Exploring Kansas City s National WWI Museum and Memorial
Exploring Kansas City’s National WWI Museum and Memorial History and Culture
You'll also see numerous war relics, including French death certificates, authentic Austrian mourning cards, Belgian bread bags soldiers used to haul their rations, and an antique brass Princess Mary Christmas gift box that held the candies, pencils and cigarettes of a British infantryman. Keepsakes like these help you imagine the young soldiers sharing a smoke and memories of their loved ones as they fought to survive far from home.
Plan Your Visit to Kansas City' s National WWI Museum and Memorial
Reflect on the drama and tragedies of the Great War
Paul Brady / Alamy Stock Photo COVID-19 update: The Liberty Memorial Tower and the Edward Jones Research Center are closed, and some interactive elements have been modified or can't be used. Face masks are no longer required inside the museum. (Kansas City, Missouri, has removed the indoor mask-wearing requirement citywide.) As I peek inside the drab zigzagged trench, held together by sticks and topped with piles of sandbags, I'm struck by the unspeakable conditions of warfare. On the ground lie two soldiers (mannequins) mired in mud while a soundtrack overhead haunts with a cacophony of explosives and unyielding shellfire. A recreation of a trench occupied by French soldiers more than a century ago, the exhibit is just one of the many at the National World War I Museum and Memorial (NWWIMM) in Kansas City, Missouri, that bring home the gruesomeness of a war that eclipsed 40 million casualties. They all serve the NWWIMM's weighty mission: to help visitors “remember, interpret and understand the Great War and its enduring impact on the global community.” Wandering through the 50,000-square-foot museum, you'll eye one of the world's most diverse collections of World War I artifacts (more than 300,000) — so impressive that Congress has recognized the museum as the nation's official World War I museum. The memorabilia runs the gamut from colorful propaganda posters and original nurse and soldier uniforms to a battle-scarred, and combat weaponry, including German grenades and Spanish revolvers. Complementing the museum: The 217-foot-tall Liberty Memorial Tower, an Egyptian Revival-style monument protected by two Assyrian Sphinxes ("Memory” and “Future"). DAVE KAUP/Getty Images Members of the U.S. Army's D Battery at the National WWI Museum's Centennial in 2017Plan Your Visit
Location: 2 Memorial Drive, in downtown Kansas City, Missouri Getting there: The National WWI Museum and Memorial (NWWIMM) is a 25-minute drive from the city's airport. Parking (including accessible parking) is free in the West Visitors Lot and on the museum's south side in the U-shaped driveway. Both are directly adjacent to the museum's entrance. Visit: Open Tuesday to Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (from Memorial Day through Labor Day, open daily). Closed for all other major holidays. Admission: Adults $18; $14 for 65 and older. The special exhibition costs an additional $3; the Liberty Memorial Tower, $2. You're encouraged to buy your tickets in advance, at theworldwar.org. Best season to visit: The grounds look their best in spring, summer and fall. For a heightened experience, NWWIMM's annual Veterans Day ceremony features active military members, commemorative dedications, music and the Legacy Jump, in which an all-veteran parachute team tandem skydives and lands on the property. Accessibility: Wheelchairs and powered carts are available at no charge (first come, first served). While the museum is accessible from gallery to gallery, powered mobility devices must stay on its main level and can't be used in the elevators or taken outside. Insider tip: For $5, rent an expert-led audio guide for bonus material in the main gallery. For example, you'll learn the story behind the story of the glass bridge and poppy field between the lobby and gallery.The backstory
A patriotic group of Kansas Citians spearheaded construction of the museum and memorial two weeks after the November 1918 armistice. The group, which called itself the Liberty Memorial Association (LMA), wanted to honor World War I service members because so many soldiers had traveled through the city's Union Station, a centrally located departure point, when they deployed. In just 10 days of fundraising, the grassroots initiative raised an astounding $2.5 million from the community (a modern-day equivalent north of $40 million) to inaugurate the symbolic project. President Calvin Coolidge officially dedicated the museum upon its opening on Nov. 11, 1926. "It [the Liberty Memorial] has not been raised to commemorate war and victory,” the 30th U.S. president said to the crowd of some 150,000 Americans on hand that day, “but rather the results of war and victory, which are embodied in peace and liberty.” Deteriorating conditions forced the NWWIMM's closure in 1994, but it reopened on Memorial Day 2002, following a hefty restoration that included both the memorial tower and the original museum, adjacent to the memorial. A multimillion-dollar expansion of the museum, built underground under the memorial, debuted in December 2006. A big surprise to many of the NWWIMM's half-million annual visitors: its global interpretation of “the war to end all wars,” a nod to the LMA's original intention to represent and collect artifacts from all participating nations (34 in total) on every front, be it Germany, France or Brazil. “There are no sides taken [at the museum] — no winners or losers,” says senior curator Doran Cart. “Even though it's in the United States, it's not an American museum — but an international museum about the war."Inside the museum
The NWWIMM covers ample ground — with a sprawling main gallery and five exhibition spaces spread across three floors — so maximizing your time and making the most of your visit requires a game plan. Start with the 12-minute introductory film in the lobby auditorium (shown every 15 minutes), which will help you better understand the power struggle and generations of chess moves that ignited this Great War. “Peace is war held in check,” the movie's narrator proclaims, underscoring Europe's mounting tension and waning aristocracy at the turn of the 20th century, eventually culminating in the straw that broke the camel's back: the 1914 assassination of Austria's Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Next, you'll want to spend most of your time in the main gallery, home to the museum's most significant artifacts, which contribute to a meticulous telling of the war's numerous twists and turns. The glass bridge that connects the lobby to this gallery hovers above a Western Front poppy field that symbolizes the millions of lives lost as a direct result of combat. The view of the 9,000 bright-red artificial flowers, each representing 1,000 combatant deaths, will tug at your heartstrings for the countless sacrifices made. Bill Grant / Alamy Stock Photo Move through the main gallery and its two sections, counterclockwise, for a chronological journey through World War I. The first section focuses on the period before the U.S. entered the conflict (1914 to spring 1917), including six life-size trench re-creations. They offer a ground-level view of the dreary underground network (enhanced by the ambient sound of gunshots) that, if laid end to end, would have stretched a staggering 35,000 miles. Dubbed “the long grave already dug” by British poet John Masefield, the tunnels were a final resting place for millions of soldiers.You'll also see numerous war relics, including French death certificates, authentic Austrian mourning cards, Belgian bread bags soldiers used to haul their rations, and an antique brass Princess Mary Christmas gift box that held the candies, pencils and cigarettes of a British infantryman. Keepsakes like these help you imagine the young soldiers sharing a smoke and memories of their loved ones as they fought to survive far from home.