US' WWI Memorials Crumbling

Communities debate fate of monuments as funds dry up
By Rob Quinn,  Newser Staff
Posted May 27, 2013 4:15 AM CDT
Updated May 27, 2013 7:55 AM CDT
As Funds Dry Up, US War Memorials Crumble
The World War Memorial Stadium is seen in Greensboro, N.C. Greensboro residents have been grappling with what to do    (AP Photo/News & Record, Scott Hoffmann)

All across the US, memorials to those who served in World War I are falling apart as funds dry up and interest in the conflict fades, the AP finds. One such memorial, the Waikiki Natatorium, was built in 1927 to honor the 10,000 Hawaiians who served in the conflict, but the crumbling salt water pool has been closed for decades; crabs scuttle between "Danger" signs there. Honolulu now plans to replace it with a beach instead of paying $70 million to restore it.

"We're a nation of short memory," laments a former state lawmaker leading a campaign to save the memorial, acknowledging that it will be tough to raise funds to renovate it. In Greensboro, North Carolina, the baseball stadium built as a memorial to World War I soldiers has also been allowed to fall into disrepair, and the city has rejected two referendums to renovate it. "The war was a long time ago," says a history professor leading preservation efforts. "I don't think it's meaningful for most people." (More Memorial Day stories.)

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