Veteran’s daughter fights new battle — to honor her father
Published November 12, 2009
If you visit the National Museum of American Jewish Military History in Washington this Veterans Day, chances are you will not see the Distinguished Service Cross awarded to Army Sgt. William Shemin for heroism in France during World War I.Shemin was awarded the medal — the nation’s second-highest military decoration — for leaping from a trench into heavy machine gun and rifle fire to carry three wounded comrades to safety.
Also not on display: Shemin’s Purple Heart or, for that matter, any of the other service medals and patches awarded for his service with Gen. John Pershing’s American Expeditionary Force.
You also won’t see:
Shemin’s uniform overcoat, his jodhpurs, leg wrappings, sleeping bag or pup tent.
The baseball shoes he wore as a member of the Army baseball team.
His scrapbook, military documents or a Passover greeting card.
Shemin’s daugher, Elsie Roth, who lives in a rural area west of St. Louis, says the majority of the 47 items she donated to the museum are rarely if ever exhibited, despite oral promises she says staffers made to her in 1991.
Here are the items you will see from Sgt. William Shemin: a French canteen and a program from the Folies-Bergere, a Parisian nightclub.
According to a September letter from the museum to Roth’s son, Joseph Roth, those are the only two items currently on display from the Shemin collection.
When Elsie Roth donated her family’s military treasures, she says she received verbal assurance that the public would be able to view the collection of World War I artifacts that her father had carefully maintained-and that was very important to her.
“As I got older, I decided that the lovely collection my father had assembled while he was fighting the war should go to a place where everybody could see it, both Jew and non-Jew,” said Roth, now 80. “I asked if they could take it on loan but was told that it would have to be a gift.”
Roth said she also received assurances that the museum would take good care of her father’s things when they were on and off exhibit. But on the occasions that family members have visited the museum, they say they have observed very few objects from William Shemin on display.
The family’s concerns were heightened in 1999 when Roth’s brother Emanuel Shemin visited the museum and saw none of his father’s possessions, and the staff members he talked to that day could not find any of the items. In September 1999, museum director Herb Rosenbleeth sent Emanuel Shemin a letter reporting that all of the objects had been located.
Despite that letter and other written assurances that the majority of items are accounted for, Roth says her family has lost confidence in the museum. This past July, her son wrote to the museum demanding that the collection be returned to the family.
Joseph Roth, a Navy commander who is being deployed to Afghanistan, said the museum has never been able to show all of the items to his mother or uncle when they visited. And, he said, the family has discovered that the Distinguished Service Cross citation signed by Pershing was torn while in the care of the museum. He accompanied his mother on a visit to the museum several years ago and said that while they were told a Distinguished Service Cross on exhibit was Shemin’s, the staff member would not turn the medal over so they could inspect the engraving.
“They couldn’t show us the whole collection,” Roth said.
Reached by phone on Monday, Rosenbleeth would not discuss the Roths’ concerns but had Pamela Elbe, collections manager and archivist, forward a copy of a letter sent to Joseph Roth by Museum President David Magidson inviting the family to visit the collection. The letter, dated Sept. 22, included a response by Elbe that accounted for “the majority of materials” in the collection.
“Jews do fight”
The photocopies that Elsie Roth keeps of her father’s military service are yellowed now, the words that were banged out 91 years ago on manual typewriters are beginning to blur.
Nine decades have passed since the young, athletic sergeant from Bayonne, N.J., made a heroic dash into gunfire to reach a wounded soldier and carry him to safety.
And then he did it again.
And again.
According to the citation for his Distinguished Service Cross, Shemin showed “extraordinary heroism” on Aug. 7, 8 and 9, 1918, on three different occasions when he “left cover and crossed an open space 150 yards, exposed to heavy machine gun and rifle fire to rescue wounded. After officers and senior noncommissioned officers had become casualties, Sgt. Shemin took command of the platoon and displayed great initiative under fire until wounded on Aug. 9.”
Elsie Roth remembers her father as a proud patriot, a first-generation American, born to Jewish parents who emigrated from Russia in the late 1800s. He regularly attended reunions of the Army and Navy Legion of Valor and was an active member of the Jewish Veterans of America.
Roth said that another factor that drove her donation to the National Museum of American Jewish Military History is its mission to combat anti-Semitism and to educate the public about the courage, heroism and sacrifices made by Jewish Americans who served in the armed forces. The museum was chartered in 1958 under the auspices of the Jewish War Veterans.
“So many people have felt that Jews don’t fight,” Roth said. “This museum has the opportunity to welcome people of all persuasions, of all races and religions, and they will see that Jews do fight-from the Revolutionary War and on.”
“Why do you want to keep it?”
Elsie Roth keeps copies of all of her correspondence with the museum, including an inventory sheet detailing all of the objects she donated. Tears well in her eyes as she talks about a mistake she feels that she made: She didn’t ask the staff in 1991 to put their promises in writing.
She says the disappointment really hit home when the museum published a booklet titled “The Hall of Heroes” featuring biographies of American Jewish recipients of the Medal of Honor, the Distinguished Service Cross and the Navy and Air Force crosses. The biography of William Shemin included the wrong photograph and incorrect biographical information.
Then-museum president Neil Goldman sent a letter to Roth dated Nov. 7, 2001, apologizing for the incorrect photograph and for mistakes made by his staff, “both past and present.”
In the most recent letter from Magidson, curator Elbe cited a database installed by the museum in 2003 as making it easy for her to track the Shemin items. She also noted that the museum is in the process of cataloguing all objects in its collection and she expects to find several items currently not accounted for: a photo, bullets, booty coins, pants and a placemat.
Roth acknowledges that the verbal promises she received from museum staffers in 1991 were not spelled out in the legal deed of gift that she signed transferring ownership of the collection.
But the Roths contend that the museum’s actions have voided the contract and that they will pursue legal action, if necessary.
“I have lost trust in this museum,” Elsie Roth said. “I want the collection back.”
A former collection manager at the museum said that although he believes the museum has hired a staff member who knows how to handle the collections properly, he witnessed disorder when he first began working there. He knows the Roths and said he understands how they feel.
“Elsie wants the collection back, but she can’t get it back because it is not hers anymore. It is theirs,” he said. “On the other hand, she has been treated very poorly by the museum. She gave them the collection in good faith and it was accepted. It’s truly an extraordinary collection and it is a shame it is not on display for the public to see. She has a lot of reason to be unhappy.”
Joseph Roth said he doesn’t understand why the museum insists on keeping his grandfather’s collection when it hasn’t shown an interest in exhibiting most of the items. “The question is, why do you want to keep it if you don’t show it? They can’t seem to answer that,” he said.
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