The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

From a secret treasure trove below the memorial to Oliver Wendell Holmes in Washington DC to a retrofitted quarry in Wales, Europe — world governments have gone to great lengths to protect precious objects from ruin. A new trove of declassified documents shine light on a new, little-known project to do just that during the Cold War,

Paranoia and fear wracked the Western world during the Cold War, and we got a new glimpse at just how seriously the UK government took the Soviet threat during the 1980s this week, when the National Archives declassified Cold War documents that detail the plan to protect the country’s masterpieces if nuclear war broke out.

It wasn’t the first time the idea had been floated. During the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, the British government created something called Operation Methodical to hide its greatest treasures at Manod Quarry in Wales, where art had been stored in World War II:

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

Art being stored at Manod quarry during WWII. Getty/Fred Ramage.

Here’s how The Guardian explained what would happen should the bomb drop:

There would be just six hours to save the nation’s art treasures. The order was to be given at midday, the troops and museum staff would be deployed and then the lorries would begin arriving. Hours later, in darkness so as not to provoke panic, the Titians and the Turners and the Tintorettos would be on their way to Welsh quarries. When the ballistic missiles incinerated British cities, they at least would survive – though there may have been no one left to view them.

Obviously, that never happened. But by the early 1980s, the possibility of nuclear war was back — and this time, it was the museums who were asking for help. The idea was to store the works in two specially-outfitted rooms in formerly top secret government facility beneath North Wales, at Rhydymwyn, where mustard gas shells had once been stored.

So what paintings made the cut? During the Cuban Missile Crisis, planning documents cited by Hyperallergic included mention of the amazing 14th century painting, the Wilton Diptych:

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

But the list also included modern works, lime Vincent Van Gogh’s masterpiece Sunflowers, painted in 1888 and stored at the National Gallery:

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

As well as a 1916 Water-Lilies, by Monet, also at the National Gallery:

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

According to Bloomberg, it was an utterly disorganized and panicked project, and it ultimately never happened. But it’s still a glimpse into the seriousness with which Western governments took the possibility of nuclear war, and it shows just how completely unprepared anyone was to make moral decisions about what to save — more specifically, what to save instead of human lives.

Meanwhile, in America…

The UK wasn’t alone in worrying. During World War II, the American government sent groups of historians and curators to Europe to salvage and protect the remains of great works of art (George Clooney even made a movie of it).

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

Amazingly, there was even a secret plan to store America’s own cultural artifacts during World War II.

A researcher at the Smithsonian recently unearthed incredible evidence of a project to build a secret and gigantic “treasure strove” to store art and other treasures in DC — beneath a memorial to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes that was being built.

The Forgotten Plan To Save Great Art From World War 3

Congress never approved the project (at as much as $US5 million in 1941, it was probably too expensive), but it’s worth noting that the government did move many artifacts out of D.C. after the bombing at Pearl Harbour. Better safe than sorry, as Brian Daniels explains in his post:

The Library of Congress sent the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Articles of Confederation, a Gutenberg Bible, and, at the request of the British, one of the surviving copies of the Magna Carta to Fort Knox on December 26, 1941. A few days later, on January 1, 1942, the National Gallery of Art moved seventy-nine masterpieces to Biltmore House in North Carolina. The Smithsonian took some time to find a secure site, but finally found a remote hideaway in Shenandoah National Park, and began moving treasured objects like the Star Spangled Banner in late 1942.

Contemporary governments are planning for the next great conflict too: Just a few years ago, a so-called “doomsday vault” filled with hundreds of thousands of seeds was installed in the remote Arctic island of Wikimapia


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