By Jeff Murphy,
August 14, 2023
The Missouri Veterans Cemetery in Higginsville is part of a federal grant-funded project
that will involve research documenting the life stories of underrpresented veterans.
WARRENSBURG, MO – Within a half-hour drive of the University of Central Missouri,
rows of neatly-placed headstones line the Missouri Veterans Cemetery in Higginsville honoring individuals who served in the United States military. With
only small bits of information etched into each of the hundreds of gray granite monuments
that dot this vast burial ground, the life stories of many underrepresented World
War II veterans mostly remain untold. This will soon change, however, thanks to a
$399,000 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) National Cemetery Administration (NCA)
grant that will also cover project work at Fort Scott National Cemetery in Fort Scott, Kansas.
UCM Professor of History Jon Taylor, Ph.D., is guiding the Veteran Voices of the Heartland
pilot project, which begins this month and continues through September 2024 in cooperation
with the Midwest Genealogy Center (MGC) at the Mid-Continent Public Library in Independence, Missouri, and the Greater Kansas City Writing Project. UCM History
and Instructional Technology graduate students and a number of Missouri and Kansas
educators and students in grades seven through 12 also will be involved in various
aspects of the project as it moves forward. Lauren Hays, Ph.D., associate professor
of instructional technology at UCM, and Katie Kline, director of the Greater Kansas City Writing Project, serve as co-principal investigators on the project. Hays will direct UCM students
as they use digital technology to capture images of the cemeteries and headstones
in Higginsville. Kline will coordinate a one-day spring professional development seminar
for secondary teachers in Fort Scott and a summer institute for secondary teachers.
This is the first time Veterans Legacy Grants Program (VLGP) has awarded funds for such a project at either of these cemeteries, according
to the VA. The VLGP is intended to “support educational institutions and other eligible
entities to conduct cemetery research and produce educational tools for the public
to utilize and learn about the histories of veterans interred in VA national cemeteries
and VA grant-funded State and Tribal Veterans’ cemeteries.”
Taylor said it is known that African American and Indigenous individuals are interred
at Fort Scott where the project focus will be on documenting information about Civil
War veterans. The emphasis at the Higginsville location will be on underrepresented
veterans who served the United States in World War II.
“Primarily in the fall, graduate students will identify specific veterans in cemeteries
in Higginsville and Fort Scott and begin to craft biographies about these individuals,”
Taylor said, adding that these soldiers are yet to be identified.
He noted Fort Scott National Cemetery already has a list of Civil War veterans, including
Buffalo Soldiers and indigenous soldiers who served in the Civil War era or on the
Great Plains. While the Missouri Veterans Cemetery offers good opportunities to do
research on much more recent service members, a lot of work still must be done to
cultivate information into biographies for all of the military veterans whose stories
will be documented. This will be a very challenging task with a “lot of moving parts,”
Taylor said.
“Most people may think this is relatively easy to find out, but it’s not,” he noted
in talking about the documentation process. “The headstones only give you a certain
amount of information. They also (veterans) were not buried in a systematic way.”
One of the key elements of this project is to make available to the public digital
biographies, which Taylor hopes to eventually share along with information about state
cemeteries on the Historic Missouri website, available through a free app.
Once biographies are written, the research that went into producing them will help
provide a foundation in which the UCM team will work with the Midwest Genealogy Center
to draft a handbook for 7-12 teachers to use in their classrooms. This will serve
as a tool to provide information about how to conduct primary and secondary research
on veterans and convert it into meaningful biographies, according to the grant proposal.
In spring 2024, UCM will work in partnership with MGC to host a one-day workshop in
Fort Scott, where the handbook will be debuted to teachers to learn more about steps
for completing veteran biographies.
A summer institute hosted by MGC follows in Independence. This event engages middle
and high school teachers in opportunities to gain hands-on experience conducting research
about a veteran interred at one of the cemeteries in Fort Scott and Higginsville.
Offering a wide range of professional development opportunities for teachers, the
Greater Kansas City Writing Project (GKCWP) also will be involved in this effort.
Teachers who participate will complete a series of lesson plans related to researching
and writing about veterans.
Taylor worked with UCM’s Office of Sponsored Programs and Research Integrity to successfully apply for federal funds in support of Veteran Voices of the Heartland.
This effort also will include participation from students and faculty members in the
university’s Department of Educational Technology and Library Science, and additional support provided by KMOS-TV, the university’s public broadcasting station.
Individuals who want to know more about Veteran Voices of the Heartland are welcome
to contact Taylor at jtaylor01@ucmo.edu.