In 1924, historians and museum curators banded together to bury a time capsule inside the Liberty Memorial, to be opened in 100 years.
In the 1920s, a group of prominent Kansas City residents formed the Liberty Memorial Association to construct a memorial dedicated to honor those who served in World War I.
With the help of the Kansas City Police Department bomb and arson unit, the capsule was successfully opened with no explosions.
The first of these artifacts was a tube of seeds representing the Kansas City agricultural community.
The final object is a printing plate from the Kansas City Star dated to November 1, 1921.
Persons:
”, Matthew Naylor, Christopher Warren, Naylor, Warren, Calvin Coolidge, ” Warren
Organizations:
CNN, National WWI Museum and Memorial, Liberty, Kansas City, Liberty Memorial Association, National WWI Museum and Memorial . Workers, Staff, Kansas City Police Department, Kansas City Star
Locations:
Kansas City , Missouri, Kansas, Kansas City, Warren