Wikipedia:GLAM/Pritzker
WikiProject GLAM/Pritzker Military Museum & Library will serve as the hub for all Wikipedia community events, content work, and community collaboration on articles related to the Pritzker Military Museum & Library in Chicago, Illinois and its collections. To learn more about our collections, see Museum overview or Library overview. If you are interested in helping, please leave your username in the participants section. If you have any questions, feel free to post them on the talk page.
Scope
This project aims to coordinate the sharing of resources between the Pritzker Military Museum & Library and the Wikimedia community. The Pritzker Military Museum & Library's mission aligns closely with Wikipedia’s goal to provide "free access to the sum of all human knowledge." The Museum and Library's collections covers all branches of the United States military from the colonial era to the present. The collections focus on the concept of the Citizen Soldier as an important element in a democratic society.[1]
Plans
- to train staff and others how they can add material to Wikipedia according to Wikipedia rules and without violating Conflict of Interest guidelines
- to write articles on topics and authors represented in the collections of the Pritzker Military Museum & Library
- to update book citations in general military history articles, including adding ISBNs and OCLC numbers
- to add VIAF numbers to biography articles of individuals associated with military history and military writing including fiction
- to illustrate articles with images donated by Pritzker Military Museum & Library and to properly categorize these images at Wikimedia Commons
- to create all the proper user boxes, project tags, etc. in order to keep track of project statistics.
Articles to start
Please add topics you'd like to see based on the Pritzker Military Museum & Library's collections
Songs
WWI
- A Fellow on a Furlough
- A Soldier Speaks
- Allegiance: Patriotic Song
- At Sundown, Love is Calling Me Home
- Au Revoir, but Not Good Bye
- Battle of Waterloo (song)
- Bomber Command (song)
- Everybody's Happy Now
- Fight for Freedom
- General Pershing: One Step, 1918 march composed by Carl D. Vandersloot
- Glory of Womanhood
- Good Luck to Our Boys in Tan
- Goodnight Soldier
- Hinky Dinky Parlay Voo? Fox Trot and 6/8 March One-step
- I'm Proud to Be the Mother of a Soldier
- I Wonder What They're Doing To-Night (Your Girl and Mine)
- Keep the Love-Light burning in the Window Till the Boy Come Marching Home
- Lucky Lindy!, a WWI song
- March Song of the 318th Eng'rs
- Oh, Charlie Is My Darling
- Salute the Flag: March & Two-Step
- Some Day Waiting Will End from The Girl Behind the Gun (musical)
- Some Lonesome Night, song by George W. Meyer
- Spring, Sweet Spring, by Stanislaus Stange and Julian Edwards >>mp3
- Swanee Shore
- The Blue Flag, a WWI song
- The Connecticut March, a 1911 song which was reissued as sheet music in 1938
- The Girl Behind the Gun (musical) (currently a redirect to later version of musical entitled Kissing Time)
- The Dream of a Soldier Boy
- The Home Guard, by M. Greenwald >>mp3
- The Nation's Call for Humanity and Right
- There's a Garden of Crosses in the Man's Land
- Under the Double Eagle March, by J.F. Wagner
- What Has Become of ''Hinky Dinky Parlay Voo?'', a song; PMML has 1924 ed.
- When I Send You a Picture of Berlin
- When You're Over There in No Man's Land, I'm Over Here in Lonesome Land, by Jesse Spiess and Jack Stanley >>mp3
- We're Going Over, 1917 song by Andrew B. Stirling, Bernie Grossman, and Arthur Lange
- We're Going Over the Top, Andrew B. Stirling
- When the Clouds Roll By (song)
- When You're a Long, Long Way From Home
- You Can't Get Away From the Blarney
WWII
- All the Way to Tokio, a WWII song
- America Needs You (song), a WWII song
- Brave Heroes of Bataan
- Hit Kit (song book series), distributed through The War Department's Special Services Division during WWII
- Uncle Sam Goes to Town, a WWII song
- Uncle Sam, Here I Am, a WWII song
- Victory Symphony Eight to the Bar, a WWII song
- The WAAC Is a Soldier Too, a WWII song
Other
- The Air Raid Warden Song, a song
- All America Swings, a song
- The Yankee Maid March, song by Blanche Wood Leger
People
Historians
- Andrew Cayton (historian), frequently writes with Fred Anderson
- Charles P. Neimeyer, historian
- Charlie T. Morrissey, historian
- David L. Sears, historian
- Edward Marolda, historian
- Elliot Carlson, historian
- Famiano Strada was a well-known Italian Jesuit scholar. He wrote De Bello Belgico.
- Gary Weir, historian
- James R. Arnold (historian), author of The Moro War: How America Battled a Muslim Insurgency in the Philippine Jungle, 1902-1913
- Jeffrey G. Barlow, historian
- John Lundstrom, historian
- Jonathan W. Jordan, historian
- Kevin Weddle, historian
- Martin P. Johnson, historian and past recipient of the Lincoln Prize
- Michael Doubler, historian
- Michael Norman (historian)
- Michael Pearlman (historian)
- Niall Barr, historian who specializes in WWII
- Peter Cozzens, historian
- Raimondo Luraghi, historian
- Robert Coram, historian
- Roger Pardo-Maurer, historian
- Sean M. Maloney (historian)
- Vanya Eftimova Bellinger, historian and journalist
Former servicemembers
- Mark DePue, historian & retired military officer
- Paul H. Herbert, historian, retired Army colonel, and Executive Director of the Cantigny First Division Foundation
- Robert C. Doyle, historian & retired naval intelligence officer
Military historians
- Donald Chisolm, military historian
- Edward J. Drea, military historian
- James R. Reckner, military historian
- James H. Willbanks, military historian
- John F. Wukovits, military historian
- John Shy, military historian
- Jonathan Parshall, military historian
- Joseph T. Glatthaar, military historian
- Paul Stillwell, specializes in the Navy
- Peter Maslowski, military historian
- Rebecca S. Dalessandro, historian who specializes in WWI
- Robert Doughty, military historian
- Robin D. S. Higham, military historian
Military people
Currently serving
- Eric Wesley (soldier), Brigadier General, currently Deputy Commanding General (Support) and Acting Senior Commander of the U.S. Army's 1st Infantry Division
- Joseph Streff, current Alaska Army National Guard commander
Veterans
- Joseph F. Callo, Rear Admiral who wrote John Paul Jones
- Richard Todas, Colonel in National Guard, attorney, and was the Chief of Staff for the Mayor of Aurora, IL
- Joseph Teti (soldier), former Marine who currently stars on the reality TV show Dual Survival
- Eunice Dessez, served as a United States Navy Yeomen during WWI
- Rodrigo Garcia (soldier), Assistant Director of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs and a veteran of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom
- David H. Hymes, former National Commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the USA and World War II veteran
- Gordon F. Hohne, veteran of USS Pillsbury and member the USS Guadalcanal's U-505 Boarding Party
- Wayne M. Pickels, veteran of USS Pillsbury and member the USS Guadalcanal's U-505 Boarding Party
- Phyllis Josephine Thompson (born on 25 March 1906), 109-year-old US Army veteran
- Phillip N. Trusheim, veteran of USS Pillsbury and member the USS Guadalcanal's U-505 Boarding Party
- Martin "Marty" Conatser, military officer & National Commander of the American Legion from 2007–2008
- Ruby Jane Douglas, a WAAC who wrote the song The WAAC Is In Back of You
- Percy W. Clarkson, Maj. Gen. who commanded the 33rd Infantry Division during WWII
- Dennis Foley, retired Lt. Col., special forces, received 2 silver stars and 4 bronze stars, later wrote popular military fiction
- Gary A. Linderer, served with LRPs in Vietnam, received 2 Silver Stars and a Bronze Star with V device, author
- Kathryn M. Hobbs, Captain, USN (ret.)
- Craig E. Bennett, Brig. Gen., Assistant Adjutant General, New Hampshire Army National Guard
- William D. San Hamel, former U.S. Army captain
- Richard Durrance, Jr., award-winning professional photographer and author/editor of Where War Lives: A Photographic Journal of Vietnam; served in Department of the Army Special Photographic Office
- Theodore Acheson, Vietnam veteran and a former motion picture photographer with the Department of the Army Special Photographic Office
- Arthur A. Jones, military officer who led the Department of the Army Special Photographic Office
- James Capers, Maj. USMC (ret.) [1] [2]
- Stewart Barbee, cinematographer who served with the Department of the Army Special Photographic Office [3]
- Eugene B. Jackson, Tuskeegee airman, died 9/20/2015 obit
- Daniel R. Green, currently a defense fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, served in the Navy as a Lt. Cmdr.
World War I & World War II Leaders & Personalities
- Richard L. Alexander, WWII ace
- Charles Cooper King, British Army officer and author
- John Walter Beresford Merewether, Indian Army officer and author of The Indian Corps in France
- Charles Boswell Norman, British Army officer and author of Battle Honours of the British Army
- Walter Francis Stirling, Lt. Col., D.S.O., M.C.
- Daniel J. Canty, 1880-1968, served with 9th Mass. Infantry, N.G. and was Instructor of Bugles for Service Schools
- William E. R. Covell, Director of Fuels and Lubricants, Office of Quartermaster General (1943–1944); Commanded Services of Supply China-Burma-India Theater (1944–1945)
- Thomas J. Hanley Jr., Commanded Air Service Command, Army Air Forces China-Burma-India Theater (1944–1945), Eleventh Air Force (1946–1948)
- Thomas G. Hearn, Chief of Staff China-Burma-India Theater (1944); Commanded Infantry Replacement Training Center (1944–1945)
- James A. Lester, Commanded 24th Division Artillery, XIV Corps Artillery, 24th Infantry Division
- Leroy H. Watson, Commanded 3rd Armored Division (1943–1944), 29th Infantry Division (1944–1945)
- Arthur A. White, Chief of Staff, U.S. Seventh Army (1944–1945); Commanded 75th Infantry Division and 71st Infantry Division (1945–1946)
- Carl C. Bank, Artillery Officer Allied Forces Headquarters, North African Theater of Operations (1942–44); Commanded 13th Field Artillery Brigade (1944–1945)
- Frederic W. Boye, Served in China (1944–1945)
- Charles M. Busbee, Commanded 102nd Division Artillery (1942–1946)
- Michael F. Davis, Commanded 78th Flying Training Wing (1944–1945), Army Air Force Central Flying Training Command (1945–1946)
- Reese M. Howell, Commanded 4th, 17th, and 13th Field Artillery Brigades (1940–1944); Assistant Division Commander 82nd Airborne Division (1944); Commanded 9th Infantry Division Artillery (1944–1946)
- Pearson Menoher, Chief of Staff XV Corps and Seventh Army (1943–1945); Commanded 24th Infantry Division in the Korean War (1949–1950)
- Lehman W. Miller, Chief of Military Mission to Brazil (1940–1942); Commanded Engineer Replacement Training Center, Fort Belvoir (1942–1944)
- Earl L. Naiden, Chief of Staff, Ferry Command, China-Burma-India Theater of Operations (1942); Chief of Staff Tenth Air Force (1942)
- Barney Oldfield, COL USAF and author; served in public affairs; here's teh link to his obit http://articles.latimes.com/2003/apr/28/local/me-passings28.3
- Hume Peabody, Commandant Army Air Forces School of Applied Tactics (1942–1944); Commanded III Tactical Air Command (1942–1944)
Other
- Amanda Mathew, the first woman to lead a deployed combat arms platoon
- Louis Auguste Adrian, (1859-August 1933) French Army officer and intendant-general who designed the helmet worn by French soldiers during WWI
- Michael Calhoun, 22nd adjutant general for Florida and the first African American adjutant general for Florida
- Paul Swiergosz, United States army officer
- Pryce Lewis, Union spy during the Civil War ; see Spies for the Blue and the Gray and Spies & Spymasters of the Civil War
- Ruth Hammond Broe, Colonel in USMCR, received posthumously the The Colonel Julia E. Hamblet Award from the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation for her work in furthering "the recognition of the history of women who have earned the title Marine"
- Sean Parnell (soldier)
- William J. Reilly, U.S.N. during WWI who had his portrait featured on WWI music scores
Musicians
- Ada de Lachau, composer known for Li'l Liza Jane
- Alberto Rivieri, musician who did the arrangement for Descriptive Fantasie on the Battles of Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain, and Missionary Ridge, etc.
- Alfred E. Warren, composer active during the late 19th century
- Betty Morgan (lyricist), early 20th century lyricist
- Blanche Wood Leger, composer
- Charles A. Bayha, (1891-1957), composer & lyricist active during WWI
- E. S. S. Huntington, composer active during WWI
- Earl Haubrich, composer active during WWI
- Eva Rendell Richardson, lyricist active during WWI
- The Farber Sisters, a musical group
- Francis Dorel, composer active during WWI
- Fred Ziemer, lyricist active during WWI
- Frederick W. Vanderpool, composer active during WWI
- George Fairman, early 20th century composer
- Henry S. Sawyer, early 20th century composer and lyricist
- Ida K. Mervine, early 20th century composer
- Irving Crocker, early 20th century lyricist
- James Frederick Lawton, (1888-1969), lyricist active during WWI
- Jessie Spiess, early 20th century composer and lyricist
- Joseph Woodruff (lyricist)
- Louis Weslyn, lyricist active during WWI
- N. A. W. Carty, composer and music publisher
- Mary Carty, arranger
- Nat Binns, early 20th century composer
- William T. Pierson, (1845-1906) composer
Artists
- A. W. Parsons, artist during WWI
- Abian A. Wallgren, artist, aka. Wally, his works include The A.E.F. in Cartoon and numerous cartoons for Stars and Stripes
- Arnold Binger, artist
- C. W. Bacon, artist
- Carolyn Moorhead Edmunson (artist)
- Dale Gallon (artist)
- David Paul Venell, artist known for his scupltures
- L. L. L. Mamburg, artist during WWI
- Louis Valentine Bonhajo, (1885-1972) artist
- Richard Fayerweather Babcock, (1887 - 1954)
Authors
- Adam Makos, author
- Anthony Weller, author
- Bernard C. Nalty, author
- Bill Yenne, author
- Charles Vernon Jones, author
- Ed Ruggero, author
- Edward W Wood Jr., author
- Gillum Ferguson, attorney and author
- Glenna Whitley, author and Colby Award recipient
- Harry Butowsky, author
- James Bilder, author of Artillery Scout: The Story of a Forward Observer with the U.S. Field Artillery in World War I
- James Campbell (American author), wrote Ghost Mountain Boys
- James Carl Nelson, author
- Jann Robbins, author and Colby Award recipient
- John Charnock, author of Bibliografia Navalis and A History of Marine Architecture
- Karla K. Goodhouse (author)
- Kevin Maurer, author
- Mark Owen (author), pen name of former Navy SEAL Matt Bissonette
- Martin W. Bowman, author of books on aviation topics
- Marvin J. Wolf, author
- Matthew Davenport (author)
- Neil Hanson (author)
- Nick Bunker, author
- Pamela Kaufman, author of historical fiction including the novel Shield of Three Lions
- Ralph F. Wetterhahn, author and Colby Award recipient
- Robert D. Schulz, author
- Robert J. Clasby, author
- Ron Werneth, author
- Russell S. Bonds, author
- Tom Clavin, author; frequently writes with Bob Drury
- Walter A. Musciano, author who wrote biographies and on aviation topics
- William Peter Grasso, novelist who writes the Jock Miles WWII series
Journalists
- Jack Cheevers, journalist who wrote Act of War: Lyndon Johnson, North Korea, and the Capture of the Spy Ship Pueblo
- Gretel C. Kovach, journalist who has received the The Major Megan McClung Award from the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation for her articles on Marines abroad
- Howard Reich (journalist)
- Steve Huntley, journalist
Scientists
- Ian Hurd, assistant professor of political science at Northwestern University
- James Schwoch, Associate Professor at Northwestern University in both the Center for International and Comparative Studies and the Department of Communication Studies
- Lester E. Fisher, zoologist and program guest on Pritzker Military Presents
Activists
- Colleen Connell, President of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois
- Becca Heller, director and co-founder of the Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP)
Public servants
- Edward G. Buikema, Regional Director of Region V of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
- Jeffrey Murawsky, current candidate for undersecretary of health at the Department of Veterans of Affairs
- Richard E. Friedman, served as the Regional Director (Midwest) for the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and was President and Chair, National Strategy Forum, Inc.
- Cortez Trotter, was Executive Director, Office of Emergency Management and Communications for the city of Chicago
Other
- Clare L. De Ceu, one of The Sacred Twenty (possible, see this journal article, mentions in this book, and this report from the Judge Advocate)
- Estelle Hine, one of The Sacred Twenty. . Some info in this book, and prior service in this book, but more is needed.
- Dann Gire, film critic
- Forrest Bryant Johnson
- Joseph A. Morris, partner in the law firm of Morris & De La Rosa
- Keith Gill, museum curator
- Michael Wilmington, film critic
- Nick Del Calzo, photographer
Literature
- Alvin York: A New Biography of the Hero of the Argonne, a book by Douglas V. Mastriano which was the 2015 recipient of the Colby Award
- Command and Control, a 2013 book by Eric Schlosser
- De Bello Belgico aka A History of the Low Countrey Warres by Famiano Strada, a 17th century Italian Jesuit
- Dilbert Groundloop, a cartoon character used in naval aviation manuals and training posters
- Evolution and the War, a book by P. Chalmers Mitchell that was published in 1915; it was translated
- Forty-Seven Days: How Pershing's Warriors Came of Age to Defeat the German Army in World War I, a book by Mitchell Yockelson
- Lincoln and the Power of the Press: The War for Public Opinion, a book by Harold Holzer which won the Lincoln Prize
- Lincoln's Forgotten Ally: Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt of Kentucky, a book by Elizabeth D. Leonard which won the Lincoln Prize
- The Lion's Gate: On the Front Lines of the Six Day War, a non-fiction title by Steven Pressfield
- Mortal Threat (novel) by A. J. Tata
- Neptune: The Allied Invasion of Europe and the D-Day Landings a book by Craig L. Symonds which received the 2015 Samuel Eliot Morison Award for Naval Literature
- Six Frigates: Epic History of Founding of the US Navy a book by Ian W. Toll which received the 2007 Samuel Eliot Morison Award for Naval Literature
- Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates, a book by Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger
- Tried by War: Abraham Lincoln as Commander in Chief, book by James M. McPherson which received the Lincoln Prize
- Washington's Immortals: The Untold Story of an Elite Regiment Who Changed the Course of the Revolution, book by Patrick K. O'Donnell
Events
- Battle of Adrianople (1829), Russians seize the city from the Ottoman Empire
- Battle of the Aa, WWI battle
- Battle of the Argesul, WWI battle
- Battle of Amara, WWI battle that occurred on June 3, 1915
- Battle of Long Neck Pass
- Battle of Gwansan
- Battle of Sasu
- Bombardment of Samogneux, WWI offensive
- Soviet occupation of North Korea
- Srem offensive (1914)
Ships
- USS Blue Island Victory, (currently a redirect)
Organizations
- Cyber Conflict Studies Association
- Wartime Music Committee, a WWII U.S. govt. agency that coordinated music contracts, publicity, etc.
- Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project
Military formations
- 305th Infantry Regiment of the 77th Infantry Division (United States)
- 308th Infantry Regiment, part of the Lost Battalion during WWI
- Submarine Squadron 19, home port= Bangor, WA
- Submarine Development Squadron 12, Groton, CT (DEVRON 12)
- Submarine Squadron 16, King's Bay, GA
- Submarine Squadron 20, King's Bay, GA
- Submarine Squadron 22, La Maddalena, Italy 1972–2008 (known as Submarine Refit and Training Group La Maddalena until the mid-1980s)
Articles to improve
Please add topics you'd like to see improved
- 4th Fighter Squadron
- 5th Marine Regiment (United States)
- 8th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- 19th Michigan Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- 19th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- 29th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- 33rd Infantry Division (United States)
- 82nd Airborne Division
- 104th Infantry Regiment (United States)
- 129th Infantry Regiment (United States)
- 131st Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- 132nd Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- Abel Davis, a Brig General from Chicago
- Aero Commander 500 family
- After The War Is Over, a WWI song
- Al Piantadosi
- Albert Wilfred Barbelle, an artist
- Allan R. Millett, historian
- Alex Kershaw
- Alexander Rose (author)
- American music during World War II
- Andy Stapp, soldier and historian
- Antony Beevor
- Arnie Bernstein
- Richard Arvine Overton (born 3 May, 1906), oldest WWII veteran from Austin, Texas at 109.
- Arthur William Brown (artist), (1881-1966)
- At Mail Call Today, a WWII song
- Au Revoir But Not Good Bye, Soldier Boy, a WWI song by The Peerless Quartet
- Autumn Sandeen, Navy veteran and transgender activist
- B. Mitchell Simpson, III, historian
- Baby's Prayer Will Soon Be Answered, a WWI song
- Barrett Tillman, author
- Battle of Belleau Wood
- Battle of Château-Thierry (1814)
- Battle of Château-Thierry (1918)
- Battle of Fort Donelson
- Battle of Iwo Jima
- Battle of Wanat
- Battleship Illinois (replica)
- Beechcraft Twin Bonanza
- Benjamin Page, Gordon S. Fulcher Professor of Decision Making at Northwestern University
- Bernard Perlin
- Bill Harlow, author and Colby Award recipient
- Billy Baskette, song writer
- Bruce Chadwick, historian
- Carol Reardon, military historian
- Carrie Jacobs-Bond, a singer and song writer
- Catherine Merridale, historian
- Chandra Manning, historian
- Charles Buckles Falls, artist
- Charles Lipson, teaches international relations at the University of Chicago
- Charles Moskos, military sociologist
- Charlotte Hatfield
- Christopher Lynch (political scientist & historian)
- Clayton Knight, aviation author and artist
- Combined Task Force 151
- Committee on Public Information
- Conrad Wise Chapman
- Cornelius Coffey, aviator
- David R. Oliver, Jr., Rear Admiral USN (ret.)
- Dennis M. McCarthy, retired U.S. Marine and former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs
- Diana M. Holland, Brig. Gen., recently appointed commandant for the Corps of cadets at West Point
- Don Stivers (artist)
- Don Troiani
- Donald Stoker (historian)
- Douglass Crockwell, (1904-1968) artist
- Edward Jablonski
- Edward Miller (historian)
- Edward R. Murphy (military officer), was the executive officer aboard the USS Pueblo when it was captured in 1968
- Egbert Van Alstyne
- Eleven Days
- Elizabeth Norman, author
- Elizabeth Samet
- Émile Fayolle, was a Marshal of France during WWI
- Fanny Wilson of New York, enlisted in the Union army with Nellie Graves
- For Your Boy and My Boy, a WWI song by The Peerless Quartet
- Four Buddies (song), WWII song
- Fort Donelson
- Fort Sheridan, Illinois
- Frances Clalin, joined the Union army with her husband
- Frances Hook
- Gao Jianfu (1879-1951), artist
- Gary B. Beikirch, former Army Special Forces medic and Medal of Honor recipient
- George G. McMurtry, Medal of Honor recipient
- G.I. Jive
- Gitz Rice, a lieutenant and songwriter
- Good Bye Broadway, Hello France a WWI song by The American Quartet
- Guadalcanal Campaign
- Guggenheim Fellowship
- Gus Kahn
- Gustav Bachmann (1860-1943), German Navy admiral and chief of the admiralty staff
- H. Charles McBarron, Jr., artist
- H. W. Brands, historian
- Harold Coyle, author
- Henry Burr, performer
- Henry J. F. Miller, Commanded Air Material Command European Theater of Operations (1943–1944). Retired as a colonel in May 1944 as a result of a security breach.
- Henry J. Reilly
- Hot time in the town of Berlin: when the Yanks go marching in
- How 'Ya Gonna Keep 'em Down on the Farm (After They've Seen Paree?), a WWI song
- Howard P. Savage, military officer & National Commander of the American Legion from 1926–1927
- I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier
- Ian W. Toll, author
- Ida Tarbell
- If He Can Fight Like He Can Love, Good Night Germany!
- Ira D. Gruber
- Ivan Turchaninov aka Brig. Gen. John Basil Turchin
- I've Got My Captain Working for Me Now, a WWI song by Billy Murray
- J. C. Leyendecker
- James Dietz (artist)
- James Mukoyama, served over thirty years on active and reserve duty in the United States Army including service in Vietnam and was the first Asian-American to command a U.S. Army division
- James L. Nelson, author
- James Swanson, author
- Jane Currie Blaikie Hoge
- Jason Redman, former Navy SEAL and author
- Jeanne Vertefeuille
- Jiang Feng (artist), (1910-1983)
- Jill Morgenthaler, retired Army Colonel, politician, and author
- John Glusman, author
- John C. McManus, a military historian and college professor
- John Robinson (aviator)
- Joseph E. Howard, song writer
- Joseph H. Alexander, military historian
- Just Like Washington Crossed the Delaware, General Pershing Will Cross the Rhine, a WWI song by the Peerless Quartet, also issued as a record by Prince's Orchestra
- K-K-K-Katy, a WWI song
- Kay Smith (artist)
- Kazimierz Chodziński
- Kyle Carpenter
- Lester W. Bentley, (1908-1972) artist
- Lizzie Compton
- Lucian Bernhard
- Madame Turchin
- Malinda Blalock
- Mary Ann Bickerdyke
- Mary Edwards Walker
- Mary Louise Rasmuson
- MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors
- McClelland Barclay
- Mercedes Graf
- Mobile Army Surgical Hospital
- Morten Storm, "a biker turned Islamist militant turned spy" for MI5 and the CIA who is now the subject of a book and a forthcoming movie
- Music of World War I
- My Belgian Rose, a WWI song by Charles Hart & Ellot Shaw
- Nancy Batson Crews, early woman aviator and WASP
- Nellie Graves, enlisted in the Union army with Fanny Wilson of New York
- Northrop P-61 Black Widow
- Oh How I Wish I could Sleep Until My Daddy Comes Back Home, a WWI song by Henry Burr
- On the Road to Calais, a WWI song by Al Jolson
- Ormsby M. Mitchel
- Oscar Lawton Wilkerson, Tuskegee Airman
- Oui, Oui, Marie, a WWI song by Arthur Fields
- Peerless Quartet, a musical group with a number of WWI songs that charted to No.1 on the US charts
- Phil Klay, author of Redeployment (book) and a retired Marine captain
- Quentin P. Smith, Ph.D., Tuskegee airman
- Randal E. Thomas, retired Maj. Gen. & 36th Adjutant General of the State of Illinois
- Ray K. Edwards
- Redeployment (book), which was shortlisted for the National Book Award in the fiction category in 2014
- Robert Komer
- Role of music in World War II
- Ron Capps, author, Army officer, former Foreign Service Officer for State Dept., and founder and director of the Veterans Writing Project
- Ronald H. Spector, military historian
- Royal Berkshire Regiment, a British infantry regiment with WWI battle honours
- Ryan M. Pitts
- The Sacred Twenty
- Sam C. Sarkesian, political scientist
- Sandra Grimes
- Say a Prayer for the Boys Over There, a WWI song by The Peerless Quartet
- Scott Air Force Base
- Scott P. Moore, Rear Admiral USN (ret.)
- Selfridge Air National Guard Base
- Sidney Riesenberg
- Society for Military History
- Somebody's Waiting for Someone, a WWI song by Henry Burr & Albert Campbell
- Somewhere In France Is the Lily, a WWI song
- Spirit of Independence March, a WWI song by the Conway's Band
- Squadron of Evolution
- Stephanie Freid-Perenchio
- Steve Mumford
- Suzanne Ferrand, artist during WWI
- Tara Zahra, historian
- Tell That to the Marines, a WWI song by Al Jolson
- Terence E. McKnight
- Theodore Karamanski
- They Were All Out of Step But Jim, a WWI song by Billy Murrary
- Thomas A. Pope, WWI Medal of Honor recipient
- Uncle Sam Gets Around, a WWII song
- United States Navy SEALs
- USS Atlanta (1884)
- USS Boston (1884)
- USS Belleau Wood (CVL-24)
- USS Charleston (C-2)
- USS Chicago (1885)
- USS Chicago (CA-29)
- USS Chicago (CA-136)
- USS Chicago (SSN-721)
- USS Franklin (CV-13)
- USS Illinois (BB-7)
- USS Illinois (BB-65)
- USS Illinois (1864)
- USS Illinois (SSN-786)
- USS Philadelphia (C-4)
- USS Pueblo (AGER-2)
- USS West Virginia (BB-48)
- Victor Forsythe, an artist
- Vincent R. Stewart, Lieutenant General, USMC, Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency
- Virginia-class submarine
- Virtual periscope, as used by the USS Chicago (SSN-721) (the current USS Chicago, a Los Angeles-class submarine, also listed here)
- Walter Donaldson
- Warren E. Thompson
- W. E. B. Griffin
- We Are All Americans, a WWI song
- Wesley Kimler
- When Yankee Doodle Learns to "Parlez Vous Français", a WWI song
- When You Come Back, a WWI song by John McCormack
- While You're Away (Pack Up Your Cares in a Bundle of Joy), a WWI song by The Peerless Quartet
- William M. Blair
- William Foley (artist)
- William P. Levine, Maj. Gen. in AUS who lived in Illinois
- Would You Rather Be a Colonel with an Eagle on Your Shoulder or a Private with a Chicken On Your Knee?, a WWI song by Arthur Fields
- Your Lips Are No Man's Land But Mine, a WWI song by Henry Burr and Albert Campbell
- Zenon B. Lukosius, veteran of USS Pillsbury and member the USS Guadalcanal's U-505 Boarding Party
Military history articles needing citations
See Military history articles needing attention to referencing and citation
Translations
Especially into French, Spanish, German, and Russian
Any of the above articles, plus
Article quality assessment
To associate an article with this project, place this template on its Talk page:
- {{Pritzker-GLAM|class= |importance= }}
You may optionally assess the article by assigning a quality class and importance or priority to the article.
Quality (Class): The Wikipedia grading scheme assigns articles to classes by quality. See the guidelines here.
Importance: Importance - Top, High, Mid, or Low - is subjective to each project, and should help us decide which articles to work on first.
Project statistics
This table is updated periodically by WP 1.0 bot (talk · contribs) (about every three days) and may not contain the latest information.
Pritzker Military Library-related articles by quality and importance | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quality | Importance | ||||||
Top | High | Mid | Low | NA | Total | ||
FA | 3 | 10 | 9 | 22 | |||
FL | 1 | 1 | |||||
A | 1 | 3 | 2 | 6 | |||
GA | 2 | 2 | 18 | 22 | 44 | ||
B | 2 | 20 | 97 | 132 | 251 | ||
C | 2 | 31 | 116 | 350 | 499 | ||
Start | 2 | 46 | 205 | 1,066 | 1,319 | ||
Stub | 4 | 44 | 666 | 714 | |||
List | 1 | 5 | 22 | 1 | 29 | ||
NA | 2 | 26 | 50 | 78 | |||
Assessed | 8 | 108 | 501 | 2,295 | 51 | 2,963 | |
Total | 8 | 108 | 501 | 2,295 | 51 | 2,963 | |
WikiWork factors (?) | ω = 13,722 | Ω = 4.81 |
Outcomes
Events
- Edit-a-thon (in coordination with WikiProject: Chicago), 16 October 2013
- Wiknic and edit-a-thon, 12 July 2014
- Edit-a-thon on 18 April 2015
Articles created
March 2016
- After the War is Over Will There Be Any "Home Sweet Home"?, 1917 song
- All Aboard for Home Sweet Home , 1917 song
- America, Here's My Boy, 1917 song
- And He'd Say, "Oo-La-La! Wee-Wee!", 1917 song
- Before I Grew Up to Love You, 1917 song
- Bring Back My Daddy To Me, 1917 song
- Come On Papa, 1917 song
- Don't Let Us Sing Anymore About War, Just Let Us Sing of Love (Peace Song), 1918 song
- For Your Country and My Country, 1917 song
- Girls of France, 1917 song
- Goodbye, Ma! Goodbye, Pa! Goodbye, Mule, with Yer Old Hee-Haw, 1917 song
- I Don't Want to Get Well, 1917 song
- It's a Long Way to Berlin, But We'll Get There!, 1917 song
- Say a Prayer for the Boys "Out There", 1917 song
- The Ragtime Soldier Man, 1912 song
- Tom, Dick and Harry and Jack (Hurry Back), 1917 song
DYKs
On 4 May 2015, Did you know was updated with a fact from the article Clayton Knight, which you recently created or substantially expanded. The fact was ... that Clayton Knight, a World War I aviator and artist, wrote and illustrated children's books with his wife Katherine Sturges Dodge? The nomination discussion and review may be seen at Template:Did you know nominations/Clayton Knight. You are welcome to check how many page hits the article got while on the front page (here's how, live views, daily totals), and it may be added to the statistics page if the total is over 5,000. |
Pending DYKs
There are Did You Know nominations pending for:
Images
Try to get these as high of resolution as you can. 600dpi is best (more if the image is small but detailed, like a film negative.
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General Armando Diaz
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WWI U.S. poster on the protein-related benefits of cottage cheese.
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Gatlings to the Assault
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USS Philadelphia in Tripoli
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It's Up to Us Now!
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Cadet Nurse Corps Poster
A gallery of images was specifically added to the Liberty bond article:
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Past and Current Participants
- PMathew42, Fall 2013 Wikipedian in Residence
- SarahPML, Summer 2013 Wikipedian in Residence
- TeriEmbrey, Chief Librarian at the Pritzker Military Museum & Library and internal advocate for Wikipedia collaboration
- I JethroBT, Wikipedia editor and Chicago resident.
- S. Rich, very minor donor to the library
- Keilana, Wikipedia admin and Chicagoan
- Bgschick, Volunteer at PMML
- Rjensen, historian now based in Montana
- bvizz84, Spring & Summer 2014, Wikipedian in Residence
- KyleMathers, Spring & Summer 2014, Wikipedian in Residence
- Pigsonthewing (Andy Mabbett), assisting remotely, from the UK.
- Arickord524, Summer 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- SamanthaMes, Summer 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- EvanRo, Summer 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- Stormbattalion3414, Summer 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- VCJeon, Fall 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- Kbeer1, Fall 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- Dquinlan27, Fall 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- Bmurph9, Fall 2014 Wikipedian in Residence
- Mchuedem, Spring 2015 Wikipedian in Residence
- Jdanbeck, Spring 2015 Wikipedian in Residence
- RosemarySullivan, Spring & Summer 2015 Wikipedian in Residence
- mareklug, Wikipedia editor and Cincinnatian/Chicagoan.
- RayLimbach,Wikipedia Pritzker Volunteer
- jwolf2, Summer 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- Omallepj, Summer 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- MohnJcIntyre, Summer 2015, Summer Intern
- BBoruMcD, Summer 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- Julianaknot, Summer 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- FilterKaapi71, Summer 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- ChiTownDev, Wikipedian
- Cakoelsch, Fall 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- Sturmvogel_66 former Chicagoan
- Ethanze, Fall 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
- baileywenzler, Fall 2015, Wikipedian in Residence
References
- ^ http://www.pritzkermilitary.org/Home/MissionStatement.aspx Mission of the Pritzker Military Museum & Library