Browse Items (16 total)

Avedes Kayoomjan in Turkey/Western Armenia in 1914/1915, dressed in an unidentified military uniform.

Protest signs that were used to encourage the US government to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

Letter from President Lyndon Johnson written to Sarkis Haroutounian as a thank you for sending a plaque.

This is a cross pendant taken from Armenia when Ruth Hartunian-Alumbaugh's relatives fled. It has been kept to this day by her.

On April 24, 2021, the President of the United States finally recognizes the Aremanina Genocide as a genocide committed by the Turkish government against the Armenian people. This is the statement in which he declared that.

A symbol of remembrance, the forget-me-not flower is used to signify that the genocide should not be forgotten.

Hagop Sarkissian's memoirs about his experiences in Ichmeh, his home, during the Armenian Genocide.

Photo of Onnik Melikian, who fought for the British Foreign Legion in the First World War. This portrait was taken after the war during peacetime.

This dagger belonged to Onnik Melikian during the worst years of the Armenian Genoide. He used the dagger to kill occupying Turkish soldiers.

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Nazaret Natcharian's was drafted in the US army in 1918, these papers are his official enlistment papers listing his skills, physical description, and record of service.
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