The Museumgoer podcast
In this episode, we’ll step inside the new changing exhibit at the National WWII Museum, and chat with Cory Graff, Museum Curator and Restoration Manager. The exhibit, “Come Back Fighting: USS New Orleans at War” tells the story of a decorated heavy cruiser that served in almost every major Pacific theater battle of World War II. Christened at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1933 with water from the Mississippi River, the ship’s interwar duties took her to Europe, South America and the US territories of Alaska and Hawaii. Undergoing repairs at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked on Dec. 7, 1941, it survived (while providing one of the war’s signature soundtrack songs) and went on to fight at the battles of the Coral Sea, Midway, and the Solomon Islands. Losing her bow and more than 180 of her crew in a battle off Guadalcanal, she limped toward repairs and then was returned to action. In 1946, a victory lap brought her to New Orleans for the first postwar Mardi Gras Photo courtesy of the National WWII Museum. Images accompanying the conversation are on the blog at themuseumgoer.com. Also, new to the Historic Hotels portion of the site is a page devoted to the Rubenstein Hotel.
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