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Informative Press Releases for Travel
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“To find such a rare artifact intact except for its actual battle damage, 90 years after it was built, gives us a great deal to celebrate on our upcoming first anniversary,” said Brian Alexander, who was recently appointed as the Museum’s new President/CEO, “especially considering that we made the acquisition as Armistice Day approaches.”
Alexander, who comes to the
The French-made Renault FT-17 tank, which still bears its camouflage markings and a huge hole left by German artillery, fills a key gap in the Museum’s world-class collection of WWI weapons, uniforms, writings and other objects. A tank was the only major historically significant exhibit that has eluded the Museum since its organizers began collecting artifacts in 1920.
Since it opened to the public
The Kansas Citians who worked for years to establish the
That belief has been borne out, not only by the greater-than-expected public impact of the museum itself, but by the attention that WWI continues to receive from historians, nearly a century later.
According to a recent review, for example, the author Alan Kramer’s new book on World War I, Dynamic of Destruction, makes the case that “the two world wars may be regarded as a single four-decade trauma … World War I was considerably more than simply a new industrial form of warfare that brutalized the modern world.” (See “Extermination States,” New York Times Book Review,
Renault FT-17 light tanks first saw battle in 1918. American tank forces used the French-made Renaults – possibly including the one obtained by the Museum.
“What makes this the perfect tank for our collection is that it will be an important tool for interpreting World War I,” said
A preliminary study of the tank revealed an unexpected connection to
The tank was obtained in 1920 by an American from the French government and was on display in
An anonymous donor gave $125,000 for the down payment. The additional $175,000 that must be raised will cover the remaining cost of the tank, its transportation and for exhibit installation.
“The acquisition of this tank was a once-in-a-generation opportunity – maybe our last chance. The Museum purchased it with only a portion of funding in hand,” explains
Donations of any amount are welcome and are tax deductible. Checks can be made payable to the Liberty Memorial Association – designated to the Tank Acquisition Fund – and mailed to PO Box 411475, Kansas City, MO 64141-1475.
Officially designated the National WWI Museum by the 108th Congress, the 50,000-square-foot core Museum exhibit and companion research center and archives are housed directly beneath the historic Liberty Memorial. The 217-foot Liberty Memorial Tower and two exhibit halls were built by the citizens of Kansas City and dedicated, in 1926, by President