Current displays page

 

Inside Museum   Montage of displays

 

There are a number of display cases containing a wide variety of war memorabilia.  There is an armory with a comprehensive display of weapons and an interview room for conducting the Oral History Program.

 

The walls are covered with an array of Order of Battle maps including:

Western Front, WWII; 8th AF Employment Plan; Operation Overlord; 86th Black Hawk Division;  Battle of the Bulge (Dec 16, '44- Jan 24, '45); 1st Armored Division; Italy '43-'45; Korea '50-'53; Vietnam; Iraq, Gulf War; Iraq, Push to Baghdad


  (if you would like to listen to a medley of services music while you look at the photos, click the start triangle)

 


 

DEDICATION OF THE GENERAL HOYT S. VANDENBERG DISPLAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2011

 

vandenberg display dedication audience

                      General's Display Case                                             Audience at dedication ceremony

 

 

Article by Bill Morem printed inThe Tribune November 3, 2011
Reproduced by permission from Mr. Morem


Marilyn Monroe once said that the three men with whom she’d most like to be stranded on a desert island were Joe DiMaggio (no surprise), Albert Einstein (surprise!) and Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg — yes, the same Vandenberg whose name graces the Air Force base in Lompoc.


I make note of this because the Central Coast Veterans Memorial Museum (located in the lower level of the San Luis Veterans Memorial Building at 801 Grand Ave.) is unveiling a display honoring the four-star general on Tuesday at 10 a.m. The public is invited to see the display and tour the museum at noon.

Vandenberg was quite a player before dying in 1954 at age 55 from prostate cancer. Not only was he a good-looking guy, featured on the covers of Time and Life magazines and described by the Washington Post as “the most impossibly handsome man on the entire Washington scene,” he was also brilliant.  In addition to being a decorated combat flyer, earning the Distinguished Flying Cross and Silver Star among dozens of other commendations, Vandenberg served in various top jobs for the Army Air Corps and then as chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force from 1948 to 1953.  In between those commands, he served as director of intelligence for the War Department, and was appointed by President Harry Truman as director of central intelligence, a precursor to the CIA.


Although smart, apparently he wasn’t a wonk 24/7. According to various bios, when he wasn’t crunching data and directing operations, he could be found on the golf course, playing to a scratch handicap, or enjoying a Scotch or Western movies; kind of a “man’s man” of the Greatest Generation.


How the general’s uniform, flags and domestic medals (his foreign decorations from countries as disparate as Luxembourg and Chile have gone to the U.S. Air Force Academy) wound up in the Central Coast Veterans Memorial Museum is a story unto itself and starts with retired Army Col. Jack Jones.  The 80-year-old San Luis Obispo resident was the 75th commander in chief of the Military Order of World Wars, a position that military notables such as Generals Douglas MacArthur, Dwight Eisenhower and Omar Bradley had held since the organization was formed in 1919.
Jones, now a member of the local Military Order of World Wars, Vandenberg Chapter, received a call from Vandenberg’s son, retired Maj. Gen. Hoyt “Sandy” Vandenberg Jr., about a year ago.  Sandy, who noted in a 2007 article in Air Force Times that “I’m the son of a pioneer airman who I think is the greatest son-of-a-bitch who ever lived,” told Jones that his wife had died and his kids didn’t want the senior Vandenberg’s military memorabilia.  Sandy, a highly decorated veteran in his own right, with more than 100 combat missions in Vietnam, wanted to know if the MOWW, Vandenberg Chapter, wanted the material, no strings attached. The chapter said yes, the museum’s board of directors said yes and the display, which cost around $2,000 to set up and house, will now become part of the permanent displays at the museum.


This collection is part of our heritage. Take the time to visit and honor those who served and those who made the ultimate sacrifice.


Bill Morem can be reached at bmorem@thetribunenews.com or at 781-7852.


 

SOME OF THE DISPLAYS SHOWN ON THE WALLS:

 

 

Station 1   Station 3

Station 1

 

Order of Battle map for the Western Front of World War I at 11:00 a.m. November 11, 1918 when the war ended. Photos nearby are of relatives of local residents who served in that war.

 

Station 3

 

The map delineates bombing routes from UK to continental Europe displaying routes taken to and from target areas

     
Station 4   Station 6

Station 4

 


 D-Day landings on Europe showing units and locations.

 

Station 6


 Island of Peleliu, Palau Group, invaded September 15, 1944.  It was a major struggle by the 1st Marine Division which had previously taken Guadalcanal and New Britain Islands.  Nearby is a map with artillery target areas showing how thoroughly covered the island was.

     
Station 7   Station 8

Station 7

 

On February 19, three divisions of Marines landed on an unknown island called Iwo Jima, bringing it into instant fame.  What become the battle with the most casualties in the Pacific War also provided the most memorable photograph, Joe Rosenthal's flag raising on Mount Suribachi.  American casualties totaled more than 23,000.  This was fewer than the U.S.airmen saved by using Iwo as an emergency landing strip after bombing runs on Japan.

 

Station 8

 

Marjorie Johnston, a San Luis Obispo resident, was working in the library of a military hospital in Chickasaw, OK, during WWII.  She began collecting shoulder patches from patients, asking them to sign their names to a slip of paper.  This unique collection resulted, with each patch mounted on the signed mounting paper.

     
Station 9   Station 14

Station 9

 

Initially trained to go to the Pacific Theater, the 86th Division was diverted to Europe during the Battle of the Bulge.  When they were released from the ETO the Blackhawks returned to Camp San Luis for training and refitting and sent to the Phillipines.  A sculpture of a Blackhawk trooper made by a division veteran sits on a display case of German artifacts liberated by local veterans.

 

Station 14

 

The invasion of Iraq in March, 2003, is portrayed with clarity on this map, showing the initial push from Kuwait to Baghdad and Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's home town.  Photos surrounding the map were taken by a local Marine who participated in the invasion, including the infamous toppling of Saddam's statue.  GySgt Hernan Rodriguez returned safely with the photos.

 


 

To view some of the other displays, click on a smaller image to display the larger version:

 

large photo frame

 

Blackhawk case thumb     AF case small   

 

Jackets case small     Crations small   

 

German hats small     Helmets small

 

Iwo Jima case small     Armory small     Machine gun    M60 gun small   Interview room small   Docent Alan            

Back to top