29th Division Museum

29th Division Museum Since Colonial times, our Citizens have become American Soldiers and made World History

As we approach Memorial Day I'd like to remind you that we have a YouTube Channel with several videos memorializing our ...
05/23/2026

As we approach Memorial Day I'd like to remind you that we have a YouTube Channel with several videos memorializing our fallen soldiers. Please visit and share.

Share your videos with friends, family, and the world

As Memorial Day approaches and you feel a need to pay your respects to our honored dead but can't get to a graveyard or ...
05/22/2026

As Memorial Day approaches and you feel a need to pay your respects to our honored dead but can't get to a graveyard or cemetery you might take the time to pay a visit via our virtual cemeteries on FindAGrave. Not all our soldiers are yet noted there, it is an ongoing project but several thousand are.

The World’s largest gravesite collection. Contribute, create and discover gravesites from all over the world. .

It has been a while since we last shared a family story, and I thought this one was especially worth telling. It illustr...
05/18/2026

It has been a while since we last shared a family story, and I thought this one was especially worth telling. It illustrates not only one family’s sacrifices, but also many realities of life in the United States during the era of the First World War.

Private First Class Howard H. Morrow was born on 6 April 1900, likely in Baltimore, Maryland, to William Joseph and Grace Ann (Marshall) Morrow. His parents had married when William was twenty-one and Grace only fifteen. Howard was the fifth of their seven children.

Howard’s father worked as an electrician for the Potomac Power Company but died in 1914 at the age of forty-three. Soon afterward, Grace remarried Harry Skirven Payne, a man twelve years her junior and only twelve years older than Howard himself. Harry already had a young son and took in Grace’s minor children as part of the household. By then, Howard’s older siblings had either already married and left home or soon would.

The family had already experienced tragedy before the war. In 1916, Howard’s older sister, Florence Lillian (Morrow) Krowe, died of pulmonary tuberculosis at the age of twenty-one, leaving behind her husband and a one-year-old son.

Too young to be accepted into the District of Columbia National Guard, Howard instead enlisted in the Maryland National Guard in 1917, likely with a parent’s consent, as he was still underage. He joined his unit when it was reorganized as Company H, 115th Infantry Regiment, at Camp McClellan, Alabama, before departing for France aboard the transport George Washington in June 1918.
By the time of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, Private Morrow had almost certainly already experienced combat. During that campaign, he was wounded in action. Evacuated to a hospital near Verdun—likely Glorieux Hospital—he died of his wounds on 11 October 1918.

Howard was posthumously promoted to the rank of Private First Class and awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for extraordinary heroism. His citation reads:
“The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918, takes pride in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross (Posthumously) to Private First Class Howard H. Morrow (ASN: 1285169), United States Army, for extraordinary heroism in action while serving with Company F, 115th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division, A.E.F., near Bois-de-Consenvoye, France, 8 October 1918. Going forward from his own lines through terrific machine-gun and artillery fire, Private Morrow rescued and brought to safety a wounded comrade. In the action of the next few days he was so severely wounded that he died shortly afterwards.”

Today, PFC Morrow rests in an unmarked grave near his father in Bethel Cemetery in Alexandria, Virginia.

As noted in the accompanying death notice, Howard was believed to have been the youngest Maryland National Guardsman to die in service. In reality, several younger Guardsmen also lost their lives, and likely many more survived the war. At the time, it was not uncommon for eager young men—and women—to conceal or adjust their ages in order to enlist.

Howard’s own sister, Theresa Martha Morrow, born in May 1901, apparently “fudged” her birth year by one year to enter service with the U.S. Navy Reserve. She served on active duty during the war as a Yeoman First Class. Howard’s older brother, Private William Joseph Morrow, also served, assigned to the 104th Engineer Train of the 29th Division. Although both brothers served in France, it is unknown whether they ever had the opportunity to see one another overseas.

Grace Morrow Payne would endure still more loss. After Howard’s death in 1918, she outlived two additional children: Earl, who died at nineteen in 1925, and Theresa, who died at fifty-three in 1954. Grace herself passed away in 1955 at the age of seventy-nine.

The photo accompanying the death notice is likely the only surviving image of Howard if, indeed, there was ever any other. The poor quality was simply unavoidable.

Happening now at the museum 16 May. GI Joe collector club meeting!
05/16/2026

Happening now at the museum 16 May. GI Joe collector club meeting!

This is Greg. He earns his MA in Public History from James Madison University next week.  He has been working, as an int...
05/06/2026

This is Greg. He earns his MA in Public History from James Madison University next week. He has been working, as an intern, on our Civil War gallery this semester.

04/06/2026
We are putting up more memorial videos on our YouTube Channel. Visit and share!
04/02/2026

We are putting up more memorial videos on our YouTube Channel. Visit and share!

Share your videos with friends, family, and the world

This is Nick.  He is a senior at JMU and has been working with General Opie’s papers, which tell an important story of t...
04/01/2026

This is Nick. He is a senior at JMU and has been working with General Opie’s papers, which tell an important story of the Virginia National Guard from 1911-1940s. Nick wants to be a Marine Officer or work for the Secret Service.

The life of PVT Stephen Lawrence James of L Company 115th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division ended not on the battlefield ...
03/25/2026

The life of PVT Stephen Lawrence James of L Company 115th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division ended not on the battlefield or in a hospital suffering the effects of the "Spanish Flu" but apparently in or on the banks of the Seine on 27 April 1919. The question arose, however, whether he was murdered or drowned. His burial card says "drowned" without further explanation. The accompanying newspaper article had the only photo we've yet found of PVT James. A second article goes into greater detail of the case. It was not simply a drowning. An early newspaper article refers to Stephen's hospitalization following a motor vehicle accident.

Stephen was born 3 Dec 1899 in Baltimore, Maryland. He was the fourth of the five sons born to Martin and Mary (Lewandowski) James. Both of his parents were Polish immigrants and three of his brothers also served in the Army during the war. Stephen had first enlisted in I Company 4th Maryland Regiment in August 1917 and eventually found himself in L Company 115th Infantry in January 1918. He was reported AWOL (from the hospital?) on 26 April 1919 and was murdered on the 27th.

We've yet to discover who the two American soldiers are that were implicated in his murder, nor do we know what became of Mademoiselle Ruebel. Stephen's mother died in August 1919.

The 115th at Couvains, 1944.
03/08/2026

The 115th at Couvains, 1944.

2nd Battalion of the 115th Infantry Regiment, 29th Infantry Division at Couvains, Manche, France. This footage was filmed in Normandy on June 17, 1944. From ...

Address

566 Lee Highway
Verona, VA
24482

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

(540) 248-0116

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