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Unit 4 WebQuest Project
Town With Major DDay Losses Gets memorial
Introduction
| Task
| Process
| Guidance
| Conclusion
| Questions
Introduction
USA TODAY, May 27, 2001
BEDFORD, Va. (AP) — For years, World
War II was a sore subject that many families in this small farming community
avoided.
"We lost so many men," said
Boyd Wilson, 79, who joined Virginia's 116th National Guard before it
was sent to war. "It was just painful."
The war hit Bedford harder than perhaps
any other small town in America, taking 19 of its sons, fathers and
brothers in the opening moments of the Allied invasion of Normandy.
Within a week, 23 of Bedford's 35 soldiers were dead. It was the highest
per capita loss for any U.S. community.
Only recently have residents begun talking
about D-Day, mostly in anticipation of the National D-Day Memorial being
dedicated here on June 6, the 57th anniversary of the Normandy invasion.
The memorial will officially open the day after the dedication.
"A lot of people don't know what
happened here," said Carol Burnett, 58, owner of the Old Liberty
Antique Mall, a downtown antique shop cluttered with lamps, dolls and
other vintage knickknacks.
For the past year, Burnett has kept a
collection of old World War II uniforms and pictures in her front window.
"People are now coming by, some old veterans, and they tell us
their story."
In the 1940s, Bedford was a farming town
of about 3,200 people. The generation of young men who would go to war
attended the same churches and schools. There were few jobs, so many
joined the 116th, which paid about $35 every two months.
Wilson said they would train together
every month at the county courthouse. "It was like being on a ball
team," he said.
In 1941, the Guard unit was shipped off
to England. It was the only National Guard unit to be on the first boats
of the Normandy invasion. Wilson, who was then fighting with another
Army unit that arrived at Omaha Beach after the 116th, said he kept
looking for his friends, but couldn't find anyone.
"Later they told me that the 116th
had been wiped out," he said.
In Bedford, Mike E. Reynolds was working
in the furniture store he bought before the war. Reynolds said he first
heard about D-Day when he went next door to the drug store for a Coke.
The telegraph machine inside had been
especially active that day, printing letters to families of the 116th.
"Word passed quickly about what happened,"
said Reynolds, 88. Families received letters during the next several
weeks as more bodies were identified on the Normandy beach.
Lucille H. Boggess, 71, was getting ready
for church when the sheriff came by with the letter that her older brother
was killed in action. The following day, the town cab driver came by
with another letter, saying that another brother died.
"By then, my parents were just so
overcome with grief," Boggess said. "It was almost like my
mom had somehow died."
It was a pain that many people in Bedford
kept to themselves, said Mayor Mike Shelton, who began lobbying for
the monument in 1994 after talking with Boggess.
"A few years ago you could walk down
the street and only about one out in five people could describe with
any sense of knowledge about what happened here in 1944," Shelton
said. "Frankly, it's been good for the community to talk about
it."
The $13.6 million monument, paid for entirely
by donations, sits on 88 acres of pastureland in Bedford, about 25 miles
east of Roanoke.
The structure, made mostly of concrete
and polished granite, recreates the Normandy landing. An architectural
representation of a Higgins boat, the sort used during the invasion,
enters a wading pool that is pierced from time to time by small geysers
meant to look like explosions. Bronze soldiers claw through the concrete
beach and climb over a wall.
Past the wall is a granite arch inscribed
with the word "Overlord" — the Allied Forces code name
for the invasion. The arch stands 44 feet, 6 inches high to represent
June 6, 1944. It is black and white, like the Allies' airplanes during
the attack.
Surrounding the arch are flags of the
United Kingdom, France, Australia, the Czech Republic, Belgium, Canada,
Greece, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland and the United States
— countries that participated in the invasion.
Richard Burrow, executive director of
the National D-Day Memorial Foundation, said officials will include
a story wall before the June 6 dedication that bears the names of Allied
and American soldiers killed on D-Day.
Organizers are also planning a three-story,
49,000-square-foot education center designed to resemble a German bunker.
It will be equipped with a theater paid for with donations from "Saving
Private Ryan" director Steven Spielberg.
Bedford officials expect as many as 20,000
people to attend the dedication. That number could expand if President
Bush decides to come. White House officials wouldn't confirm whether
he plans to attend the dedication.
"This is almost like sacred ground,"
Boggess said, looking at the memorial on Tuesday as work crews put the
final touches on the parking lot. "This is a place where veterans
can finally meet and share their stories. We can honor them with this."
The Task You
work as an architect for an architectural firm. The city in which your
firm is located wants to construct a monument to honor the war veterans
from your city. The monument needs to be a unique building with a maximum
of 1000 square feet of interior floor space. They also want a unique,
creative tile pattern to be used on the floor inside the monument. You
need to present a design for this building to the others in your firm.
Your proposal should be in a portfolio that contains a design for the
building and a pattern to be used for tiling the floor inside the building.
If you prefer, you can prepare a Web page with this information for the
members of your firm to view. Be sure that your portfolio or Web page
contains the following information:
- a scale drawing of the front and side views of your proposed building;
- a scale drawing of the floor plan, which has a maximum of 1000
square feet;
- a scale drawing of the tile pattern to be used inside the building;
- calculations that show the surface area of the walls and ceiling
for the building;
- calculations showing the volume of the building.
The Process
To successfully complete this project, you will
need to complete the following items.
- Decide upon the type of building you will design. To view some existing
monuments, try these Web sites.
www.vietvet.org/vietmems.htm
www.yahoo.com
and search for "veterans and memorials"
www.barton.cc.ks.us./b29/
www.rockies.net/~spirit/grief/grief05.html
history.acusd.edu/gen/ww2_links.html
- Make a scale drawing of the front and side views of your proposed
building.
- Make a scale drawing of the floor plan for the building.
- Make a scale drawing of a tiling pattern to be used for the floor
of the building. For ideas for patterns, try these Web sites.
library.thinkquest.org/11750/
www.tabletoptelephone.com/~hopspage/HopsTiles.html
www.frognet.net/~janos1/
www.msn.fullfeed.com/~jpdesign/MPR.html
- Find the surface area of the walls and ceiling of the building.
- Find the volume of the building.
- Be creative. Add some additional data, information, or even pictures
to your portfolio or Web page.
Guidance Here
are some additional questions and ideas you may want to consider for
your project.
- Design an unusual building, such as a pyramid or hemisphere.
- Draw a mural to be painted on a wall of the monument.
- Write a poem to be used as a tribute to the war veterans.
- Design a garden to surround the monument.
- Research a particular monument you find on the Internet. Find out why the monument was constructed.
- Research tessellations. Find out about the various classifications for tessellation patterns.
- Research artists who use tessellations in their work.
Conclusion
Here are some ideas for concluding your project.
- Present your project to your class or at a family night.
- Present the information on a Web page. Have other students critique
your project and help you to make improvements to your project.
- Interview an architect. Find out how this person comes up with
creative ideas for architectural designs.
Questions
Lesson 114
Miguel finds this tessellation pattern on the
Internet. He plans to modify it and use it as the basis for his tile
pattern for the war veterans' monument.

- Identify the polygons in the tessellation.
- Find the degree measures of the interior angles for each polygon
in the tessellation.
- Determine whether the tessellation is uniform, regular, or semi–regular.
Name all possibilities and explain your reasoning.
Lesson 125
Petra's proposed building is a square pyramid. In her plans, the base is 30 feet on a side. The height of the pyramid at the center will be 40 feet.
- Make a sketch of the pyramid structure.
- To the nearest hundredth, find the slant height of a face of the
pyramid.
- Find the lateral area of the pyramid using your answer to Exercise
2. (Do not include the area of the floor.)
- Will the area of the floor be less than the 1000 square feet specified
for the project? Explain.
Lesson 13–3
Miranda and Jordan are working together to design
a building to serve as a memorial to war veterans. Their building will
be a hemisphere (half of a sphere). The circular floor will have a radius
of 25 feet.
- Make a sketch of the hemisphere.
- Will the area of the floor be less than the 1000 square feet specified
for the project? Explain.
- To the nearest square foot, find the surface area of the hemisphere.
- To the nearest square foot, find the volume of the hemisphere.
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