Jiggersfromsphilly wrote:
The guiding spirit behind this endeavour was Stephen Ambrose. He was all about the buck. A gentleman from the Midwest had restored a LCVP as he had been in charge of one in the South Paciific during the war. he heard of the Higgins Boat project and he donated his fully restored WW2 vintage LCVP to the Museum. Well that would have ended the drive to raise funds to find one and restore it. So the good Dr. sold it to a museum in Europe and went on his way soliciting funds . The Museum is a cash cow and who knows how much has been raised under the guise of other projects ? It sure doesn't seem like the collection is that extensive and most of it is donated.
I’d give anything to know where that Higgins boat went. In 1992, I participated in a re-enactment on the shores of Lake Pontchartrain near the campus as a fund raiser for the museum. I was in the first group to jump out of that boat, and got on CNN and the front page of the Times Picayune for it. Marvin Perrett piloted the boat, and was a Coast Guard landing craft driver in WW2. He participated in Normandy and Iwo Jima. Really good guy, I heard he passed a few years ago. I also have heard that the boat we were in was sold but I have never been able to find out to where. If ANYONE knows, please let me know.
As for the museum itself, I too have heard it’s mostly geared toward “storytelling” and not to the artifacts themselves. That’s a real shame as plenty of good museums have
both. I know lots of incredible stuff has been donated to them that will likely never be seen by the public.