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January 2019 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_Jan_2019.pdf

September 2017 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_Sept_2017.pdf

May 2017 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum News_May_2017.pdf

January 2017 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_Jan2017.pdf

September 2016 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_9-16.pdf

May 2016 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_5-16.pdf

April 2015 -pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_4-15.pdf

January 2015 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_1-15.pdf

September 2014 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_9-14.pdf

May 2014 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_5-14.pdf

January 2014 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_1-14.pdf

September 2013 -  pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_9-13.pdf

February 2013 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_2-13.pdf

October 2012 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_10-12a.pdf

June 2012 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_6-12a.pdf

February 2012 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_2-12a.pdf

October 2011 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_10-11.pdf

June 2011 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_6-11.pdf

February 2011 - pdfNational_Vietnam_War_Museum_News_2-11.pdf

2018 Museum begins direct mail campaign

You will be receiving letters in the future from a variety of people asking for your financial support of the museum. The letters sent so far have come from board presidents and the latest one is from Joe Galloway.  The address to send those donations is: National Vietnam War Museum, Correspondence Center, P.O. Box 1875, Merrifield VA  22116.

Annual Spring Fundraiser

Each year we come together for an evening of fun, food and entertainment. The Annual Spring Fundraiser usually takes place the last Saturday in March, and is held at varioius locations in the area.

The doors open, the bar opens and the silent auction begins. We have dinner, thank your sponsors and the entertainment is under way. Later in the evening there is a live auction and the silent auction continues. The silent auction ends shortly after the live auction ends. After the festivities it's time to collection auction items, socialize and shop in the gift shop.

The Annual Spring Fundraiser is hosted by the Friends of the Museum.

Annual Updating of the Wall

The Vietnam Memorial Garden on the museum grounds contains a 300-foot long replica of the Moving Wall™, a 1/2 scale version of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C. The wall is updated at least once a year to keep the names up-to-date with those on the Vietnam Memorial in D.C.

 

battlefield cross

 

For many Americans, Vietnamese, and others, the war in Vietnam was the defining event in their lives. It was a conflict that divided families and brought violence both to Vietnam and to the United States. Many of us had a Vietnam experience.

At its peak, over half a million U. S. soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen were serving in Vietnam, the surrounding waters and countries, along with millions of Vietnamese and thousands of Australians, New Zealanders, South Koreans, Thais, and Filipinos.

Even with such extensive involvement, the Vietnam War Era has been misrepresented and misunderstood for decades. Current education of this era for public school children typically does not begin until 8th grade, and only one or two weeks are dedicated for lessons. This lack of representation and education perpetuates the misunderstanding many have of the Vietnam War.

Our museum is here to help bridge the gap of knowledge and understanding.


 

 

 

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 The National Vietnam War Museum Phase II Construction

 

Museum Building Specifications

  • 18,000 additional square feet
  • Additional galleries and exhibits
  • Elevator to the second floor
  • Sky bridge

 1st--2nd-floor

2nd-floor

 

When? How?

How can you help?

  • You can still join the Builders Club with a one time donation of $10,000.
  • Gallery Naming Rights: $100,000
  • Naming rights to the building $200,000
  • NEW DONOR CATEGORY: Guardians of the Museum
    • $50/month or
    • $500/year or
    • $10,000 lifetime member
  • Other donor levels available - everyone can help!
  • Builders Club Members:
    • In Honor & Memory of Richard C. Allen (Laine Perry)
    • JoAnn Barnhart
    • Bobby & Belinda Bateman
    • Brazos Foundation
    • Baum-Carlock-Bumgardner Funeral Home
    • John &  Monica Chesnut
    • Katie Daniels
    • Betty Boyd Dettre
    • Fort Wolters Chapter VHPA
    • Friends of the Museum
    • John & Carol Hyatt
    • The Carl E. Kessler Family Foundation
    • Edd & Gloria Luttenberger
    • Norman D and Margaret N McMullen
    • Jim & Iola Messinger
    • Bill & Judy Murphy
    • John, James, & Su Nasche
    • Dave & Lorraine Pashby
    • Don & Leigh Payne
    • Mike Richardson
    • Jerry & Letta Staggs
    • Suzanne K. Shriver
    • Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W. Smith
    • VFW Post 2399
    • Allan & Helen Werst
    • Barbara Wheeler(In Memory of CW4 Michael J Wheeler)

 Please email  for information on how to donate.

GuideStar Silver Transparency Seal, 2023. Please view our Guidestar Profile for the most current financial reports.

The National Vietnam War Museum is an IRS registered 501(c)(3) organization, and all donations may be considered tax deductible. View our IRS Non-Profit Determination letter here: pdfIRS_Determination.pdf

IRS form 990 for FYE 2022 can be found here: 

Why is it important that this museum to be built?

This museum provides an educational venue that presents an unbiased account of the Vietnam Era that will allow visitors to develop their own understanding of one of America's most controversial periods. Accurate answers to this war's questions are important to our society; to help heal the scars that remain and ensure that we learn from our past. This museum will help those who were involved, whether as participants from the five services involved in the war, anti-war activists, family members of those who served, or just observers, to remember, and better understand, the key happenings of those times in order to finally be able to move on.

What makes this museum unique?

This museum isn't a reflective static monument or memorial, but an educational venue designed to cultivate a better understanding of the era and how it affected those that lived through it.

Who is served by the museum?

The museum serves anyone with an interest in American history; anyone who participated in, or was affected by, the Vietnam Era; and anyone who seeks to understand why this short period in our history was so important and so deeply affected our country and the world. It will provide a place where future generations can study this important period in history.

Why so many different displays...
About the opposition to the war... About the people of Vietnam... About their culture?

The displays are designed to show as many aspects of the Vietnam War and the Era as possible. It is important that visitors appreciate not only the military aspects, but how the Vietnamese culture affected the conduct and outcome of the war; how events in the US contributed to the eventual outcome; and how events in Vietnam affected the US throughout the rest of the 20th century--and into the 21st Century."

Why Mineral Wells, Texas?

This site was chosen for the museum because the most visible and remembered symbol of the Vietnam War was the helicopter, and the majority of Vietnam helicopter pilots began their training at Fort Wolters in Mineral Wells, Texas.

The site is also less than an hour's drive from the heart of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, an area with a population of over 4 million people and the home of DFW International Airport with regularly scheduled flights to major cities in the US and worldwide.

Can I donate to the museum?

The museum accepts financial and artifact donations. Click the "Donate Now" button at the top of the page for financial donations. To have an artifact considered for donation into the collection, please click the link below to contact the museum. We are unable to accept any unsolicited artifact donations through the mail.

For answers to your other questions about the museum, please contact the museum.

The National Vietnam War Museum project was formalized in 1998 to develop a national venue that would create an atmosphere of learning about the Vietnam War era, and engage people of all ages, nationalities, and political points of view.

In 1999, the museum was incorporated as a 501(c) (3) corporation in the State of Texas and purchased a 12-acre site in Mineral Wells, Texas, approximately 50 miles west of Fort Worth. In addition to establishing a Board of Directors, the museum established a Board of Visitors, prominent individuals selected to advise the Board of Directors and promote the museum's cause. The museum has also established sponsorship relationships with a number of local and national veterans' organizations to promote the museum to their memberships.

The museum has been designed to tell the unbiased story of the approximately 2.7 million servicemen and women who served there; the civilian contractors who supported their efforts; the Vietnamese people, their culture and history; and those on the home front, both those who supported and those who protested the war.

 

Mission Statement

To promote an understanding of the Vietnam Era, while honoring those who served.

For many Americans, Vietnamese, and others, the war in Vietnam was the defining event of their lives. It was a conflict that divided families and brought violence both to Vietnam and the United States. Whether in uniform or not, everyone who lived through this period had a Vietnam experience.

Despite its cultural and military importance, after more than 40 years, there is no national venue dedicated to examining the legacy of the Vietnam War. The time has come to examine and understand this most divisive period in our history, to allow for reflection, resolution, and healing.

From whatever vantage point one takes, on whichever side of the issues one stands, America's involvement in the Vietnam War must be seen as one of the most important events in recent history. The goal of The National Vietnam War Museum is to present an unbiased and balanced view of the events and participants of the Vietnam Era, and to allow visitors to form their own opinions based on facts.

flags of the Vietnam War

The war in Vietnam was one of many flags (above). The National Vietnam War Museum will explore the varied impact on our allies, their peoples and their countries' futures.

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