VFW post 1062
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- Cuyahoga Falls, OH
- VFW post 1062
We are a social club that welcomes new members every day. We offer adult beverages, billiards, karaoke, food, friends and fun!!
Address
1581 Main Street
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
44221
General information
open daily noon - 11:00pm Karaoke every Saturday starting Feb 2, 2013 from 8pm-midnight If you or your business would be interested in sponsoring the VFW rebuild effort, please go to our website and click on the "donors and sponsors" page or send us a message through Facebook for details.
Opening Hours
| Monday | 12pm - 10pm |
| Tuesday | 12pm - 10pm |
| Wednesday | 12pm - 10pm |
| Thursday | 12pm - 10pm |
| Friday | 12pm - 10pm |
| Saturday | 12pm - 10pm |
| Sunday | 12pm - 8pm |
Telephone
Website
Products
We welcome all guests! However, we are a members-only club so a current member will need to sign you in for a visit. If you do not know a current member personally, please call us and we can arrange for you to be signed in.
To become a member:
1. You need a current full member to sponsor you for a cantina membership.
2. You need your own DD214 for a full membership, no sponsor required.
3. You need to be next of kin to a service-member and have their DD214 for a full membership, no sponsor required.
To get a copy of the DD214, please go here for more details:
http://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/
**These requirements do not apply to any fundraiser or benefit held by the post.
If there are additional questions, please contact the post via phone or through this page.
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Who We Are
The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States is a nonprofit veterans service organization comprised of eligible veterans and military service members from the active, guard and reserve forces.
We trace our roots back to 1899 when veterans of the Spanish-American War (1898) and the Philippine Insurrection (1899-1902) founded local organizations to secure rights and benefits for their service. Many arrived home wounded or sick. There was no medical care or veterans' pension for them, and they were left to care for themselves.
In their misery, some of these veterans banded together and formed organizations that would eventually band together and become known as the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States. After chapters were formed in Ohio, Colorado and Pennsylvania, the movement quickly gained momentum. Today, membership stands at more than 1.6 million members of the VFW and its Auxiliary.