San Antonio Express-News

National Museum of Army to open after 5-month delay

- By Michael E. Ruane

Pvt. Martin Teahan’s rifle sits in a display case, his name, “M. Teahan,” carved on one side of the wooden stock and the mysterious name “Kitty” carved on the other.

It’s a small artifact. A simple rifle carried by an American paratroope­r who jumped into France on DDay and was killed in action. But it is a link to the Army’s history, and one of the powerful artifacts in its new museum outside Washington.

The Army announced Tuesday that the $430 million National Museum of the U.S. Army will formally open on Veterans Day, after a five-month delay caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Built of stainless steel, aluminum and glass, the museum in Fort Belvoir, Va., is filled with more than 1,300 historic artifacts, from Teahan’s rifle to “Cobra King,” the World War II Sherman tank that was the first to reach the besieged Belgium town of Bastogne.

The museum has the dented helmet of Sgt. Alvin York, the World War I hero who earned the Medal of Honor for capturing 132 German soldiers. It has a sword belonging to Hermann Göring, one of Adolf Hitler’s key subordinat­es. It has the uniform cap of World War II and Korean War Gen. Douglas MacArthur.

There is a landing craft that ferried men to the beach on D-Day. (It was found on an island in the English Channel and is one of only six known to survive, the museum said.)

There is a piece of the landing gear of a plane that crashed into the World Trade Center. And there is a motorcycle that was used by a Taliban bomb courier in

Afghanista­n.

“These are artifacts not props,” said museum spokeswoma­n Susan Smullen on Monday. “These are the real deal.”

The museum also has created a number of simulated battle scenes featuring lifelike soldiers made of plastic, urethane, foam and other materials. The figures are models of modern-day soldiers who posed for the sculptors. Accuracy was crucial. One scene depicts soldiers scrambling down a cargo net into a landing craft during the second wave ashore on D-Day, June 6, 1944.

“We went to great detail to be authentic as possible,” Smullen said. The soldiers’ rifles are wrapped in plastic to keep them dry. One man has a bazooka slung over his back.

The Army, which owns and operates the facility, says it is its first “comprehens­ive and truly national museum.”

The museum is a joint effort of the Army and the Army Historical Foundation. The foundation headed a $200 million private campaign to construct the building. The Army provided the

land — the museum is on an 84-acre, publicly accessible piece of Fort Belvoir property — and approximat­ely $230 million toward the project.

Constructi­on started in 2017, and the museum had been scheduled to open in June. But in April, because of the danger of the coronaviru­s to the public and the virus’ impact on constructi­on, the opening was postponed, Smullen said.

Admission is free and timed tickets can be received at TheNMUSA.org. The museum will have enhanced health and safety measures in place.

As for Pvt. Teahan, a member of the 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment, he was 20 and came from the New York City.

He had been captured by the Germans during the post-D-Day fighting and was shot by one of his jittery captors, according to a book by his nephew Jim Farrell.

Teahan is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial in France.

His M1 rifle had been lost but was later found by a French farmer in Picauville, just south of the drop zone where the 508th landed.

 ?? Jahi Chikwendiu / Washington Post ?? Justin Kendall and other workers install a World War II display at the new National Museum of the U.S. Army.
Jahi Chikwendiu / Washington Post Justin Kendall and other workers install a World War II display at the new National Museum of the U.S. Army.

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