'Missouri and the Great War' Traveling Exhibit Comes to Warrensburg
By Jon Taylor,
March 5, 2021
WARRENSBURG, MO – Beginning March 1 and running through May 7, Warrensburg residents
and University of Central Missouri students will have the opportunity to explore Missouri’s
vital role in World War I in a traveling exhibit. Endorsed by the Missouri Bicentennial,
the exhibit will feature stories, images, and artifacts from museums, libraries, archives
and private collections across the state. The Warrensburg viewing of Missouri in the
Great War exhibit is sponsored by the UCM History Program, the James C. Kirkpatrick
Library and UCM Military and Veteran Services.
The Missouri Humanities Council and the Springfield-Greene County Library District
developed the exhibit with funding provided by the Missouri Humanities Council, Friends
of Springfield-Greene County Library District, and the RDW Family and Community Fund.
The exhibit will be on display at the Kirkpatrick Library, located at 601 South Missouri,
Warrensburg. Due to COVID-19, all campus guests, as well as UCM students who visit
the library to view the exhibit, must wear masks/face coverings and practice social
distancing.
To tell these stories, the Springfield-Greene County Library District and the Missouri
Humanities Council developed the traveling exhibit. The exhibit explores the many
facets of World War I history through the perspective of Missouri and Missourians.
Guests of the exhibits will learn facts about Missouri during the first world war
such as the Missourians who contributed to the war effort even before the United States
joined the hostilities over 100 years ago in April 1917, Missouri industries supplied
mules, munitions and other goods to Allied armies and more than 156,000 Missourians
served in the war, including men like future president Harry S. Truman, Walt Disney
and generals John J. Pershing and Enoch Crowder.
Guests of the exhibit can even expect to learn about the contributions of Missouri
women and African Americans to the war effort. Discover the vital role Missouri horses
and mules played in the war despite the military adopting new technologies such as
motorized vehicles.
Jon Taylor, professor of history at UCM, noted that many Missourians contributed to
the Great War and that many of those contributions came from Warrensburg and the surrounding
area. The university has had a number of veterans who have comprised an important
part of the student body since it was founded in 1871. Famed soldier John Barkley
attended the institution prior to leaving to serve in World War I and he was awarded
the Congressional Medal of Honor for bravery in battle. Merchants from the city of
Warrensburg participated in the war effort by providing mules, which were shipped
from the Jones Brothers Mule Barn downtown. Other local communities like Lexington
had graduates from the Wentworth Military Academy serve in the war and George Creel,
who President Woodrow Wilson appointed to serve as chairman of the Office of War Information,
spent some time in Odessa.