A new exhibit at the National Music Museum in Vermillion, “Banding Together: The American Soldier’s Musical Arsenal,” explores the role of music from the Revolutionary War to the war in Afghanistan.
The rare items on display include a violin played by a Civil War soldier; fragments of a harmonica found on the Vicksburg battlefield; woodwind instruments carried by Spanish-American War soldiers; a snare drum used in a field-artillery battalion during World War I; a clarinet given to an Army private recovering from injuries sustained in World War II’s Battle of the Bulge; and an American soldier’s Vietnamese-made electric guitar.
"Banding Together" also features original photographs of U.S. military bands and soldiers making music both on and off the battlefield. Liberty Bond posters from WWI, popular sheet-music covers, a complete bandsman’s uniform worn by a WW I musician, and other memorabilia provide historic contexts for the ways in which music and musical instruments have been used during wartime. The exhibit received funding from the Mary Chilton DAR Foundation.
The museum's curator of education, Deborah Reeves, joined Dakota Midday and discussed the exhibit.
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