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Materials we have here so you can understand army history, whether youre a soldier and a veteran or someone who has never had family or been in the army themselves. We start the timeline for this exhibit with the spanishamerican war because thats when our collections have the very first recorded audio oral histories of soldiers who actually experienced the war itself. Of course the spanish american war we have the title, the great adventure, because the army was not ready to go to war at this period of time when the u. S. S. Maine exploded in havana harbor and cubans rebelled against the span ir, everything came to a head and we declared war on spain. Spain declared war on us and the war started in earnest in a lot of soldiers enlisted all at once. We didnt have any sort of underlying setup, any sort of logistics ready to go to supply all these soldiers. So between not being able to ply the soldiers to begin with but going to war any way and seeing the consequences of the spanish american war afterwards, kind of foreshadowed the americas ability to fight war throughout the 20th century. So we start with spanish american war in 1898 and we move on through and show different soldiers stories throughout the exhibit. The great part of these glassed in sections of our exhibit which is only 7,000 square feet, is that we can show different soldiers stories over time and switch them out easily to get our massive collection of artifacts and soldiers stories through the exhibit. Kintens collection is kept in our storage facility. We have here would primary pieces from this collection, one is the blouse that he wore during his service. And the other is his 1884 trap door springfield rifle. Soldiers were eventually given much better weapons than that but he kept a great diary and were able to show his entire story through not only this exhibit but also our Archival Holdings of photographs, diaries and manuscripts from soldiers like private kinner. The philippine insurrection was part of the spanish american war, the people of the philippines expected the u. S. Would grant them independence, and when we didnt an insurgency started, much like the insurgencies that were getting done fighting today in iraq and afghanistan. Many of the southerns who went over there kept war souvenirs and one freight collection we have here of lieutenant hobbs he went over, he had many different jobs while in the philippines. But one thing he did was collect many weapons and materials that insurgency groups had the philippines used against americans. Its a very bloody portion of our history, but its one that needs to be told, specifically through soldier stories like lieutenant hobbs. Some of our best collections of weapons are these insurgent weapons from the internettishamerican war and the philippine insurrection. As we move on, the army doesnt just stop in inner war years. We did send a contingent of soldiers to the china relief expedition more popularly known as the boxer rebellion. Along with the british, austrians, russians, germans. And in that time we helped to secure peking, which would later be called beijing. It was one of the first examples of the American Army fighting alongside other nations, and really became the first Real International operation marked by american cooperation with other countries. One interesting piece we have in our collection here at the Army Heritage and Education Center and is access it via several of the q. R. Codes we have in the exhibit, in this case is calvin titus. Titus won a medal of honor for daring and galant conduct, he was one of the first soldiers to scale the walls of peking during the boxer rebellion. This q. R. Code will take your cell phone to a recording of his actual oral history. This is something that took place a long time ago and its followed me. I cant get away from it. But the wall looks like the one you scaled . Yes, thats a very good representation of it. Of course, as you see that fellow standing on top there now, that would have been impossible. That thing those stones are round up on top and narrow and nobody could stand up there unless he was an acrobat. What did you think at the time you were scaling it, were you sure you would make it or did you have doubts about it . Well, i thought id make it all right. I wasnt very much afraid of that because i was a fairly good climber. But of course i never thought about what i was getting into. laughter i understand that when president the door roosevelt personally presented but the medal, it was on the Parade Ground at west point, is that correct . Yes, they turned out the corps in full dress. I saw someone coming up toward me with the superintendent, and he got close enough i saw it was Teddy Roosevelt himself. And the age i tant the agjutant held the medal itself and he took it and started to pin it on my full dress coat here and he said to me now young man, dont let this give you the big head. laughter . Wonderful. Before world war i there was a small conflict called the Mexican Border crisis. We fault against the outlaw poncho villa down on the new mexico border with mexico. And of course we have material in our collections outlining what it might have been like to be a soldier in that troubled period between us and the mexicans. We have an amazing wore war i collection world war i collection, very expansive, everything from soldiers diaries photographs all the way up to memoirs and histories of commanding generals. To start out we show a hotchkiss machine gun. Of course weve demilitarized it for the exhibit, its peeking out over the top much a world war i trench. The war very quickly devolved into trench warfare, as machine guns and artillery forced soldiers, to were used to fighting in a 19th century fashion are now forced to fight with automatic weapons and artillery, and that causes to go down into the trenches to avoid those new weapon systems. Were going to talk about a few of those weapon systems right over here. A high explosive artillery shell during world war i made an enormous amount of noise when it exploded. Sometimes gas shells didnt make as much noise, of course gas being mustard gas and chlorine gas and these sorts of irritants that would do everything from bring a soldier down so he cant fight, all the way to killing soldiers. So if a gas canister or gas artillery shell goes off near you and you want to warn other soldiers in your trench line of that gas, youre going to need something loud enough to get over the din of warfare to warn them that an artillery shell just went off. This artifact here is a wooden gas alarm. Normally you would take it above your head and swing it around. However, we bolted it in for safetys sake. But you can hear the noise it makes. If you had three or four of those going off at the same time, everyone around you would know its time to mask up and get ready for gas to, for the wind to push gas over the top of you. What we have right here is an excellent specimen of an ft17 french designed renaud tank. This tank was built by the americans and used to train the soldiers in france on how to drive and fire the main weapons on tanks. Remember before this tank there werent tanks. The british had tanks and the germans had tanks, but there were no tanks prior to this first generation of tanks. This piece right here is the tank that George Patton fell in love with. Of course general patton would go onto become the grandfather of american armor. You can see some of the as respects on this tank are very similar to tanks we have nowadays. You have a tour it that can rotate 360 degrees. The one thing ill point out, or a few things ill point out first the treads themselves are very aggressive, theyre far forward of the tank ands you can see how the treads are designed to grip. The idea being that if this tank had to go down into an enemy trench line, it would be able to pull itself up the other side. Further more, in the back you can see a scoop, that scoop was designed to steady the tank so that it could go over longer and longer trench lines, or rather wider and wider trench lines. This front load wheel is made of wood. The reason for that is at the time the steel that could have been idea for that front road wheel, there would be too much friction and it would heat up too fast and could break. The strongest but most resilient material we had at the time was live oak. And we used live oak to build those front road wheels so that they would be sturdy enough to deal with the for shun the torsion and pressure without heating up too much. Weve got great footage in our collection. Ive talked about diaries manuscripts and photographs. We also have an extensive video collection, and a team of experts that are able to cure dij ties them. We show them in our main exhibit here. These videos of course are of ft17s in action moving around behind the lines getting ready to go to the fight. After world war which world war i, we entered a period of peace in war times. As the war died down and we started to reduce our forces, one of the big aspects of how the amendment was dealing with the interwar years and the progressive nature of some of the politicians was integrating the United States army. Over here we have another soldiers story, in this case Brigadier General benjamin davis. Davis joined the army in 1898, fought in the philippines and eventually moved his way up through the ranks to become the very first black general officer in the United States armys history. We have his entire collection here and as you can see here it includes medals, his ceremonial saber, his class a uniform. And of course were very proud to have his collection here especially for folks who want to come in and do research on the desegregation of the United States army. He was very instrumental in that process. After the inter war years the United States army entered world war ii and had to bring thary back up to strength very very quickly. You can see a soldier with his bufl bag ready, getting ready to go overseas to fight the german army other perhaps the japanese. As we move through the exhibit you can see that we had several different theaters in which these soldiers were shipping out the fight. Each theater had its own uniform, its own tactics its own way of doing things. This is neat to show because it shows how the Army Heritage and Education Center can take more than a uniform and a gun and put it up on display. Here we have specific items important to this in this case pfth sam adgent. You can see the belt that he probably strapped a pistol to when he went off to war. He was awe military policeman, so he also carry a whistle. We have a little piece of history of this military policeman and the whistle he carried to alert soldiers, direct traffic issue command the whole nine yards. We even have his training bulletin and pieces of material that he brought back from the war. Another as respect of our collections that are phenomenal and are really unmatched anywhere else is the art collections. We have a great deal of artwork, but right here you can see materials from Sergeant Dominic Sergeant Dominic took sketch books ask water colors with him to the fighting in world war ii specifically in the philippines, and then into various island campaigns. You can see here sketches and water colors. The beauty of these selectses is it shows us how a soldier saw through his own eyes the fighting and the gullies that a soldier deals with in war. Through photographs you see a still image, a sanitized image of only whats within the frame. You can see the feeling that the soldier has for that particular aspect of war. Another good collection we have here, weve seen a lot of soldiers stories from men n. This case we have a woman who joined the army right before world war ii, captain hannah tussie. Quickly moved up the ranks to captain which was a fairly high rank for a female at the time. She had served in combat hospitals throughout world war ii, sometimes working upjazzer of 12hour shifts as a upwards of 12hour shifts as a scrub nurse. After the war she moved into the army reserve and eventually fought in vietnam, well, served as a nurse in vietnam. And retired as a lieutenant colonel. We have her collections here including diaries photographs you can see her nurses uniform from world war ii here fantastic stuff to see the entire story of a very strong woman in the United States army. We move into the cold war and in this case one aspect of the cold war is the korean war. Some people call it the forgotten war, because unfortunately its not featured a lot in the media. But it was an undeclared war of Police Action as it was described at the time by some politicians. But it was a full on war. And as in many other times in United States army history the soldiers deployed to the war werent always given the right equipment, and it got very very cold during the winters and very hot in the summer. But the soldiers soldiered on, so to speak, and held off the chinese in the north korean invasion over time. We have some great artifacts from the collection, of course the cold weather is really one of the big aspects of the war itself. And in in case you can see a field cap from the time and also what was called mickey mouse boots. They were Long Time Coming to some of the southerns, they had to wait a while before they got these, but they were able to keep a soldiers fee warm and prevent frostbite. But they were difficult to wear, they cause your feet to sweat and sometimes that sweat froze. It made foot care very very difficult in these cold conditions but overtime soldiers figured out the tricks to keeping their feet warm. We have one more soldier story in this exhibit First Lieutenant emigh, fought through world war ii and ended up in the korean war. In this case he was second infantry division, and as you can see his uniform and purple heart from a gunshot wound during the korean war. As the cold war continues, we move onto another undeclared war, but a war nonetheless, in this case vietnam. In one interesting aspect of the exhibit is a series of photographs we show of the sort of fact dangers that a soldier walking through a junk nell jungle in vietnam, the dangers they dealt with booby traps. Really vietnam shows every aspect of warfare, from fighting in damage, dark jungles, all the way to fighting in highlands to fighting in dryer areas. The american soldier during vietnam had to deal with every type of warfare. One of our very best soldier stories from vietnam is from joe newsome, a great friend of this facility in fact. He was a helicopter pilot and flew numerous, numerous missions over vietnam. You can see some parts of his collection here, we have his flight helmet, we have his uniform. And we have a flight bag to hold the helmet, decorated with the various unit insignias in which he served. Another great part of captain newsomes collection that is absolutely invaluable is the film that he shot from the helicopters that he flew. He was a huey pilot, would hook up the camera in the main door of the huey itself and shoot film of his mission. And this gives us the ability to see what it might have been like to be that door gunner, sitting in newsomes helicopter, and actually in combat, in night running those missions. It is a viewpoint that very few people eventually ever have. The cold war ends and then we fight Saddam Hussein in Desert Shield desert storm. Again, a mazing as respect of our collection are the photographs, the videos, the oral history interviews from the soldiers who were on the ground during desert storm. To fight the iraqi army. We have seen a private soldiers story, weve seen a nurses soldiers story. This right here is one of the soldiers story of a collection we have on general fred franks. One interesting aspect of his career a very wide and expansive career in the army, commanding troops at every single level as you can see at four stars is that we have his prosthetic leg. He comes back to visit us routinely, and of course we have his leg for him to see. But its an interesting piece because he lost his leg in cambodia during vietnam. And he was able to continue with his career with that prosthetic leg. Again moving up through the ranks and becoming one of the most influential generals in the United States history. We move into a Peace Time Army post cold war, after desert storm and Desert Shield and through, we did have conflicts in places like bosnia. But as we move through you can see we get to finally the war on terror. We are currently collecting materials from current, soldiers who are currently operating and soldiers who are recent veterans. If you know of anybody who has materials from their time in the United States army this is the place for that material to go. It allows us to show every as respect of a soldiers life and allow the American People to understand what it was like to be a soldier. In this case weve got the soldiers story of special aguilar. We regularly change out his materials because we have an extensive collection of his materials. Interesting piece up in the side there is his zone i erickson telephone. He did not actually use that cell phone to make phone calls when he was in iraq and afghanistan, rather he used it to help do the mathematics behind the targeting for his sniper rifle. In fact he told us this story and told us that on Night Missions he didnt even use that telephone because of the light emitted from the cell phone itself. Little bits and pieces of the soldiers story, just like that cell phone, are what give us that whole view of the soldier and can better understand the history of the United States army. You can see a piece right there a section of improvised explosive device. Of course one of the main concerns of most soldiers in iraq and afghanistan was the i. E. D. We have an exhibit over here put together by one of our Staff Members who actually was on an e. O. D. Team in iraq. He was wounded by a sniper during a mission, but now he is one of our exhibit designers. And he put together this exhibit right here. This is different views of what he saw as an explosive Ordinance Disposal soldier in iraq. You can see different ways that insurgents might build an improvised explosive device. For those of us who are veterans of this war, these pieces right here really bring out a visceral reaction. These are the sorts of things we dealt with every single day. We show off a lot veterans materials here. We allow the American Public to understand the soldiers experience and what it was like to be a soldier. And of course for us to be able to do that, we utilize the veterans materials. So if you have a diary, if you have a uniform and youre interested in showing it to the world and to allowing us to better our mission, please come on by and talk to us about it, wed love to have you. Up next a pan of scholars discuss United States Foreign Policy toward totalitarian and communist government since the 1930s. This discussion was part of a conference hosted by princeton Universitys James Madison program in american ideals and institutions. The association for the study of free institutions, and texas tech university. This program is an hour and a half

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