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National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Wed Nov 30, 2011 10:22 pm

For the first time in a number of years I was able to make it to Fredericksburg, TX over Thanksgiving weekend. The museum has grown quite a bit and includes a lot of fascinating exhibits covering all branches of the service. Tight spaces make photography of the aircraft difficult, and you can't really get up close and personal with them. Still, the museum is very well worth the visit.

All of the aviation displays are now indoors -- except for one lonely Japanese propeller.
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The TBM is in its own display building.
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The Rex is now displayed in the main museum building and looking good.
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The Val hulk is now indoors inside the main museum.
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The Lake Michigan FM-2 is also displayed basically as recovered.
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The B-25 looks great, but is hard to photograph due to the close quarters.
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Finally, there's a very interesting display case of Pearl Harbor raid relics, including small bits from some of the attacking aircraft.
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Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Wed Nov 30, 2011 11:19 pm

Wow! I had no idea there was a surviving Rex! Cool stuff. Thanks for posting.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Wed Nov 30, 2011 11:28 pm

I was there two weeks ago and I had no idea that place was that amazing. I couldn't believe how big the Japanese float plane was.
I thought that was one of the planes pulled from Lake Michigan, but they don't seem to have anything there that tells the story of it being at the bottom of the lake. I think they need something there in big letters explaining that.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 11:27 am

It's a very nice collection and a tremendous amount of work has gone into it in the last few years. I used to visit it quite frequently when I lived nearby, and for many years it really was what I wished my backyard looked like: a bunch of cool crap gathered together and fenced in. Somehow, someway, they must've got the funding spigot turned on because now it has first rate buildings and restorations with lots of rare artifacts in a very good interpretive context. Plus, it's in what I would argue is one of the most beautiful parts of our great state of Texas. If you're ever in Austin or San Antonio, plan an extra day and head out to Fredricksburg. The drive is beautiful, the town is great, and as you can see, the museum is top notch.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 11:32 am

carlisle1926 wrote:I thought that was one of the planes pulled from Lake Michigan, but they don't seem to have anything there that tells the story of it being at the bottom of the lake. I think they need something there in big letters explaining that.


I agree with you that there should be something there giving context. But man, just a few short years ago that Val and Avenger were sitting under what was essentially a big, open sided tractor barn. Most of the rest of the stuff was just outside, or not even on display at all. The problem of not having an interpretive exhibit for the Wildcat is a good problem to have for these folks!

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 11:46 am

Is the Japanese midget sub on inside display as well?

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 12:03 pm

What's the history of the B-25?

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 1:05 pm

Pat Carry wrote:Is the Japanese midget sub on inside display as well?



Yes!

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 1:22 pm

JohnB wrote:What's the history of the B-25?

http://www.warbirdregistry.org/b25regis ... 86880.html
Last edited by the330thbg on Thu Dec 01, 2011 4:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 2:17 pm

In addition to the Pearl Harbor sub, the museum also has a Higgins boat (PT-309), an admiral's barge, the conning tower of the USS Pintado, a number of naval guns, etc., plus many smaller relics including a steel door cut from the USS Arizona. There are a number of US and Japanese tanks, field guns, anti-aircraft guns, a tracked landing craft, rifles, pistols, etc. If you want to try to look at everything you could easily spend a whole day there.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 2:44 pm

Dave Lindauer wrote:In addition to the Pearl Harbor sub, the museum also has a Higgins boat (PT-309), an admiral's barge, the conning tower of the USS Pintado, a number of naval guns, etc., plus many smaller relics including a steel door cut from the USS Arizona. There are a number of US and Japanese tanks, field guns, anti-aircraft guns, a tracked landing craft, rifles, pistols, etc. If you want to try to look at everything you could easily spend a whole day there.

Sounds like a very kool place to pay a visit to.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 2:46 pm

kalamazookid wrote:Wow! I had no idea there was a surviving Rex! Cool stuff. Thanks for posting.

Who restored the Rex? It looks great.

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 4:36 pm

I used to see that B-25 every day as a student at Reese. (Somewhere, in a box, are photos that need to be scanned and posted.) Following the Registry link, the black and white photo says 1959 ... other than the vehicles in the background, it looks just as it looked in the 90's to me.

I realize the airplane underwent quite a transformation from TB-25 to B-25B but I would love to know that they found when she came down from her perch. Was she a TB-25 time capsule or a stripped shell?

Ken

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 6:37 pm

i believe the nambu pistol is the older papa nambu model, not the more common type 14 model. that rex looks to be in cherry condition!!

Re: National Museum of the Pacific War 11/29/2011

Thu Dec 01, 2011 7:33 pm

Tom - I don't know about this Nambu, but here is a blow-up of the photo I posted before.

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I have a Nambu Model 94 that my father sent back from the Pacific (along with an Arisaka, bayonet, Samurai sword, flag, and other souvenirs), but I don't know much about the earlier models.

Dave
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