Tony Award®-Nominated Broadway Actress, Singer & Writer Melissa Errico brings The Story of a Rose: A Musical Reverie on The Great War to Washington, D.C. Region on May 7, 2025
Special Offer for Vets, Military & First Responders: Thanks to a Gary Sinise Foundation gift, our heroes save 80% on “The Story of a Rose” tickets.
Tony Award®-nominated Broadway actress, singer and author Melissa Errico (My Fair Lady, Dracula, Les Misérables) will take the stage at the Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall and Arts Center (located on NOVA’s Alexandria Campus) on May 7, with her mesmerizing new musical presentation, The Story of a Rose: A Musical Reverie on The Great War – Tickets on sale here.
In a unique mix of beautiful song and brilliant speech, Melissa relates the story of the too-often-overlooked epoch of World War One, in all its many-sided American complexity, in an original musical presentation produced by The Doughboy Foundation to benefit its work in support of America’s National World War I Memorial in Washington, D.C. The show is also presented by the Gary Sinise Foundation, which was established by Actor and Humanitarian Gary Sinise to honor our nation’s defenders, veterans, first responders, and their families by creating and supporting unique programs designed to entertain, educate, inspire and support these heroes.
Learn more about “The Story of a Rose”–both stylish entertainment, and a deep reflection on a war we must not forget.

Carolyn Timbie, the granddaughter of Hello Girl Grace Banker, speaks during a celebration of the Hello Girls at the Military Women’s Memorial. At left: Donna Ayres, grand niece of Hello Girl Olive Shaw. At right, Catherine Bourgin, granddaughter of Hello Girl Marie Edmee LeRoux.
A Tribute To The World War I ‘Hello Girls’ At The Military Women’s Memorial
As part of Women’s History Month, the Military Women’s Memorial celebrated the recent Congressional Gold Medal designation for the 223 women whose role was instrumental in World War I. The “Hello Girls,” who received the Congressional Gold Medal designation late last year, made an transformative difference for the American Expeditionary Forces in WWI. The ability of the bilingual female operators to pass critical tactical information calmly and seamlessly between two allied armies that spoke different languages was a fundamental breakthrough in rapid tactical communications on the Western Front. Read more about the inspiring ceremony at the Military Women’s Memorial, and learn how the organization is working to collect and preserve the stories of women veterans from all wars.

The American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) Band of the Doughboy Foundation performed at the annual Military Through the Ages event at Jamestown Settlement in Jamestown, Virginia, on March 15 and 16, 2025. This marked the second year the band participated in this event. As part of the Doughboy Foundation’s educational outreach, the AEF Headquarters Band has been re-established to honor and recreate the music of the World War I era. The band performs music that would have been heard at the AEF Headquarters in Chaumont, France, between 1918 and 1919. Learn more about the AEF Band, and the two-day Jamestown event showcasing military equipment used in the air, on land, and at sea, accompanied by various military musical performances.
The World War I Historical Association is excited to announce its inaugural “14-18 Book Club” online session. The first selection is Herbert Corey’s Great War: A Memoir of World War I by the American Reporter Who Saw It All (Louisiana State University Press, 2022) edited by Peter Finn and John Maxwell Hamilton. The first book club will be 28 June (2 EST; 1 CST; 12 MST; 11 PST) via Zoom. A Zoom link will be posted in the May edition of Dispatch. More information (when available) can be found on the World War I Historical Association website.
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On March 19, 2025, Daily Taps at the National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC was sounded in honor of the WWI Hello Girls, the women telephone operators of the U.S. Army Signal Corps, for their service, dedication to duty, and 60-year fight for recognition as Soldiers.
The Hello Girls made a transformative difference for the American Expeditionary Forces in WWI. The ability of the bilingual female operators to pass critical tactical information calmly and seamlessly between two allied armies that spoke different languages was a fundamental breakthrough in rapid tactical communications on the Western Front.
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The service of the Hello Girls helped bring the fighting to an end in the Allies’ favor as much as one year earlier than it might have taken without them, according to General John Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces.
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Even after the Armistice in 1918, the Hello Girls stayed on duty in Europe after most of the other Doughboys went home, so that they could support President Woodrow Wilson during the Versailles peace talks.
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But when all the Hello Girls finally returned home, these women who had served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps, and wore U.S. Army uniforms, received a shock. They were denied veteran status and benefits, not receiving them until 1977. In 2024, the finally Hello Girls received long-overdue recognition for their pivotal contributions in WWI with passage of legislation awarding them a Congressional Gold Medal.
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The Daily Taps program of the Doughboy Foundation provides a unique opportunity to dedicate a livestreamed sounding of Taps in honor of a special person of your choice while supporting the important work of the Doughboy Foundation. Choose a day, or even establish this honor in perpetuity. Click here for more information on how to honor a loved veteran with the sounding of Taps.
A new recording of Joseph Turrin’s “And Crimson Roses Once Again be Fair”, a 45-minute Cantata based on poetry from World War I, has been released on the Naxos label and recorded in New York. The poets include Charlotte Mew, Bruno Frank, Siegfried Sassoon, Alfred Lichtenstein, John McCrae, Wilfred Owen, Albert-Paul Granier and Vera Brittain. The new released was reviewed in the January 2025 issue of Gramophone magazine. Learn more about this powerful work, and find out how it was originally inspired by a poem by Vera Brittain, who lost her fiancé, brother, and two close friends during WWI.
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World War I was The War that Changed the World, and its impact on the United States continues to be felt over a century later, as people across the nation learn more about and remember those who served in the Great War. Here’s a collection of news items from the last month related to World War I and America.
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How the Hundred Days Offensive Ended World War I
Golden 14: Black Women Exploited a Loophole to Serve in WWI
Bennie Owens, QMC
20 Incredible Facts About Weapons America Used in WWI
The 21 best World War I movies of all time
WWI Trench Guns: Shotguns for Ferocious Fighting
Off-Ramps to Nowhere
This day in history: German Spring Offensive, March 21, 1918
Honoring WWI Nurses and Norfolk’s Own Kate Talcott Cooke
“Willing to die with fatigue”: Rebecca Rhoads, WWI canteen worker
The Never Ending Story: Resilience of the 1911 Commander
Mather Field: From WWI combat training days to Capital Airshow
A man is only missing if he is forgotten.
Our Doughboy MIA this month Robert Brown Gilbreath, born in Columbia, Tennessee on January 13th, 1893. He graduated with honors from Columbia High School and later attended Columbia Military Academy. He later moved to Texas, where he enrolled at the University of Texas and took a teaching position at the State Orphan Home.
In May 1917, Robert enlisted in the U.S. Army at Camp Travis, Texas. He was assigned to Company “A” of the 358th Infantry Regiment, 90th Division. On June 20th, 1918, he sailed for France aboard the HMT Canada, arriving in Liverpool, England, on July 2nd. He arrived in Le Havre, France on July 7th, 1918.
On September 26th, 1918, the 358th and 359th Infantry conducted a raid on German positions west of Prény in the St. Mihiel sector. The objective was to hold enemy troops in this sector, making them believe the raid was part of the more significant attack along the Argonne Forest. At 5:00 a.m. the men advanced toward the Hindenburg Line. After covering 500 yards, they came under heavy machine gun and artillery fire, forcing them to fall back with severe casualties. Lieutenant Gilbreath never made it back to the American lines.
Would you like to be involved with solving the case of Lieutenant Robert Brown Gilbreath, and all the other Americans still in MIA status from World War I? You can! Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to our non-profit organization today, and help us bring them home! Help us do the best job possible and give today, with our thanks. Remember: A man is only missing if he is forgotten.
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Merchandise From The Official
Doughboy Foundation WWI Store

- A Doughboy.shop Exclusive
- Premium, Dual sided Poppy Design
- 5’ x 7’ Digital Nylon
- Grommets for rigging
- Limited Edition
- Made in USA

- A Doughboy.shop Exclusive
- Premium flag made of durable nylon
- Single sided
- Measures 5′ x 3′
- Iconic Doughboy silhouette digitally screened
- 2 brass grommets for rigging
- Limited Edition
Proceeds from the sale of these items will help The Doughboy Foundation keep watch on the National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC.
This and many other items are available as Official Merchandise of the Doughboy Foundation.
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