My
Visit to the National Museum of the Marine Corps
By:Lucas Shubert
One
stop my family and I made while site-seeing over Thanksgiving break was the
Marine Corps Museum near Stafford Virginia. It was a very interesting
experience from parking lot to exhibit. The outer form of the building is
unique and structurally honest. Most of the building formed a circular bunker
under a built-up rampart. The center of the circle was a conical glass shape with
a massive mast jutting through the center into the sky. The march toward the
entry of the building, flanked by two-story precast retaining walls, was
somewhat ominous as well as monumental in scale.
On the
grounds around the museum proper exists a chapel, several statues and miles of
wooded paths. The chapel seemed to be a favorite place for marines to share
their nuptials, after learning that it was booked constantly throughout the
year. It was a simple wood and glass structure placed on top of a small wooded
hill overlooking the museum.
Once
inside the museum, after passing through the metal detectors approaching the
front desk, I was greeted by a huge several story volume as the ceiling opened
up. Large exhibits were present in this central lobby- three on the floor and
four airplanes hanging above.
The
layout of the primary exhibit area was a somewhat linear path around the
circumference of the central circle. It was chronologically ordered, beginning
with the conception of the Marine Corps and ending with present day conditions.
I’ve never been to a museum with so much information presented in the forms of
models, images, and text. It seemed like someone could spend an entire day in
just one section of the museum absorbing all the information.
After
spending a couple hours walking through the exhibit path back to the center
lobby, we rode the elevator up to the second floor to get a better look at the
airplanes hanging within the cone. A clerestory hallway lead around the circle
to a restaurant and tavern. At this point I noticed that a lot of people were
confused about how to get back down to the first floor (myself included). It
turned out we had to walk all the way back around the circle to the stairway
where we came up. That part seemed like poor planning. After visiting the gift
shop near the entrance, we left the museum.
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