Times Kansans got connected to the help they needed through United Way 211 Information & Referral. OUR IMPACT IS LOCAL Your gift helps your neighbors, right here in south central Kansas.
NC 211 is an information and referral service provided by United Way of North Carolina. Families and individuals can dial 2-1-1 or 1-888-892-1162 to obtain free and confidential information on health and human services and resources within their community. The FCC intended the 211 code as an easy-to-remember and universally recognizable number that would enable a critical connection between individuals and families in need and the appropriate community-based organizations and government agencies. Currently, active 211 systems cover all or part of 50 states. Residents at 211 140th St, New York NY: Alssatou Bah, Isatu Barrie (212) 234-6579, Nouhou Barrie (212) 234-6579. Neighbors, Property Information, Public and Historical records.
211th Infantry Regiment | |
---|---|
Active | Circa 1946-present[1] |
Country | United States |
Branch | Florida Army National Guard |
Type | Light infantry |
Motto(s) | 'Paroneri' meaning 'Equal to the Task' |
Insignia | |
Distinctive unit insignia |
U.S. Infantry Regiments | |
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Previous | Next |
201st Infantry Regiment | 218th Infantry Regiment |
The 211th Infantry Regiment is the Regional Training Institute of Florida. The regiment existed as an operational unit during the Cold War era as part of the 51st Infantry Division. The regiment's headquarters was in Miami.
The 211th Infantry performed their first annual field training at Fort Jackson from July 4 to 18, 1948 as part of the 51st Infantry Division. Companies C and G were ordered into State Active Duty to aid civil authorities in hurricane relief. Lieutenant Roland Fisher commanded Company G (3 officers and 83 soldiers) during the relief operation in Fort Lauderdale from October 5 to November 15, 1948. Captain Richard H. Coburn commanded Company C (3 officers and 48 soldiers) during relief operations from October 5 to 7, 1948.[2]
Organization in 1948[edit]
Headquarters | Company | Station |
---|---|---|
211 Infantry Regiment | Headquarters | Miami, Florida |
Service Company | Miami, Florida | |
Heavy Mortar Company | Tampa, Florida | |
Heavy Tank Company | Palmetto, Florida | |
Medical Company | St. Petersburg, Florida | |
1st Battalion, 211th Infantry Regiment | Headquarters & Headquarters Company | Miami, Florida |
Company A, 1–211 IN | Miami Springs, Florida | |
Company B, 1–211 IN | Coral Gables, Florida | |
Company C, 1–211 IN | Hollywood, Florida | |
Company D, 1–211 IN | Homestead, Florida | |
2nd Battalion, 211th Infantry Regiment | Headquarters & Headquarters Company | West Palm Beach, Florida |
Company E, 2–211 IN | Belle Glade, Florida | |
Company F, 2–211 IN | West Palm Beach, Florida | |
Company G, 2–211 IN | Fort Lauderdale, Florida | |
Company H, 2–211 IN | Fort Pierce, Florida | |
3rd Battalion, 211th Infantry Regiment | Headquarters & Headquarters Company | St. Petersburg, Florida |
Company I, 3–211 IN | St. Petersburg, Florida | |
Company K, 3–211 IN | Clearwater, Florida | |
Company L, 3–211 IN | Bradenton, Florida | |
Company M, 3–211 IN | Sarasota, Florida |
The 211th Infantry conducted annual training at Fort Jackson July 3 to 17, 1949 and August 13 to 27, 1950 with the 51st Infantry Division. The regiment was again partially called on for hurricane relief. Second battalion headquarters and portions of Companies G and H (altogether totalling 9 officers and 153 soldiers) conducted relief operations in West Palm Beach, Fort Pierce, Hollywood, and Fort Lauderdale areas from August 26 to September 1, 1949. Company K (4 officers and 52 soldiers) under command of Captain Richard Woodring aided in hurricane relief to Tarpon Springs-Clearwater area on September 6 to 7, 1950. Company C (5 officers and 46 soldiers) under command of Lieutenant Elby H. Cross aided in hurricane relief from October 18 to 20, 1950.[3]
The 211th Infantry conducted Annual Training at Fort McClellan, Alabama, from July 29 to August 12, 1951, and Company I was awarded The Adjutant General's Trophy for 1951.
The regiment conducted Annual Training from June 15 to 29, 1952, July 26 to August 9, 1953, July 4 to 18, 1954, and from June 6 to 23, 1957 at Fort McClellan.
Th2110d1009
Commanders[edit]
COL Robert A. Ballard, 211th Infantry Regiment, 1947 -
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- Hawk, Robert. Florida's Army: Militia/State Troops?National Guard 1565-1985. Englewood, FL. Pineapple Press, Inc. 1986.
- ^https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=uGcpAAAAIBAJ&sjid=F8gEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6595,5478552&dq=211th+infantry&hl=en
- ^Lance, Mark (1948). Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida, 1947-1948. Florida National Guard. p. 10.
- ^Lance, Mark (1950). Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida, 1949-1950. Florida National Guard. p. 9.
- ^Lance, Mark (1948). Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida, 1947-1948. Florida National Guard. p. 9.
In many states, dialing '211' provides individuals and families in need with a shortcut through what can be a bewildering maze of health and human service agency phone numbers. By simply dialing 211, those in need of assistance can be referred, and sometimes connected, to appropriate agencies and community organizations.
Th2110d Manual
Dialing 211 helps direct callers to services for, among others, the elderly, the disabled, those who do not speak English, those with a personal crisis, those with limited reading skills, and those who are new to their communities.
211 is available to approximately 309 million people, which is 94.6 percent of the total U.S. population. 211 covers all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. To find out whether 211 services are offered in your area and to obtain more information, visit 211.org.
How 211 Works
211 works a bit like 911. Calls to 211 are routed by the local telephone company to a local or regional calling center. The 211 center's referral specialists receive requests from callers, access databases of resources available from private and public health and human service agencies, match the callers' needs to available resources, and link or refer them directly to an agency or organization that can help.
Chinese blackjack odds. Types of Referrals Offered by 211
- Basic Human Needs Resources – including food and clothing banks, shelters, rent assistance, and utility assistance.
- Physical and Mental Health Resources – including health insurance programs, Medicaid and Medicare, maternal health resources, health insurance programs for children, medical information lines, crisis intervention services, support groups, counseling, and drug and alcohol intervention and rehabilitation.
- Work Support – including financial assistance, job training, transportation assistance and education programs.
- Access to Services in Non-English Languages - including language translation and interpretation services to help non-English-speaking people find public resources (Foreign language services vary by location.)
- Support for Older Americans and Persons with Disabilities – including adult day care, community meals, respite care, home health care, transportation and homemaker services.
- Children, Youth and Family Support – including child care, after-school programs, educational programs for low-income families, family resource centers, summer camps and recreation programs, mentoring, tutoring and protective services.
- Suicide Prevention – referral to suicide prevention help organizations. Callers can also dial the following National Suicide Prevention Hotline numbers which are operated by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services:
- 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255)
- 1-800-SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433)
- 1-888-SUICIDE (1-888-784-2433)
- 1-877-SUICIDA (1-877-784-2432) (Spanish)
Th2111ssal
Those who wish to donate time or money to community help organizations can also do so by dialing 211.
Printable Version
U.S. Infantry Regiments | |
---|---|
Previous | Next |
201st Infantry Regiment | 218th Infantry Regiment |
The 211th Infantry Regiment is the Regional Training Institute of Florida. The regiment existed as an operational unit during the Cold War era as part of the 51st Infantry Division. The regiment's headquarters was in Miami.
The 211th Infantry performed their first annual field training at Fort Jackson from July 4 to 18, 1948 as part of the 51st Infantry Division. Companies C and G were ordered into State Active Duty to aid civil authorities in hurricane relief. Lieutenant Roland Fisher commanded Company G (3 officers and 83 soldiers) during the relief operation in Fort Lauderdale from October 5 to November 15, 1948. Captain Richard H. Coburn commanded Company C (3 officers and 48 soldiers) during relief operations from October 5 to 7, 1948.[2]
Organization in 1948[edit]
Headquarters | Company | Station |
---|---|---|
211 Infantry Regiment | Headquarters | Miami, Florida |
Service Company | Miami, Florida | |
Heavy Mortar Company | Tampa, Florida | |
Heavy Tank Company | Palmetto, Florida | |
Medical Company | St. Petersburg, Florida | |
1st Battalion, 211th Infantry Regiment | Headquarters & Headquarters Company | Miami, Florida |
Company A, 1–211 IN | Miami Springs, Florida | |
Company B, 1–211 IN | Coral Gables, Florida | |
Company C, 1–211 IN | Hollywood, Florida | |
Company D, 1–211 IN | Homestead, Florida | |
2nd Battalion, 211th Infantry Regiment | Headquarters & Headquarters Company | West Palm Beach, Florida |
Company E, 2–211 IN | Belle Glade, Florida | |
Company F, 2–211 IN | West Palm Beach, Florida | |
Company G, 2–211 IN | Fort Lauderdale, Florida | |
Company H, 2–211 IN | Fort Pierce, Florida | |
3rd Battalion, 211th Infantry Regiment | Headquarters & Headquarters Company | St. Petersburg, Florida |
Company I, 3–211 IN | St. Petersburg, Florida | |
Company K, 3–211 IN | Clearwater, Florida | |
Company L, 3–211 IN | Bradenton, Florida | |
Company M, 3–211 IN | Sarasota, Florida |
The 211th Infantry conducted annual training at Fort Jackson July 3 to 17, 1949 and August 13 to 27, 1950 with the 51st Infantry Division. The regiment was again partially called on for hurricane relief. Second battalion headquarters and portions of Companies G and H (altogether totalling 9 officers and 153 soldiers) conducted relief operations in West Palm Beach, Fort Pierce, Hollywood, and Fort Lauderdale areas from August 26 to September 1, 1949. Company K (4 officers and 52 soldiers) under command of Captain Richard Woodring aided in hurricane relief to Tarpon Springs-Clearwater area on September 6 to 7, 1950. Company C (5 officers and 46 soldiers) under command of Lieutenant Elby H. Cross aided in hurricane relief from October 18 to 20, 1950.[3]
The 211th Infantry conducted Annual Training at Fort McClellan, Alabama, from July 29 to August 12, 1951, and Company I was awarded The Adjutant General's Trophy for 1951.
The regiment conducted Annual Training from June 15 to 29, 1952, July 26 to August 9, 1953, July 4 to 18, 1954, and from June 6 to 23, 1957 at Fort McClellan.
Th2110d1009
Commanders[edit]
COL Robert A. Ballard, 211th Infantry Regiment, 1947 -
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- Hawk, Robert. Florida's Army: Militia/State Troops?National Guard 1565-1985. Englewood, FL. Pineapple Press, Inc. 1986.
- ^https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=uGcpAAAAIBAJ&sjid=F8gEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6595,5478552&dq=211th+infantry&hl=en
- ^Lance, Mark (1948). Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida, 1947-1948. Florida National Guard. p. 10.
- ^Lance, Mark (1950). Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida, 1949-1950. Florida National Guard. p. 9.
- ^Lance, Mark (1948). Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida, 1947-1948. Florida National Guard. p. 9.
In many states, dialing '211' provides individuals and families in need with a shortcut through what can be a bewildering maze of health and human service agency phone numbers. By simply dialing 211, those in need of assistance can be referred, and sometimes connected, to appropriate agencies and community organizations.
Th2110d Manual
Dialing 211 helps direct callers to services for, among others, the elderly, the disabled, those who do not speak English, those with a personal crisis, those with limited reading skills, and those who are new to their communities.
211 is available to approximately 309 million people, which is 94.6 percent of the total U.S. population. 211 covers all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. To find out whether 211 services are offered in your area and to obtain more information, visit 211.org.
How 211 Works
211 works a bit like 911. Calls to 211 are routed by the local telephone company to a local or regional calling center. The 211 center's referral specialists receive requests from callers, access databases of resources available from private and public health and human service agencies, match the callers' needs to available resources, and link or refer them directly to an agency or organization that can help.
Chinese blackjack odds. Types of Referrals Offered by 211
- Basic Human Needs Resources – including food and clothing banks, shelters, rent assistance, and utility assistance.
- Physical and Mental Health Resources – including health insurance programs, Medicaid and Medicare, maternal health resources, health insurance programs for children, medical information lines, crisis intervention services, support groups, counseling, and drug and alcohol intervention and rehabilitation.
- Work Support – including financial assistance, job training, transportation assistance and education programs.
- Access to Services in Non-English Languages - including language translation and interpretation services to help non-English-speaking people find public resources (Foreign language services vary by location.)
- Support for Older Americans and Persons with Disabilities – including adult day care, community meals, respite care, home health care, transportation and homemaker services.
- Children, Youth and Family Support – including child care, after-school programs, educational programs for low-income families, family resource centers, summer camps and recreation programs, mentoring, tutoring and protective services.
- Suicide Prevention – referral to suicide prevention help organizations. Callers can also dial the following National Suicide Prevention Hotline numbers which are operated by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services:
- 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255)
- 1-800-SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433)
- 1-888-SUICIDE (1-888-784-2433)
- 1-877-SUICIDA (1-877-784-2432) (Spanish)
Th2111ssal
Those who wish to donate time or money to community help organizations can also do so by dialing 211.
Printable Version
Dial 211 for Essential Community Services Guide (pdf)