• History. Delivered.

    History. Delivered.

    The weapons used. The uniforms worn. The letters written. The sacrifices made. Each piece of memorabilia in the Michigan Traveling Military Museum holds a story of the individual who used it. History at your fingertips. And we bring it all to you.
  • History. Delivered.

    History. Delivered.

    The weapons used. The uniforms worn. The letters written. The sacrifices made. Each piece of memorabilia in the Michigan Traveling Military Museum holds a story of the individual who used it. History at your fingertips. And we bring it all to you.
  • History. Delivered.

    History. Delivered.

    The weapons used. The uniforms worn. The letters written. The sacrifices made. Each piece of memorabilia in the Michigan Traveling Military Museum holds a story of the individual who used it. History at your fingertips. And we bring it all to you.
  • History. Delivered.

    History. Delivered.

    The weapons used. The uniforms worn. The letters written. The sacrifices made. Each piece of memorabilia in the Michigan Traveling Military Museum holds a story of the individual who used it. History at your fingertips. And we bring it all to you.
  • History. Delivered.

    History. Delivered.

    The weapons used. The uniforms worn. The letters written. The sacrifices made. Each piece of memorabilia in the Michigan Traveling Military Museum holds a story of the individual who used it. History at your fingertips. And we bring it all to you.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

WWI

Browse our bits of history from The Great War.

Read More

 

WWII

See our relics from the deadliest conflict in history.

Read More

 

German Military

Learn more about our German military pieces.

Read More

 

Japanese Military

Have a look at our Japanese military memorabilia.

Read More

 

James R. Upham of Flint, Mich., entered active duty as a member of the U.S. Army on June 29, 1943. He was originally attached to the 29th Infantry Division for a short time, and then was transferred to Company F 311th Infantry Regiment of the 78th Infantry Division.

Fierce Battle


Once in Europe, Upham was involved in a great amount of heavy combat, which led to him receiving the Bronze Star medal. Some of the fiercest fighting he endured took place in and around the German town of Kesternich. The weather in that area was brutally cold, and Upham found that his BAR rifle had frozen and would not function. But this did not stop him from bagging five German prisoners. It was during the heated battle for Kesternich that his company did a little house-to-house cleaning of Germans. Upham kicked in the door of one room, stepped inside, switched the BAR around the room menacingly, and made a loud "Brrrr" with his tongue. This did the trick, and five Germans in the room threw down their weapons and surrendered. Talk about luck! 

A Purple Heart


Upham's unit continued to face heavy fighting around Kesternich, and on Dec. 20, 1944, he was awarded an Oak Leaf cluster to his first Bronze Star. On Dec. 26, 1944, he was wounded in action and received the Purple Heart.   

Heroics Under Fire


On March 13, 1945, Upham faced one of his toughest challenges when he was a squad leader with the leading platoon of Company F. When direct fire from a camouflaged Panzer Mark 4 tank had cut the lead platoon off from the remainder of the company, Upham and seven others moved toward the tank. After leaving six men to cover their advance, he and one other crawled to the crest of the hill and exposed themselves to bring bazooka fire to bear on the enemy armor. Fire from the tank was shifted to the two men, and Upham and his companion remained exposed and fired two rounds at the tank and silenced it. For this aggressive and decisive action, he was awarded the Silver Star medal.


A Key Capture


Upham continued on and was with the 78th when they captured the Ludendorff bridge at the town of Remagen. The capture of this key bridge definitely doomed the Germans on the western front and shortened the war in the west. Upham continued to be a platoon leader right through to the end of the war and was discharged on Jan. 17, 1946.

Our Collection


The Michigan Traveling Military Museum is pleased to have and display the Staff Sgt. James R. Upham 78th Infantry Division grouping. It is complete with his original uniform, medals, dog tags, documents, photo album and more. It is a fitting tribute to a very brave and resourceful soldier who was involved with some of the fiercest fighting the U.S. Army faced during World War II.

 

Joseph Andrews of Dearborn, Mich., entered active military duty as a B-24 Bomber Navigator on July 31, 1944, and served with the 15th Air Force, based in southern Italy.

Distinguished Unit Citations


As a member of the 451st Bombardment Group (H), Andrews participated in many long-range strategic bombing missions to enemy military, industrial and transportation targets in Italy, France, Germany, Hungary, Romania and Yugoslavia. They attacked such targets as oil refineries, marshaling yards, aircraft factories, bridges and airfields. His unit was extremely effective and was awarded three Distinguished Unit Citations for attacks on an aircraft factory in Regensburg on Feb. 25, 1944, oil refineries and marshaling yards in Ploesti on April 5, 1944, and an air dome at Vienna on Aug. 23, 1944. In each of these three missions, the bombers of the 451st fought their way through large numbers of enemy fighters and severe anti-aircraft fire, and inflicted serious damage on the assigned targets.   

Air Medal


The 451st Bombardment Group (H) also flew missions to pave the way for and participation in the invasion of southern France in August 1944. By the end of his service time, Andrews was credited with participating in a total of 27 combat missions over enemy territory. He was commended for efficiency and was awarded the Air Medal with two Oak Leaf clusters.   

Our Collection


The Michigan Traveling Military Museum is pleased to have and display the 1st Lt. Joseph Andrews 15th Army Air Force B-24 navigator grouping. It is an excellent collection including his A-2 jacket, officer's hat, medals and insignia grouping, dog tags, and his military records. It is a fitting tribute to a proud 15th Army Air Force veteran.