Category Archives: World War One Centennial Commission

WWI DISPATCH June 2021

A newsletter that may be of interest to our members.


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June 2021

Amy Band April 16 Photo 2

The U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” is pictured participating in the “First Colors” event at the National World War I Memorial April 16 in Washington, DC. This Thursday, July 1st (weather permitting) “Pershing’s Own” will be performing its first live concert at the National WWI Memorial at 6:00 p.m. EDT.

U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” presents “Rush Hour Concert” at the National WWI Memorial in DC July 1

General John “Black Jack” Pershing created the U.S. Army Band in 1922. On Thursday, July 1st (weather permitting), “Pershing’s Own” will be presenting its first concert at the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC, near the statue of General Pershing. at 6:00 p.m. EDT.

The National World War I Memorial is located on Pennsylvania Ave. NW between 14h and 15th Streets.

The band performed at the “First Colors” ceremony which opened the Memorial to the public on April 16.

“Pershing’s Own” is hoping to inaugurate an ongoing series of summer concerts at the Memorial, saluting its founder, as well as honoring America’s heroes, and providing memorable musical experiences on summer evenings in the nation’s capitol.

The program for the July 1 “Rush Hour Concert” will include:

  • Summon the Heroes – by John Williams
  • Black Jack March – Written in honor of General John “Black Jack” Pershing
  • Jupiter from The Planets by Gustav Holtz
  • The U.S. Field Artillery March
  • La Virgin de la Macarena (with trumpet soloist SFC Lorenzo Trujillo)
  • Music from The Incredibles
  • Armed Forces Salute
  • America the Beautiful
  • Stars and Stripes Forever

Can’t make it downtown to the National World War I Memorial on Thursday? You can watch a special live online Independence Day Concert by the U.S. Army Band at 4:00 p.m. on July 1, as “Pershing’s Own” shares a virtual birthday greeting to celebrate the return of some of our personal freedoms and the tenets upon which our country was forged.

More information about the band’s origin and history can be found at https://www.usarmyband.com.


“Little Sure Shot”: Annie Oakley in WWI

Annie Oakley poster

Annie Oakley is renowned for being probably the best Woman Sharpshooter to ever live. Through her talent with firearms, she became a national celebrity in the United States during the late 1800s and into the early 20th century. While she was most famous for her feats of skill and shooting tricks during her time performing with Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show, she was also a huge supporter of the war effort when the United States entered into World War I. As Charles Pauley reports, she participated in a number of ways, and even tried to raise a small army to be used at the United States’ disposal. Click here to read more, and learn how (allegedly) at one point, she had the opportunity to “prevent” the war with a single shot. 


The (Lost and Found) World War I Diary of Private Rabb Forest Mobley

Rabb Forest Mobley

In the late 1980s, the chance discovery of a notepad of lined paper on a sidewalk in Menlo Park, California was the beginning of a 30-year odessey by Mike Forester to identify the creator of what appeared to be the diary of an American World War I Doughboy, from June 28th through October 3, 1918. Forester’s dogged and detailed research paid off with the eventual identification of the diarist as Private Rabb Forest Mobley. But that wasn’t the end of the story. Click here to read more, and learn how Forester’s research eventually reunited the diary with Mobley’s family over 100 years after it was written.


Learning about WWI, and Writing and Illustrating a Children’s Book on Battlefield Preservation in 4 Months

Charlotte Yeung

Most rising high school seniors have enough to keep them occupied just looking forward to graduation, and deciding where to go college or work. But Charlotte Yeung had a little time on her hands, and while an intern at the American Battlefield Trust last year, she decided to write an illustrated (by her) book on battlefield preservation aimed specifically at children. Click here to read more, and learn how, in the process of authoring her newly-published book Isabelle and the Magic Bird, she learned a lot about both World War I, and the importance of memorials honoring those Americans who served their nation in wars.


The Lafayette Escadrille: Americans who flew with French in World War I

Lafayette Escadrille Memorial

With the Fourth of July just around the corner, writer Bob Alvis wanted to look back at America’s involvement in World War I, and specifically those daring young men in their flying machines: a group of volunteers who would become legendary in the world of American aviation: the famous Lafayette Escadrille. But his research for the article in Aerotech News took some unexpected turns. Click here to read more, and find out about those early day American volunteers and the true meaning of their sacrifice on the world’s behalf, and the restoration of the memorial to their service in France.


Lakewood, WA Helps Relocate and Restore Living World War I Memorial

Michael Farley

The City of Lakewood, Washington is recognizing two men who have helped preserve a living memorial to the thousands of American soldiers who died in World War I: the Boulevard of Remembrance Oaks. Shortly after WWI, 500 oak trees were planted along the highway running from Fort Lewis to Tacoma, a memorial to those who served and died in the war. But in the decades since the highway was expanded into I-5, encroaching upon the boulevard, and only 31 of the original 500 oaks remain standing. Click here to read more, and learn how two men who have been working on a solution to restore the memorial trees have been honored by the city.


How a WWI battle still influences USMC: “Retreat? Hell! We just got here!
is “103 years old and still badass”

Lloyd Williams

The phrase “Retreat Hell!” has been the motto of one of the Marine Corps’ most-decorated infantry battalions for more than two decades, and has long served as a motivational quote to inspire Marines past and present. Writing on the Task and Purpose web site, Paul Szoldra (a Marine himself) recalls how “on June 2, 1918, a captain named Lloyd Williams thought to say the iconic cool guy quote in the heat of battle during World War I, and in so doing cemented himself in Marine lore.”

Writing on the Business Insider web site, Benjamin Brimelow gives the context for the famous saying in the Marines’ orders from Headquarters: “No retirement will be thought of on any pretext whatsoever” in Belleau Wood, and discusses how the Marine’s first battle in World War I still influences the Corps a century later.


Gripes are growing: Don’t mess with Las Olas and its tree-lined median originally planted as a World War I memorial

Las Olas palms 1920s

Palm trees planted in the median of Las Olas Boulevard as a World War I memorial in the 1920’s were the beginnings of the iconic Fort Lauderdale boulevard that won a national competition for most beautiful street in America some years ago. But the coming redesign of the 2.4-mile historic corridor has tongues wagging and keyboards clacking, with residents blasting their opinions on social media and in emails to City Hall. “Removing … the center trees is crazy to me,” one man from Las Olas Isles griped. Click here to read more about the project, and the divisions it has created in the communities along the famous road.


World War I artifacts discovered in American Legion attic in MA

Ralph J Lord,

Nearly everyone can identify with the feeling of finding long-forgotten items stored in the attic. But when the items are more than a century old, such a find becomes newsworthy. Commander Mike Ferro of the Akroyd Houde Post 132 American Legion recalls that Marlborough resident Matty Sargent, a Navy reservist and ardent history buff, recently asked about taking a look in the attic to see if there were any interesting artifacts stored up there. Click here to read more, and learn how what Sargent unearthed in the Post attic sheds new light on the World War I service of area residents, and even created something of a family reunion a century later.


Long Island Veterans Memorial Plaza:
In Remembrance of Our WWI Veterans

Copiague monument

Stony Brook University on Long Island, NY assigned students in certain courses to study the history and literature of World War in the Spring of 2021. A few students elected to fulfill an experiential learning requirement visiting, researching, and writing about a WWI memorial on Long Island. Click here to read the report of student Jun-Yi Wu on the WWI Memorial at the Copiague, Long Island train station, which was created just after WWI, but augmented significantly during the war’s Centennial.


Norwich, CT program honors WWI Doughnut Girls, helps build memorial

Donut Girls

Norwich City Historian Dale Plummer connected the dots meticulously to make a solid connection between National Doughnut Day on June 4, and the effort to resume fundraising to restore the city’s World War I howitzer and create a lasting memorial to local soldiers of that war. Click here to read more, and learn how the event also raised awareness of the many nonfighting groups that played a role in the Great War, such as the Knights of Columbus, American Red Cross, YMCA, and other organizations.


A new volunteer effort in Dracut, MA aims to remember those fallen in WWI

Richard Silvio

Dracut, MA is a small town, but it is not lacking on volunteers. From the Dracut Scholarship Foundation to Old Home Day, the people of Dracut always come together for a good cause. One new volunteer project underway in town is being organized by Dracut High School student Richard Silvio, founder and president of the World War I Rededication Committee. Its purpose: to restore the town’s WWI memorial, and to educate the public on Dracut’s efforts during World War I. Click here to read more, and learn how and why a high school student has taken the lead in remembering and restoring the town’s World War I legacy.


After World War I, American families were asked if they wanted their dead brought home; 40,000 said yes

Casket

In a massive and little-remembered project after World War I, the U.S. sent out 74,000 questionnaire cards asking the families of dead soldiers if they wanted the body of their loved one shipped home for burial, and then tried to fulfill their wishes. The repatriation effort came about as the United States was preparing for the solemn homecoming of the lone unknown soldier in November, 1921. Click here to read more about the challenges, obstacles, and successes of the colossal task which “Neither the United States nor any other nation up until that time had ever attempted.”


After 100 years, soldiers are no longer segregated on Durham’s WWI memorial

Durham WWI memorial

When the Durham, NC WWI memorial went up in 1921, it listed Durham County men who’d died in the war, with the names of the white soldiers etched into the front of the monument, and the names of the Black soldiers on the back. This year, the city unveiled a plaque in front of the memorial, complete with historical context and a full list of the men who died in that war. Click here to read more, and learn how the names on the revised memorial are organized not by race, but in alphabetical order. More than a hundred years after those men could have died together in a trench, they are listed together in a prominent place in their home county, which they once departed never to return.


Lost Generation: Toledo-centric film focuses attention on World War I

Jim Nowak

Glimpses from the Great War, a documentary more than 30 years in the making by filmmaker Jim Nowak (left), tells the story of World War I through the eyes of Pvts. Howard Sweet and William Claus, both Toledoans who served together in the Ohio National Guard’s 37th “Buckeye” Division with the 135th Field Artillery from 1917 to 1919. The last surviving veteran of the World War I died in 2012, but the last stories of the war didn’t die with her. Nowak’s film provides a glimpse of why: while Claus passed in 1993 and Sweet in 1994, Nowak interviewed both in 1986. Click here to read more, find out where to view the documentary, and learn how his own family tragedy led Nowak to record the videos at the core of the film.


Rep. Jacobs Asks Navy to Name Ship After WWI-era Filipino-American Hero

Telesforo Trinidad

Rep. Sara Jacobs of California has asked the Navy to name a new ship after Telesforo Trinidad, a Filipino American sailor who received the Medal of Honor in 1915. Trinidad, who saved his crewmembers after boiler explosions aboard the armored cruiser USS San Diego, is the only Filipino American and the only Asian American sailor to receive the Medal of Honor. A future USS Telesforo Trinidad would be the first warship named after an American of Filipino descent. Click here to read more about the recommendation that Trinidad’s name be used for a future Navy surface combatant.


Life after the WWI 1918 flu has lessons for a 21st Century post-pandemic world

Masks 1918

A widespread sense that time has split into two — or pandemics creating a “before” and “after” — is an experience that’s associated with many traumatic events, say experts. This social phenomenon is both psychologically and practically relevant, in that pandemics — including the 1918 influenza and Covid-19 pandemics — significantly affect how we assess and act on risk, or stay resilient, but also how we work, play and socialize. Click here to read more, and learn how the startling and harrowing nature of the 1918 flu and its fatal consequences induced a sense of caution that, in some places, had permanent implications for how people would respond to disease outbreaks in later decades, and may be reflected again in our own pandemic a century later.


Doughboy MIA for June 2021

Leroy Sealy

A man is only missing if he is forgotten.

Our Doughboy MIA this month is Private Leroy Sealey, Machine Gun Company, 369th Infantry Regiment, 93rd Division.

Sealey has the distinction of being the first MIA we are featuring from the famous ‘Harlem Hell Fighters’, the 369th Infantry, of which there are 27 names on the MIA roll. The 369th was an all-black regiment created from the old 15th New York National Guard infantry regiment (the 15th ‘Heavy Foot’), an old and well-regarded regiment.

Unfortunately, with the National Archives still closed, we were only able to gather limited information on Sealey’s story. ‘Roy’, as he was generally known, was born in the British West Indies, most likely in 1896. His mother’s name was Marion and he was the middle of three children (two boys and a girl). It appears the family arrived in New York in about 1907. The family was living on west 99th Street in New York City when Roy enlisted in the 15th New York on August 8th, 1916. Following the declaration of war, he was called to active duty on July 15th, 1917 and assigned to Company I on July 25th. It is believed that with them he sailed to France aboard the USS Pochahontas, arriving in France on December 27th, 1917 though no shipping manifest has yet been found containing his name.

The 15th was federalized as the 369th Infantry in France and was first assigned labor duties at the docks, unloading incoming ships, before finally being assigned to the French army on April 8th, 1918. Welcomed into the French forces, they were issued with French weapons, helmets and combat gear and entered the trenches on May 8th, 1918.The regiment would gain an enviable combat record spending 191 days on the front line, more than any other U.S. regiment, and suffer some 1,500 casualties – almost a third of their numbers –  by the time of the Armistice, as well as the respect of the Germans they faced.

Roy Sealey was assigned to the Machine Gun Company/369th on June 4th, 1918, which was armed with the M1914 Hotchkiss heavy machine gun, and he would see combat in the Berzieux, Minancourt and Cahiere sectors. He was killed in action on September 28th, 1918 but nothing concerning his death is known at this time. He is memorialized on the Tablet to the Missing at the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery at Romagne sous Montfaucon. In 1931 his mother participated in the Gold Star Mother’s Pilgrimage.

Wish you could help us account for America’s missing servicemen from World War I? You can! Consider making a donation to Doughboy MIA today. Simply go to www.ww1cc.org/mia and click the donation link. It’s quick, easy, tax deductible, and our non-profit organization uses the money to continue research and, soon, to mount field expeditions – all of which costs money. Your donation gives you the chance to help out and be part of the solution.

Can you spare just ten dollars? Give ‘Ten For Them‘ to Doughboy MIA and help us make a full accounting of the 4,423 American service personnel still listed as missing in action from WW1. Make your tax deductible donation now, with our thanks.


Official WWI Centennial Merchandise

Flag large

When you fly Old Glory this Fourth of July, add this World War 1 Centennial Flag to your patriotic display! The flag is made of durable nylon and measures 3’x5′, with the iconic Doughboy silhouette digitally screened onto it, and has 2 brass grommets to hang the flag.

Proceeds from the sale of these items will help complete the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC. You can show your support, and help promote the efforts, by proudly displaying your custom flag.

This and many other items are available as Official Merchandise of the Doughboy Foundation.



Virtual Explorer

Click or scan the QR Code below to download the Virtual Explorer App for the National World War I Memorial, and explore what the Memorial will look like when work is completed.

QR Code for Virtual Explorer App download


Education Thumb Drive image

Free Self-Contained WWI History Web Site on YOUR computer

Sources, lessons, activities, videos, podcasts, images

We have packaged all the content we created for “How WWI Changed America” into a format that is essentially a web site on a drive. Download the content onto any drive (USB, external, or as a folder on your computer), and all the content is accessible in a web site type format even without an internet connection. Click here to learn more, and download this amazing educational resource for home or classroom use.


Genealogy book FREE DOWNLOAD


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Frank Robert Dannanfelser

A Story of Service from the Stories of Service section of ww1cc.org

Frank Robert Dannanfelser

Submitted by: Sandra Dunlap {great niece}

Frank Robert Dannanfelser born around 1887. Frank Dannanfelser served in World War 1 with the United States Navy. The enlistment was in 1907 and the service was completed in 1926.

Story of Service

My great great uncle Frank Robert Dannanfelser was orphaned at the age of 10. Sent south to Savannah, GA to live with an aunt, he ended up being admitted to the Bethesda Orphan Asylum instead. After aging out of the orphanage about 1905, he worked as an electrician in Savannah until 1907.

On 14 May 1907, he enlisted in the US Navy and was sent off to Norfolk, VA, to the USS Franklin. In August of the same year, he was transferred to the USS Ohio (BB-12) at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and left in December on President Theodore Roosevelt’s “Great White Fleet” world cruise.

Navy life apparently agreed with him as he re-enlisted multiple times. Early in his career, he was primarily attached to battleships, cruisers, and destroyers with a smattering of shore duty stations. The longest shore duty time was gunnery school at the Naval Gun Factory, Washington Navy Yard from June 1911 to January 1912.

Read Frank Robert Dannanfelser’s entire Story of Service here.

Submit your family’s Story of Service here.


Honor the Stories of Service of ALL Who Served.

Do Your Bit to Help Build the new National World War I Memorial.

Progress maquette $1.29M left


WWI DISPATCH May 2021

A newsletter from the organization formerly known at the World War One Centennial Commission.


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May 2021

Taps Bugler-2 05282021

The Doughboy Foundation continues its mission to “keep faith with the American Doughboy” with a daily playing of “Taps” at the National World War I Memorial every evening at 5:00 p.m. ET, rain or shine. The pilot program runs from May through Veterans Day. If you are in DC, please stop by the Memorial at 5:00 p.m. any day to see this performance.

Daily playing of Taps inaugurated at the National World War I Memorial in DC

The Doughboy Foundation, the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission’s longtime partner, will continue its mission to “keep faith with the American Doughboy” by honoring those who served; commemorating the events of a century ago; and inspiring visitors to learn, remember, and reflect on how World War I changed our country and the world through commemorative and educational programs. To that end, one of the Foundation’s signature initiatives will be to honor the Doughboys with a daily playing of “Taps” at the National World War I Memorial every evening at 5:00 p.m. EDT, rain or shine in a pilot program running through Veterans Day. Taps will be sounded daily by buglers from the Taps for Veterans organization at the foot of the flagpole at the northwest corner of the Memorial. Click here to learn how you can support Daily Taps at the Memorial and other Doughboy Foundation programs.


Hamby Milley award

Hamby receives Distinguished Public Service Award from the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs

Terry W. Hamby, the Chair of the United States World War I Centennial Commission, received the Distinguished Public Service Award from General Mark A. Milley, USA, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,  during a ceremony May 28, 2021 at the National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC.  The award was presented in recognition of Hamby’s “extraordinary contributions as the Chairman of the World War I Centennial Commission.” In particular, the award highlighted Hamby’s leadership of the Commission “to completion of its mission to build the United States National War Memorial in Washington, DC.” Click here to ready more about the award ceremony for the Commission’s Chair for a job well done.


Virginia Boy Scout Troop lends hands to honor Americans who served in WWI

Scouts folding flags

A Boy Scout troop in Richmond, Virginia, over a century old itself, lent its hands recently to acknowledge those whose help enabled the April 16, 2021 opening of the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC honoring the 4.7 million Americans who served their nation in uniform 100 years ago. As part of the activities after the recent Father & Son Hike, Troop 400 folded flags that were flown over the Memorial so that they could be placed into presentation cases for the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission World War I Memorial Donor and Patron Recognition Program. Click here to read more about the Scout troop ‘s timely assistance to help thank those who helped build the Memorial.


Brancy and Dugan Release The Journey Home: Live from the Kennedy Center

The Journey Home: Live from the Kennedy Center player

On May 28, 2021 Vocal Arts DC in collaboration with Avie Records released The Journey Home: Live from the Kennedy Center. Inspired by the 100th anniversary of the end of WWI, the concert, which sold-out at the time, explores timeless themes of longing, loss, love, and the search for peace in the wake of catastrophe. Accompanying the album, the duo has released a film of the performance, which includes interviews with historians and military personnel, and explores the long overdue process of creating a national memorial to World War I in Washington, DC, including interviews with the United States WWI Centennial Commissioners. Click here to read more about these new releases, and find out where to listen and watch.


Piece of World War I history returned to Wichita, KS, honoring local airman

Lt. Erwin Bleckley

A piece of World War I history returned to Wichita Friday, May 28: an airplane that looks exactly like the plane Lt. Erwin Bleckley flew during his last mission during the First World War. The plan with the plane, once it’s restored, is to have it displayed at Wichita’s Eisenhower National Airport, available for thousands to see and to learn a little about the plane’s history and why it’s important to Wichita. Lt. Erwin Bleckley died at the age of 23 on Oct. 6, 1918 on a mission to drop supplies from the sky. He later received the Medal of Honor for his bravery. Click here to read more about this aircraft, and why it is “a very big deal for the city of Wichita to bring this airplane home.”


American Legion Magazine spotlights new National WWI Memorial in DC

Legion June magazine

The June 2021 American Legion Magazine digital edition looks at the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, D.C. The extensive coverage  looks at the memorial’s commemorative elements, and how the WWI Memorial Virtual Explorer and WWI Memorial Visitor Guide apps help explore the site. Plus, John D. “Jack” Monahan, The American Legion’s representative on the U.S. World War One Commission, previews “A Soldier’s Journey,” the Sabin Howard sculpture to be installed in 2024. Click here to read more about the June American Legion Magazine’s coverage of the new National World War I Memorial


To Find Their Brothers: The Trek of Two Montana Nurses in World War I

Butzerin and Welborn

On the occasion of National Nurses Day on May 6, Ed Saunders wrote a thoughtful article about two Montana nurses who served their nation during World War I. Eula Bernice Butzerin (left) served in a Red Cross hospital in Kansas City, MO. Susie Lee Welborn joined the Army Nurse Corps, and served at Base Hospital 53 at Langres, France. But the two nurses shared more than their state and profession: both had to perform a sad duty after the fighting stopped. Click here to read more about the family tragedies that each Montana nurse suffered Over There in World War I.


General Pershing inspired film cast member to join USAF, becoming pilot

Roberto Duran

Roberto Duran, a Captain in the United States Air Force, is currently flying for Air Force Special Operations Command. After Duran graduated from college and before he was commissioned, he auditioned for and was cast in Pershing’s Paths of Glory, a documentary film which features Pershing Rifles members, a Pershing Angel, and Blackjacks who travel and mark incidents in the life of General John J. Pershing, the great World War I Commander of the American Expeditionary Forces. Duran, a Pershing Rifleman from Texas and college graduate from Louisiana State University, was a serious, stabilizing force among the diverse group of high energy, military cadets still in secondary school. Click here to learn more about Duran, what he learned during the making of the movie, and how General Pershing inspired to to a career in the military.


Doughboy MIA for May

Private Wesley J. Creech

A man is only missing if he is forgotten.

Our Doughboy MIA this month is

Born 15MAR1886, in Hallsboro, North Carolina, Wesley Jackson Creech was the fourth of six children that Henry and Martha Creech would rear. He signed his 05JUN1917 draft card at Bolton, North Carolina, where he listed himself as a lumber inspector and two months later married Miss Francis Williamson, age 19.

Creech received his draft call shortly thereafter, reporting for duty on 01OCT1917 and was sent to Camp Jackson for induction. From there he went to Camp Sevier for infantry training and was placed in Company C, 120th Infantry Regiment, 30th ‘Old Hickory’ Division. Departing Boston, Massachusetts for overseas service on 12May1918 aboard the transport Bohemian, Creech’s division was brigaded with the British in the Somme sector that summer.

Records show Wesley Creech as being killed in action on 31AUG1918 and buried by a British unit, however later identification of his grave by American Graves Registration personnel proved fruitless. As such, he is memorialized on the Tablets to the Missing at the Flanders Field American Cemetery at Waregem, Belgium.

Want to help solve Pvt. Creech’s case? Consider making a donation to Doughboy MIA at www.usww1cc.org/mia. It takes only a moment and your tax deductible contribution can be as large as you want or as small as $10.00 on our ‘Ten for Them’ program. Your contribution helps us make a full accounting of all 4,425 US MIA’s from WW1 and keeps these lost men from being forgotten.  Make your tax deductible donation now, with our thanks. Remember:

A man is only missing if he is forgotten.


Official Doughboy Foundation Store

Window decal

“Doughboy”
Window Decal

Featuring the iconic Doughboy silhouette flanked by barbed wire so prevalent during WWI, you can proudly display this poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by U.S. soldiers.

  • Measures 3.5″ x 6″
  • All weather screen design on vinyl

Proceeds from the sale of these items will help build the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC.

This and many other items are available as Official Merchandise of the Doughboy Foundation.



Virtual Explorer

Click or scan the QR Code below to download the Virtual Explorer App for the National World War I Memorial, and explore what the Memorial will look like when work is completed.

QR Code for Virtual Explorer App download


Education Thumb Drive image

Free Self-Contained WWI History Web Site on YOUR computer

Sources, lessons, activities, videos, podcasts, images

We have packaged all the content we created for “How WWI Changed America” into a format that is essentially a web site on a drive. Download the content onto any drive (USB, external, or as a folder on your computer), and all the content is accessible in a web site type format even without an internet connection. Click here to learn more, and download this amazing educational resource for home or classroom use.


Genealogy book FREE DOWNLOAD


you can help - shop using amazon smile


Poppy Seed Side Ad


Doughboy MIA


Pershing Sponsors

Pershing Sponsors


email us


websitefacebooktwitter


Helma Caroline (Anderson) Evans

A Story of Service from the Stories of Service section of ww1cc.org

Helma Caroline (Anderson) Evans

Submitted by: Douglas Evans {Grandson}

Helma Caroline (Anderson) Evans was born around 1894. Helma (Anderson) Evans served in World War 1 with the United States Navy. The enlistment was in 1918 and the service was completed in 1919.

Story of Service

Helma Caroline (Anderson) Evans was born on September, 2, 1894. Always fiercely independent, and against her parents’ wishes, she enlisted in the US Navy in September of 1918. Helma was assigned as a bookkeeper and assistant to a Navy Commander known as the “Chief Bookkeeper” at the Washington Navy Yard.

She achieved the rank of Petty Office 3rd Class (E-4), and her rating was Yeoman 3rd Class (YN3). During WWI, female Navy Yeoman were known as “Yeomanettes,” and she proudly wore that moniker. Helma was honorably discharged in July of 1919. She was awarded the WWI Victory medal.

While in the service and after the war ended, she participated in a number of parades and ceremonies in support of her fellow Sailors, Marines, and Army troops. Helma also marched in parades in New York City, Providence RI, and Boston, MA, in uniform, in celebration of Armistice Day.

Read Helma Caroline (Anderson) Evans’s entire Story of Service here.

Submit your family’s Story of Service here.


Honor the Stories of Service of ALL Who Served.

Do Your Bit to Help Build the new National World War I Memorial.

Progress maquette $1.29M left


Memorial Day 2021 Message from the Doughboy Foundation

A newsletter from the organization formerly known as the World War One Centennial Commission.


Wreath at National WWI Memorial

Dear Friends of the Doughboy Foundation,

This Memorial Day offers an important moment to reflect on the sacrifices of our veterans, including the 4.7 million men and women who served our nation over a century ago in World War I.

It is also an opportunity to feel immense gratitude and pride for what we have accomplished during this historic year to honor their memory.

As of April 16th, the National World War I Memorial is now open to the public.  As we celebrate this incredible milestone and welcome visitors to the Memorial site, our work is not yet finished.

At our studio, work is progressing on the 58-foot-long sculpture, A Soldier’s Journey.  Our sculptor, Sabin Howard, and his dedicated team are creating this beautiful work of art which will depict the journey of both the soldier and our nation in “The War that Changed the World.”  Once completed, it will be the largest free-standing bronze high relief sculpture in the western hemisphere.

On Memorial Day 2024, the sculpture will be dedicated and thereby mark the official completion of the National World War I Memorial.  Mark your calendars!

So what’s next?

The Doughboy Foundation, the U.S. WWI Centennial Commission’s longtime partner, will continue its mission to “keep faith with the American Doughboy” by honoring those who served; commemorating the events of a century ago; and inspiring visitors to learn, remember, and reflect on how World War I changed our country and the world through commemorative and educational programs.

To that end, one of our Foundation’s signature initiatives will be to honor the Doughboys with a daily playing of “Taps” at the National World War I Memorial every evening at 5:00pm EDT, rain or shine. The playing has begun at the Memorial already; if you are in DC, please stop by the Memorial this weekend at 5pm to see a performance.

For those of you who can’t make it, we will soon have a video available of the performance for you to enjoy until your next trip to the nation’s capital.

In the meantime, if you would like to learn more about one of our programs, please click here.

Thank you for your time and support of our veterans.  Have a wonderful holiday weekend.

Dans Signature

Daniel S. Dayton
Chairman

The Doughboy Foundation


“WWI Memorial Insider Tour for Guides and Planners” WEBINAR VIDEO is posted

Note the recording of this webinar that was held last week.


Webinar slide ID
Five start 260

The Webinar
is Posted for Viewing and Sharing:

An Insider Tour for Guides, Travel Planners, Volunteers and Interested Visitors
Held on Friday, May 14, 2021, 1pm EST

On April 17, 2021, the New National WWI Memorial opened to the public. This webinar provides a detailed and insider perspective on the WWI Memorial. It is ideal for professional tour guides, travel planners, teachers, docent volunteers and anyone who wants to understand the history, structure, features, meaning and resources surrounding the new National WWI Memorial in our nation’s capitol.

Guests:

  • Daniel S. Dayton: Executive Director, US WWI Centennial Commission:
    Welcome & Overview
  • Edwin Fountain: Former Vice-Chair, US WWI Centennial Commission:
    Why We Need This Memorial
  • Joe Weishaar: Lead Designer, National WWI Memorial, Washington, DC:
    A Walk Through the Design” 
  • Patricia Abler and Christina Bauer: Education Committee Co-Chairs, The Guild of Professional Tour Guides of Washington, DC:
    First Impressions from a Tour Guide’s Perspective
  • Sabin Howard: Sculptor, “A Soldier’s Journey,” WWI Memorial, Washington, DC:
    A Soldier’s Journey Sculpture Evolution and Design
  • Host: Theo Mayer, Chief Technologist, US WWI Centennial Commission / Doughboy Foundation:
    The WWI Memorial Apps – A Digital Dimension to the WWI Memorial”

View The Webinar


Brought to you by the Doughboy Foundation

Webinar Promo Graphic for tour guides, travel planners and interested visitors

Funding for this webinar was provided by The Doughboy Foundation.

To support the continuation of our webinar series and other educational programming and resources, please click the button below.

Support 

Webinar About The New National WWI Memorial in Washington DC

This webinar next week may be of interest to some of our members.


Doughboy Foundation 2021 webinar logo

Friday May 14, 2021 @ 1p ET

REGISTER

Webinar Promo Graphic for tour guides, travel planners and interested visitors


Join us on Friday May 14, 2021 at 10am PT / 1pm ET for an exclusive insider tour of the new Memorial that opened to the public on April 17, 2021.

Get ready for Memorial Day with insights to Washington, D.C.’s newest War Memorial
We will present you with:

  • Photo essays and video of the Memorial
  • Background and History of the location
  • The Story of how the WWI Memorial went from concept to opening
  • Tour of design features and insider tidbits
  • An update on “A Soldier’s Journey” the sculpture by Sabin Howard
  • How the Memorial speaks to the history of WWI

AND SPECIAL TOOLS

  • The WWI Memorial APPs
    • The WWI Memorial Visitor Guide: For use when at the Memorial
    • The WWI Memorial Virtual explorer: To bring the Memorial into any classroom, living room or outdoor space
  • How WWI Changed America: A downloadable web site on the social and cultural impact of WWI

REGISTER