VETERANS BREAKFAST CLUB

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania, 15228-1324 United States

Mission Statement

The mission of the Veterans Breakfast Club is to create communities of listening around veterans and their stories to ensure that this living history will never be forgotten. We believe that through our work, people will be educated, healed, and inspired. The VBC offers 40 storytelling programs and events per year in a dozen locations in Western Pennsylvania, hosting about 3,500 people annually. We also conduct broadcast-quality audio/video interviews through our Veteran Voices of Pittsburgh Oral History Project. We currently conduct roughly 70 interviews per year and have archived over 600 interviews. We partner with the Heinz History Center, which serves as a repository of the Veteran Voices collection for use in exhibits, programming, and an in-the-works web platform. In 2015, the VBC launched "Veteran Voices: The Magazine of the Veterans Breakfast Club," featuring the stories told at breakfasts and in interviews.

About This Cause

The Veterans Breakfast Club was was born from a remarkable gathering of 30 World War II veterans brought together in the fall of 2008 at the Crowne Plaza Hotel on Fort Couch Road in Bethel Park, PA, simply to share their stories. The emotion was so high, and the stories so enthralling that the organizer, local businessman Dan Cavanaugh, scheduled another session, this time open to the public. Sixty attended the second morning, and one veteran’s daughter said upon leaving, “I’ve never heard my dad tell these stories before. There’s a real need for this kind of thing.” By early 2009, Todd DePastino, a professor and writer of history, had teamed with Dan to create a non-profit that would host local storytelling programs where veterans of all eras and ages and kinds of service could share their experiences with the public. The VBC found venues in Penn Hills, Moon Township, and North Hills to carry their monthly programs, now well established in Bethel Park, to other areas of the region. By 2010, they were scheduling 30 events a year and drawing 50-150 people at each event. In 2011, the VBC recruited a six member board of directors, received 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status and expanded its programs to include region-wide events, such as the Veterans Day Breakfast at Duquesne University which draws 750 attendees, and special events at the Heinz History Center and Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Hall for post-9/11 veterans. In early 2012, the VBC’s board insisted that while the stories told were healing, instructive, and inspiring for the people attending, they needed to be recorded, preserved, and shared more broadly with the public. Thus, the VBC’s Veteran Voices of Pittsburgh Oral History Project was born. To date, the project has cataloged over 600 veterans' stories through a thousand hours of audio and video footage, as well as over 5,000 photographs and documents. We make these interviews and supporting materials available on our website and through various other video sharing outlets. Our creative commons license allows for any other educational use. These efforts attracted regional media attention (spots on KDKA-TV, WESA-FM, in the Post Gazette, Tribune Review, and local magazines) and, in turn, attendance at our events and requests for interviews rocketed. In 2014, the Heinz History Center entered a partnership with the Veterans Breakfast Club to serve as a repository of the Veteran Voices collection for use in exhibits, programming, and an in-the-works web platform. In 2015, the VBC launched its first fundraising event along with the first issue of Veteran Voices: The Magazine of the Veterans Breakfast Club, featuring the stories and photos of veterans who have attended its events and sat for interviews. In 2016, the VBC will launch a grant-funded model project to reach a generation of veterans under-represented in our current programming: those who have served since September 11, 2001. We propose to identify and gather post-9/11 veterans Western Pennsylvania in order to record, preserve, and share their stories with the public, and, in so doing, deepen their connections to the community, encourage healing, and inspire all. Since that morning in 2008, when 30 veterans gathered at the Crowne Plaza, the VBC has hosted over 3,500 unique individuals at its 40 annual storytelling events. “It helps to listen,” remarked one Vietnam veteran at a recent event. “Perhaps one day, I’ll tell my story.” Our job is to be there when he does.

VETERANS BREAKFAST CLUB
200 Magnolia Pl
PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania 15228-1324
United States
Phone 412-623-9029
Twitter @VetsBC
Unique Identifier 264633657