'How We Mourned' memorializes Las Vegas
mass shooting
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[September 29, 2018]
By John Smith
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - The teddy bears
belonged in a child’s bedroom, the votive candles in a local church.
Instead, they were among the thousands of items left by the grieving
near the site of the largest mass shooting in modern American history.
They are now part of “How We Mourned,” a somber exhibit at the Clark
County Museum that helps mark the first anniversary of the Oct. 1, 2017
shooting spree that killed 58 people and wounded over 800 at an outdoor
festival on the Las Vegas Strip.
Stephen Paddock, 64, a retired real estate investor, poured gunfire from
his 32nd-floor hotel suite into a crowd of 20,000 people attending the
Route 91 Harvest festival last Oct. 1, then killed himself before police
stormed his room.
In August, authorities closed their investigation without an explanation
for what motivated Paddock.
After the carnage, scores of Las Vegas residents and visitors placed an
eclectic array of offerings in various areas of the gambling mecca,
including the traffic island that’s home to the iconic “Welcome to
Fabulous Las Vegas” sign.
Museum Administrator Mark Hall-Patton said only a relatively small
portion of the more than 15,000 items collected - approximately 3,000 -
were displayed in the exhibit.
With 25 volunteers spending 7,000 hours sorting, photographing and
cataloguing what Hall-Patton called trailerloads of items, the artifacts
will eventually be placed in storage and made available for study.
“Anything that could be saved, we saved,” Hall-Patton said. “We’re not
done yet." The exhibit is on display until Feb. 28.
The items include everything from stuffed animals, painted rocks and
artificial flower bouquets to T-shirts, cowboy hats, whiskey bottles and
rosaries.
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The "Welcome to Las Vegas" sign is surrounded by flowers and items,
left after the October 1 mass shooting, in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
October 9, 2017. REUTERS/Las Vegas Sun/Steve Marcus/File Photo
Schools from as far away as Canada sent letters expressing sympathy.
A group from Hawaii brought a peace lei hundreds of yards long, with
58 white crosses. Contributions have come in from around the world.
“This is an international exhibit,” Hall-Patton said, noting
tourists “flew into town from overseas” just to present their
offerings and pay their respects.”
Many of the items, including a large hand-painted “Vegas Strong”
banner signed by hundreds of well-wishers, were created without a
thought given to preservation for future generations.
“One of the challenges we have is, how are we going to preserve
that?” he said. “They were looked at as a short-term statement of
care.”
Sorting through the vast assortment of items from such an emotional
time in the community’s history was at times difficult, he said.
“It affects everybody,” Hall-Patton said. “You walk away sometimes.
But this is what we do.”
(Editing by Bill Tarrant and Cynthia Osterman)
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