Dayton Daily News

Ohio National Guard historian is proud of the past he collects

- By Bonnie Meibers

Ohio Army National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Josh Mann pulls back a heavy black curtain and walks into a room filled with immense gray cabinets.

Mann, 41, who towers over most people at 6 feet, 5 inches, seems small here. He steps up to a black vault leading to a temperatur­e-controlled room containing several cabinets. Mann pulls blue latex gloves from the back pocket of his Army greens and puts them on before pulling open a drawer of one of the cabinets. Resting flat in the shallow drawer is a battle flag from World War II.

The 148th Infantry Regiment. The distinct eagle crest, clutching arrows in one talon and a branch in the other. “We’ll do it,” proudly displayed above.

“This is the part of the collection I am most proud of,” Mann said.

And Mann’s favorite part of his job as Ohio Army National Guard historian is when he gets to share its history with others. The Ohio National Guard turns 230 years old Wednesday. It was organized before Ohio was a state, originally called the Northwest Territory Militia.

The celebratio­n at the Maj. Gen. Robert Beightler Armory in northwest Columbus will include a ceremonial recognitio­n of the Ohio National Guard’s service to the nation. The Guard includes the Ohio Army National Guard, Ohio Air National Guard, Ohio Military Reserve and Ohio Naval Militia, which total more than 16,000 personnel, according to its website.

Maj. Gen. Mark E. Bartman, Ohio’s adjutant general, will administer the oath to two new members, and like any birthday celebratio­n, there will be a cake.

Mann spends a lot of his time in a vault-like room with relics of America’s past: guns from the Civil War and uniforms dating back a century among them. The Beightler armory is home to a huge collection of Ohio National Guard artifacts, including post-World War II battle flags.

As the historian for the Ohio Army National Guard, Mann knows each of their stories intimately.

He said his dad, Richard Mann, is the reason he works as a historian. “I like to call my dad a weekend historian,” Mann said.

The elder Mann, who died in 2009, worked in a sparkplug factory and participat­ed in historical war reenactmen­ts on weekends. Mann was just a month old when he attended his first reenactmen­t.

“Any family vacation we went on, we made a stop at a historical battlefiel­d or cemetery,” Mann said. “The biggest family vacation we ever went on was to Gettysburg.”

Mann joined the Ohio Army National Guard at the end of his senior year of high school to “knock down tuition costs” for college.

On July 13, 23 years later, he extended his service another six years.

Over those six years, Mann hopes to make steps toward creating a museum of sorts, where Ohioans could view items Mann and others have worked to collect.

The only place where the public has been able to regularly see part of the collection is at Ohio History Connection in northeast Columbus. The history center has more than 500 battle flags, all of them from before World War II.

Lt. Col. Greg Rogers was the previous Ohio Army National Guard historian. Before the end of an earlier six-year enlistment period, Mann called Rogers to ask if he could do Rogers’ job for a year and then decide if he would re-enlist in 2004.

“I always joke that one of my biggest contributi­ons to the Guard is keeping Josh Mann in,” Rogers said.

Mann’s ability to make intangible ideas into tangible objects, Rogers said, is what makes him irreplacea­ble as historian.

“He has a heart for history and preserving history,” Rogers said. “He really wants to be here, and you can tell.”

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS / COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Ohio Army National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Josh Mann, the Guard’s historian, examines a Civil War battle flag carried by the 148th Infantry Regiment last month. The flag is stored at the Beightler Armory in northwest Columbus.
ADAM CAIRNS / COLUMBUS DISPATCH Ohio Army National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Josh Mann, the Guard’s historian, examines a Civil War battle flag carried by the 148th Infantry Regiment last month. The flag is stored at the Beightler Armory in northwest Columbus.

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