The collections are stored in these blue boxes. Next we visit the National Park Service Resource center to see a selection of items left at the wall. Hi. And workeum technician for the Vietnam Memorial out in maryland. Its for National Capital regions parks. Housed collection is entirely in this building. We are a collection of objects at a memorial in d. C. , the Vietnam Memorial. Come by the memorial every day and leave objects at the rangers which our park collect and then every two weeks or so, we do a pickup at the them out nd we bring here to our museum Resource Center and we sort through them catalog them and make them part of our collection. Some objects to show you from the collection. Hey kind of cover the range of the collection interprets. Theyre objects that will be on display and i think they are really good example of things in the this was part of the this mans s in Corporal Michael pedals room when he what you in high school. Note is from his brother but the you the co
Dedicating his flag to all the other men who are still missing in action or prisoners of war in vietnam. A lot of times veterans, if they want to come see the things that they left, we are always willing to give them a tour and show them around. It also helps us because we can connect specific names, donors to what they left. We have a big barrel that was left. I think it was left in 2002. I am too young to know what it was. But i have been told that in vietnam they used it as a letrine. An unfortunate soldier was given the job of burning it. But they came and they gave us a bit of context about what it was and when they left it and why. So thats really cool. Theres some donors who are still really active and want to see the things that they left. So this, as you may or may not know, is a roll of toilet paper. You may wonder why we have it in our collection. But toilet paper was as good as gold in vietnam, because if you were out in the field and you didnt have any toilet paper, you ha
The National Park service. I work specifically for the Vietnam Veterans memorial collection, which is housed here in the Museum Resource center. The building is for the National Capital region parks. But our collection specifically is housed entirely in this building. We are a collection of objects that are left at a memorial in d. C. , Vietnam Veterans memorial. Visitors come by every day, leave objects at the memorial which our park rangers collect. And then every two weeks or so, we do a pickup at the memorial. We bring them out here to our moo zeal Resource Center where we sourt through them and catalog them and make them part of our collection. I have chosen objects to show you from the collection. They kind of cover the range of topics that the collection interprets, including ptsd, mothers and fathers who lost children. They are objects that will go on display soon. They are good examples of the tin things in the collection. This was left at the wall in the 90s. This is part of