The National Museum of the Marine Corps: A Tribute to all Marines Past, Present, and Future

Page 212

Exhibits

10/9/06

4:54 PM

Page 203

THE MUSEUM

THROUGH THE EYES OF MARINES

The National Museum of the Marine Corps’ design team, through carefully crafted exhibits, summons the spirit of the nation’s military elite. By Craig Collins

All photos Larry S. Glenn

L

ong before he had so much as sketched out the first exhibit for the National Museum of the Marine Corps, Bill Ruggieri found himself atop the rocky volcanic dome of Mount Suribachi on the island of Iwo Jima, 650 miles south of Japan. He had been invited by the National Museum’s deputy director, Col. Joe Long (USMC-Ret.) and two of the Marine Corps’ historians, Col. John Ripley and Col. Jon Hoffman (both retired Marines), to see the place where 6,140 Marines and Navy personnel, along with nearly 22,000 Japanese defenders, were killed during the 35day fight for the island. Ruggieri, who was born after World War II, knew the fight for Iwo Jima’s air strips was one of the most important battles in history. He knew of the black-sand beaches, the volcanic landscape whose dominant feature was the dormant crater on the island’s southwestern tip. “But I had no idea,” he says, “that it was that small.” Iwo Jima would be just one leg of the journey made by Ruggieri – the lead exhibit designer for the National Museum of the Marine Corps – and other members of the design team, long before ground had been broken at the site of the new museum. Together and separately, they visited the Pacific Islands of Tinian, Saipan, and Guam; they visited Belleau Wood, near Chateau-Thierry, France, where Marines fought the bloodiest and fiercest battle of World War I and earned the nickname “Devil Dogs” from their German opponents; they stayed for several days in a troop-berthing aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Nassau, offshore from Camp Lejeune, N.C.; and they visited several other military museums around the world. According to Long, they also experienced a bit of what he went through at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego in 1966: boot camp. When Ruggieri’s company, the Boston-based Christopher Chadbourne and Associates, joined the Denver architectural firm of Fentress Bradburn as the main design contractors for the museum, Long says, “The Commandant [Gen. James L. Jones, now NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander, Europe] said ‘Let’s see if we can make these guys green,’ and I thought that was a great idea. We wanted them to be as close to the Corps as they could get.” In San Diego, design team members jumped off a bus with two dozen recruits and ran smack into a classic drillinstructor welcome, which Long recalls with unconcealed

fondness. “Chris Chadbourne – he’s 55, probably, and doesn’t need to do the kind of stuff he did, but he got on the bus. And boy, they got screamed off the bus. The drill instructor was screaming at them to line up on the yellow footprints, and my guys jumped off the bus along with all those 18-, 19-year-old recruits, and Chris Chadbourne didn’t go far enough down the line of yellow footprints – he was supposed to go down to the very end – and the drill instructor got right in his face and screamed him down to the end. Actually,” he laughs, “the guys were kind of quivering a little bit.” Ruggieri – who would become perhaps the only museum exhibit designer ever to knock himself unconscious on a Marine boot camp obstacle course – remembers his experience with a mixture of emotions. His visit to Iwo Jima moved him profoundly. Jon Hoffman, former deputy director of the Marine Corps’ History and Museums Division, explains that immersing the design team in Marine Corps culture was an important first step toward answering a rhetorical question posed by Lt. Gen. Victor Krulak nearly a halfcentury ago: “Why do we need a Marine Corps?” By implication, the question for the design team was: “Why do we need a Marine Corps Museum?” “Because when you really get down to it, the Marine Corps is essentially like a second army,” Hoffman says. “We’re guys who fight on the ground ... and so my view as to the museum was that this should explain to the American public what the Marine Corps contributes that nobody else has, and why we should keep the Marine Corps around.”

A Core Message When they first began seeking designers for the National Museum several years ago, the two key organizations in the planning of the museum – the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation, the nonprofit organization that promotes historical scholarship about the Corps, and the Marine Corps’ own History and Museums Division – began by knowing exactly what they did not want the museum to be. Since World War II, the History and Museums Division’s remarkable archive – approximately 30,000 artifacts, including the finest small-arms collection in the world; authentic combat film footage; a collection of combat art; documents; and cherished items associated with the heroic acts of

203


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Preserving A Heritage

14min
pages 223, 226, 228, 230, 232-233

Through the Eyes of Marines

18min
pages 212-216, 218-220

A New Icon

13min
pages 192, 194-200, 202-203, 206-207, 210-211

Conveying Semper Fidelis to America

12min
pages 184-187, 189, 191

The Marine Corps Heritage Foundation

13min
pages 176-177, 179-180, 182-183

Making Marines

19min
pages 22, 24, 26-27, 29-31, 33

FIGHTING FOR THE FUTURE

25min
pages 161-164, 166-167, 169, 171-175

Brave New World

12min
pages 152-155, 157

Limited War, Violent Peace (1969-1990)

9min
pages 142, 144-146, 150

Khe Sanh, Tet Hue City (1968)

8min
pages 135, 137, 139, 141

Cold War\uDBFF\uDC00Crusades (1953-1967)

6min
pages 129-131, 133

The Seesaw War ( Korea 1951- 1953)

8min
pages 122, 124-125, 127, 129

Froze\uDBFF\uDC00n Chosin (North Korea, 1950)

10min
pages 117-119, 121-122

The Great End Run ( Inchon, 1950)

7min
pages 110-111, 113-114

The F\uDBFF\uDC00ire Brigade (Korea, Summer 1950)

6min
pages 104, 106, 109

Amphibious Capstones (Okinawa to V-J Day)

10min
pages 98, 100-103

Sulfur Island (Iwo Jima, 1945)

8min
pages 92-94, 96, 98

Heading for the Philippines

4min
pages 91-92

Westward to the Marshalls and Marianas

7min
pages 83-84, 86, 89

Across the Reef at Tarawa

10min
pages 77-79, 81-82

Stranglin\uDBFF\uDC00g Rabaul (1943)

10min
pages 69, 71-74

GUADALCANAL FIRST OFFENSIVE

12min
pages 59-60, 62-63, 65-67

ISSUE IN DOUBT (World War II, 1941-1942)

8min
pages 54-57

\u201CSKILLED WATERMEN AND JUNGLE FIGHTERS, TOO\u201D (The Interwar Years, 1919-1941)

5min
pages 50, 52

Devil Dogs (World War I)

11min
pages 44, 46-49

Manifest Destiny (1859-1914)

8min
pages 39-41, 43

U.S. MARINE CORPS HIS\uDBFF\uDC00TORY: The Leathernecks

7min
pages 34-35, 37-39
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.