Baltimore Sun Sunday

FOR ALL VETERANS

New museum in Ohio honors those who served in every U.S. war

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — “Ever since I was a kid, I was dead set on getting into West Point. I was in the class of 2005. We are considered to be the class of 9/11 because 9/11 happened our freshman year. It got very real when classmates started dying. Every once in a while, they’d make an announceme­nt at lunch that we lost another classmate in combat.”

That poignant recollecti­on is just part of the story of former U.S. Army 1st Lt. Joshua Mantz of San Jose, Calif., a Purple Heart recipient. It’s one of many personal stories that visitors will experience at the new National Veterans Memorial and Museum in Columbus, Ohio, set to open Oct. 27.

They’ll also find out about Deborah Sampson, a teenage girl who disguised herself as a boy to fight in the Revolution­ary War. When wounded, she dug the musket ball out of her flesh rather than let a doctor discover her secret. And they’ll learn about Army Sgt. Wendell Wiley Wolfenbarg­er, whose lucky rabbit’s foot and wishbone couldn’t protect him from being killed in action during World War II, and Army Sgt. Don Jakeway, who survived even after confrontin­g nearby German snipers.

War and peace. Life and death. Honor and survival. History and homecoming.

These fundamenta­l themes of human experience are on display, mostly in the form of firstperso­n accounts, at the nation’s first museum dedicated to veterans from all conflicts and all branches of the U.S. military.

“We have museums across the country that focus on branches and conflicts, but our museum houses universal stories of patriotism and service from all branches and all conflicts under one roof,” said retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Ferriter, the institutio­n’s president and CEO. “The emotional core of the experience lies See MUSEUM, page 5

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