Inscription
The Lima Chapter of the American Women’s Voluntary Services Organization established a community-based, free canteen during World War II for troops traveling on the Pennsylvania Railroad and adjacent Baltimore & Ohio-Nickel Plate Railroads. Meeting as many as forty trains a day, the ladies served 2.5 million troops between 1942-1945. Food, coffee, and other items were donated to the canteen from a twelve county area. The “AWVS” disbanded in 1945, but succeeding volunteers continued to provide service throughout the Korean Conflict and Viet Nam War. Lima’s “Servicemen’s Free Canteen” was the longest, continuously operated service canteen in the United States. An estimated four million soldiers, sailors, and marines were served between 1942-1970.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Allen
More Than A Game
Cairo, OH
Memorial Park hosted the famous Kansas City Monarchs during a barnstorming tour on August 4, 1961.
P-39 Airacobra Crash Site, March 18, 1942
On March 18, 1942, four U.S. Army Air Corps pilots lost their lives within a quarter mile of this marker.
Mc Kee’s Hill
Following the American Revolution, the British Crown sought to retain possession of the Ohio Country by sending chief British Indian...
Solar Refinery
Oil became a valuable resource in Ohio when significant quantities were discovered in Lima in 1885.
The Interurban Era
Lima, OH
In 1910, the Ohio Electric Railway Company opened this terminal, formerly the Interurban Building, which served interurban passengers...
