Last woman in group known for saving cultural treasures during and after World War II dies of corona
By Zack Budryk - 05/11/20 11:54 AM EDT
Motoko Fujishiro Huthwaite, the last of a group of women who worked to preserve art and cultural treasures during and after World War II, has died of complications from coronavirus at 92.
Huthwaite was the last of the 27 so-called Monuments Women, who along with 318 male counterparts, worked to ensure Allied bombing raids spared artifacts and cultural sites and repair those that were damaged, according to The New York Times. After the war, they tracked down and returned more than 4 million items stolen by the Nazis.
While much of the groups work occurred in Europe, Huthwaite, who was the daughter of Japanese immigrants and was sent to Japan after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, worked for the group in Pacific after the war, preparing field reports and correspondence. During this period, she also reported directly to Lt. Commander George L. Stout, the co-creator of the Monuments Men.
In 2015, the six then-surviving Monuments Men and Women were presented with the Congressional Gold Medal. Huthwaite and three other survivors attended the ceremony.
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https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/497115-last-woman-known-for-saving-cultural-treasures-during-and-after
R.I.P. and thank you.