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HomeMy WebLinkAboutTexas in WWII, It's Been a Very Good YearTEXAS IN WORLD WAR II: * * ~ IT'S BEEN A VERY GOOD YEAR ~ ~ ~ exas in World War II, the Texas Historical Commission's (THC) multifaceted, multi-year statewide initiative to honor the crucial role our state played in all aspects of the war, had a successful first year. Generous donors from across Texas helped the THC produce: a new heritage tourism brochure, a celebration at the State Capitol commemorating the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II, "Vignettes of Wartime Texas" historical markers, "Here and There: Recollections of Wartime Texas" oral history training workshops, "Texas in World War II -Online," and a special World War II edition of The Medallion. One final and critically important component of the initiative, the Texas in World War II Historic Sites Survey, is yet to be funded. There is an urgent need to identify and record signifi- cant World War II-era military and homefront sites and to capture personal anecdotes related to those sites. Vestiges of the war still remain on the landscape today. Some are visible, restored and interpreted, but others are forgotten, endangered or demolished. Working with local communities, county historical commissions and veterans' organizations, the historic sites survey will identify and document significant sites throughout the state as a basis for future planning, preservation and interpretation. Historians, educators and the general public will have access to collected information through the THC web site and the Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Records compiled as part of this project will result in the largest and most comprehensive online, site-based resource of information about World War II-era Texas in existence. As such, it will serve as the starting point for countless, diverse projects in the future, from scholarly publications and documentaries to the development of school curricula and site interpretation. The Texas in World War II Historic Sites Survey will enable THC historians to leverage resources, gaining a wealth of additional qualitative and quantitative information, including citizen-contributed data. Volumes of new information will be added to the Atlas, providing a richer portrait of life in Texas when it was transformed virtually overnight by the construction of more than 175 major military instal- lations and the infusion of hundreds of thousands of military personnel. "The historic sites survey is one of the most important aspects of Texas in World War II," said Larry Oaks, THC executive director. "America is losing 1,200 of its senior veterans every day, along with their knowledge of World War II-era sites and events. Wartime memories and landscapes are quickly receding into the past, and it is incumbent upon the Texans of today to capture and preserve this rich history before many of the sites -and those who can tell their story -are gone." For information about contributing to the Texas in World War II program, contact Toni Turner, THC development officer, at 512/936-2241 or at friendsC~ thc. state. tx. us. ~t ~''' 12