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National World War I National Museum and Memorial

Kansas City MO

This Museum and Memorial holds the most comprehensive collection of World War I objects and documents in the world and is the second-oldest public museum dedicated to preserving the objects, history and experiences of the war.
The setting for World War I.
Wilhelm II of Germany and Franz-Josef of Austria-Hungary.
European empires controlled half of the world’s surface.
Europe was by far the strongest economic engine of the world.
This “World War” was fought on many fronts…the Western..
…the Eastern…
African..
Near East…
Gallipoli (Turkey)…
Even Asia and Japan!
The trigger for World War I: the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary by a Bosnian Serb nationalist.
Various cannons from the war. These are a German 15 cm Heavy Field Howitzer, Model 1902 and a British 5 inch Heavy Field Gun, Mark I.
German 24.5 cm New Model Heavy Trench Mortar (Minenwerfer), Model 1916
French 75 mm Field Gun, Model of 1897
Austro-Hungarian 8 cm Field Gun, Model 5/8
Bavarian 15 cm Heavy Field Howitzer (SFH), 1893
Whitehead Torpedo, Mark I, manufactured in the USA, this type of torpedo was used on British, French, Russian and Japanese submarines during the war.
Naval Mine, US-made Mark IV, Model 1, 1917, contained 300 pounds of TNT.
We stayed out of the war until 1917. President Woodrow Wilson campaigned for reelection in 1916 highlighting that he had kept us out of the war.
President Woodrow Wilson
British Dehavilland DH2
German Fokker D.VII
This was the legendary Red Baron.
Trenches.
War recruiting posters
Ford Model T Truck, 1918, Light Delivery Body. These trucks were used for transporting supplies and equipment without military paint or markings.
Red Cross wagon and infirmary cot.
1917 Harley Davidson motorcycle
French-made Renault FT17 Tank
General John J. Pershing, Commander, American Expeditionary Forces
US Army Nurse Corps uniform worn by Amy Beers, who served on a “shock team” treating severely wounded soldiers. She rigged up an apparatus to conduct heat into hospital beds. She served more than twelve months overseas. After the war she returned to the states and became a nursing administrator.
This cane was crafted from the wing of Quentin Roosevelt’s plane that was shot down by the Germans. President Theodore Roosevelt’s son was killed in 1918 just months before the Armistice was signed. The Germans, out of respect for the ex-president, conducted an honorable funeral for Quentin.
Austrian uniforms.
Russian uniforms.
Austro-Hungarian General’s hat
Armistice ends the war on November 11, 1918.
Unfortunately, the way World War I ended paved the way for the rise of Adolph Hitler, and World War II.
Below the bridge leading to the inside of the museum are 9,000 poppies. Each poppy represents 1,000 World War I combatants who lost their lives during their service, honoring the 9 million total soldiers killed.
We were at the museum during Memorial Day weekend, so there were many flags all around.
It was rainy earlier in the day.

18th & Vine District

Kansas City MO

This is the historically bustling district for Jazz in Kansas City.
The Blue Room
Gem Theater
World Famous Arthur Bryant’s Barbeque
We were there a little early. Typically the line goes out the door and down the block at lunchtime.
Pulled pork
Brisket
Many famous people have eaten here, including President Jimmy Carter…
…Sarah Palin…
…and Barack 0bama.

American Jazz Museum

Kansas City MO

Kansas City has long been one of the busiest Jazz scenes. Adjacent to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum is the American Jazz Museum. The museum is fairly small, and there are not very many displays that are photo-worthy.
Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong
Louis Armstrong’s trumpet.
Charlie “Bird” Parker
Duke Ellington
Ella Fitzgerald’s dress
Typical neon signs from the heyday of Kansas City Jazz.
The Blue Room, a typical jazz club.

Negro Leagues Baseball Museum

Kansas City MO

Major League Baseball was segregated for most of the first half of the 20th century, and during the time when African-Americans were not allowed to play in the big leagues, they did have their own baseball leagues. This museum honors those players who should have been able to play with the likes of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, but were not allowed. Kansas City was a major hub for Negro Leagues baseball.
The biggest star of the Negro Leagues was unquestionably Satchel Paige. He was a great pitcher, and quite a character too.
Replica of Satchel Paige’s uniform.
Hotel lobby.
Typical “Sleeping Room” in black hotels in the 1940s.
1946 was the year that the possibility of blacks in the big leagues started to become a reality.
Jackie Robinson became the first black major league player in 1947 for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Josh Gibson was considered the Babe Ruth of the Negro Leagues.
Jackie Robinson birthplace marker, on loan to the museum from Cairo GA.
Uniforms of the Negro League teams.
Pretty cool sculptures set up like an All-star game, with the greatest Negro Leagues players in position.
Satchel Paige
Cool Papa Bell
Oscar Charleston
Leon Gray
Buck Leonard
John Henry Lloyd
Judy Johnson
Ray Dandridge
Batting: Martin Dihigo
Catching: Josh Gibson
Umpire: Bob Motley
Manager (behind the fence): Buck O’Neil