778 passengers, counting 475 embarked at the Philadelphia cargo port, and 37,799,955 measurement tons of cargo had passed through the New York port itself with 5,893,199 tons of cargo having passed through its cargo sub-port at Philadelphia—about 44% of all troops and 34% of all cargo passing through army ports of embarkation.