US Army's Hidden Treasure Room

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henryk
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US Army's Hidden Treasure Room

#1

Post by henryk » 16 Mar 2014, 19:46

http://www.buzzfeed.com/bennyjohnson/in ... asure-room
See source for photos.
Inside The Army’s Spectacular Hidden Treasure Room

You will not believe this… posted on February 20, 2014 at 10:21am EST
Benny Johnson BuzzFeed Staff

Remember that ending scene out of Indiana Jones where the Ark of the Covenant is boxed up and wheeled through an endless government warehouse?

Did you know that that place actually exists? It is called the Center of Military History.
It is located 30 minutes outside Washington, D.C., at Fort Belvoir in Virginia. The building itself is very nondescript…
…but behind a series of highly alarmed doors……and long, cement, camera-laden hallways.....
…is the highly sophisticated, climate-controlled treasure room where the Army keeps its most precious artifacts.

The facility was built for $24 million in 2010. The cavernous warehouse is typically shrouded in total darkness. Motion lights illuminate only the areas in which someone is walking

Behind these giant doors lie the Army’s historic collection of weaponry.
The room consists of dozens of collapsable “hallways” filled with the richest American firearm collection on the planet.
The collection is stacked with priceless items. The entire collection can be moved at the press of a button…
…to create new endless hallways of historic firearms. Entire lineages of weapons are kept here for research as well as preservation purposes.

Another portion of the warehouse consists of endless rows of gigantic airtight lockers. This is called “3D storage.”
Every meaningful artifact that has been worn on a military battlefield is stored here. Including Gen. Ulysses Grant’s Civil War cap.
Famous generals’ uniforms and Revolutionary War powder satchels…
…flags, canteens, and cannons. And the rows go on and on and on and on…

But the crown jewel of the collection is the 16,000 pieces of fine art the Army owns. The art is kept on giant rolling metal frames.
The massive collection consists of donated and commissioned pieces. Much of the art was painted by soldiers who experienced their subjects in real life.

During World War I, the Army began commissioning artists to deploy into the war zone and paint the scenes they observed. This practice has continued to this day. Much of the museum’s collection consists of these commissioned wartime pieces. The collection also keeps hold of valuable donated military art and historical pieces dating back to the Mexican American War.
The art tells the story of America’s wars through a soldier’s unique perspective.

Some works are just beautiful beyond words. “Softball Game in Hyde Park” by Floyd Davis.
Every aspect of war is captured in the collection. “That 2,000-Yard Stare” by Tom Lea.

The collection also includes original Army propaganda art. Including beautiful Norman Rockwell originals that the Army commissioned in the 1940s. Original Rockwells like these regularly fetch tens of millions of dollars at auction.

Virtually every American conflict is represented from a first-hand soldier’s perspective.
Vietnam.
Desert Storm.
Humanitarian aid missions to the conflicts of the 1980s.
Peace and war.
The “war on terror.”
The soldier’s perspective…

The collection also has a controversial side that has never been displayed. Unique art and artifacts that were seized from the Nazis after World War II are stored here. The painting above was filmed at the center for the 2006 documentary The Rape of Europa. Including watercolors painted by Hitler himself.

At the age of 18, Adolf Hitler applied to the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna but was rejected. A number of Hitler’s paintings were seized by the U.S. Army at the end of World War II and found a home at the center. None of the confiscated Nazi art has ever been displayed, and the curators thought them too controversial for this piece. The scene above was filmed at the center for the documentary The Rape of Europa.


Not a single piece in this massive collection is open to the public. Why is it kept under lock and key in a blackened warehouse?
Simple answer: Because there is no museum to house it.
The entire collection could be made accessible to the public, if the funds for a museum could be raised.
The Army Historical Foundation is in charge of raising the funds for the museum. Via armyhistory.org

However, there are major fundraising hurdles to jump before the museum can be built. The foundation’s president recently told the Washington Post that it has raised $76 million of the $175 million required for the museum and predicts the museum could open in 2018. The plan is to build the museum at Fort Belvoir.

But until then…

South
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Joined: 06 Sep 2007, 10:01
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Re: US Army's Hidden Treasure Room

#2

Post by South » 17 Mar 2014, 10:30

Good morning Henry,

A great article !

Although restricted for public access, I'm sure there are specific researcher provisions to visit, eg a published military history author seeking access to a specific collection.

I don't remember the Indiana Jones scene but do recall the King of Fuji's preserved head was stored in the archives at Walter Reed Medical Center (now merged with Bethesda [Naval] Medical Center).

Ft Belvoir might be ~ 30 miles from Washington, D.C. but 30 -minutes - .....maybe at 3 in the morning. Traffic congestion is substantial.

My day is made after reading this !


Warm regards,

Bob


MLW
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Re: US Army's Hidden Treasure Room

#3

Post by MLW » 17 Mar 2014, 13:06

Groups can arrange visits. The Western Front Association, East Coast Branch (Baltimore-based) is planning to have a WWI symposium there soon. The archivists offered to bring out their best and favorite WWI artifacts for us to see. It is not a secretive place at all.

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