Gen. Spaatz Museum in Boyertown celebrates Vietnam War Veterans Day
Memorabilia from local Vietnam veterans displayed
To commemorate National Vietnam War Veterans Day, the General Carl Spaatz USAAF Museum in Boyertown displayed a special Vietnam War era memorabilia exhibit and a museum admission discount for veterans March 26 and 27.
The exhibit, composed of donated memorabilia and individual items on loan to the museum from local Vietnam veterans, consists of equipment and clothing from that era and was on display in two locations within the museum through April 3.
“This would be what someone would look like leaving the perimeter,” Tom Gosse, director of marketing for the museum, said as he described a Vietnam field uniform. “Many times in Vietnam, you didn’t bother with the shirt. It’s just too hot, this (uniform) was extremely heavy and extremely hot, but it was a lifesaver.”
Also part of the special exhibit is a re-creation of an M60 Machine Gun, nicknamed The Pig, due to its size.
“You gave this to your best soldier,” said Gosse. “The best, strongest person carried The Pig.”
A highlight of the exhibit includes a Marine Corps “Mule” vehicle with the missing man ceremony field display. A Mule is a four-wheel drive, gasolinepowered truck/tractor vehicle that can carry up to a half-ton off-road. The Missing Man Ceremony Field Display includes a soldier’s rifle and boots, with helmet on top.
One part of the display featured an MCI or Meal, Combat, Individual canned wet combat rations along with photographs and Donald L Conrad of Barto’s order to report notice for his
induction into the armed forces on May 26, 1969.
“The equipment tells the story,” said Kristian Steffenhagen, “Oftentimes, if you deconstruct the machinery it will tell you more about the environment that led to its creation. Oftentimes, you get a very complicated history behind the development of a machine … why it is the way it is. And then occasionally, you wind up with standout stuff like these two pieces of ammunition (50-caliber round and 20mm shell) which are so widespread that they are still in use in various places around the world in a variety of roles.”
Steffenhagen explained the difference in technology between a 50 caliber round and 20mm shell.
“Through World War II and into Korea, we were using 50-caliber machine guns. By the time Vietnam rolls around, the M61 Vulcan has come about and that is a 20-millimeter shell which is a significant upgrade in firepower. This 50-caliber round fires anywhere between 750 and 1,000 rounds a minute; the 20-millimeter shell fires 6000 rounds a minute.”
The museum featured a video and period music with songs like “I Fought the Law,” by The Bobby Fuller Four.
National Vietnam War Veterans Day is acknowledged on March 29, honoring the more than 2.7 million Americans who served in the war. The date was chosen because after 20 years in Vietnam, the last U.S. combat troops left the