[The found timepieces. Provided by Barry Culhane]
In search of the missing 19 granite timepieces at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial: 1973 – September 11th, 2001, [BELOW] tells the story of Barry Culhane, Creator of the VVM Timeline, and his quest to locate and restore 19 granite timepieces removed for cleaning and repairs about 15 years ago, but never returned.

(9/11/21) Barry Culhane at the 9/11 dedication and groundbreaking for the War on Terror Monument at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial of Greater Rochester from Bob Lonsberry’s facebook page: “Forty years ago, Barry Culhane was Steve Schultz’s counselor at the Rochester Institute of Technology. They’ve been friends ever since, as Steve founded and was chief technology officer at Pictometry, and now serves as Henrietta town supervisor.” (right) “An historic meeting. Hector Sotomayor is the father of the War On Terror Memorial, and Barry Culhane is the father of the Vietnam War Memorial. In uniform and civilian life, these men have lives of constant service.” From Remembering 9/11 at Monroe Community College, Highland Park and the War Memorial

(top) At the South Avenue entrance to the Memorial; (bottom) On the Monument top next to the flag poles [Photos: David Kramer 9/20/21]

The final two timepieces. Images provided by Barry Culhane.
Bill installed the granite pieces in his patio, preserving the memory of those who served their country and those who died, their loved ones and all of our citizens affected by the Vietnam Wars.
As of now, the search continues for the other 17. But Barry is that much closer to fulfilling his quest.
In search of the missing 19 granite timepieces at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial: 1973 – September 11th, 2001
December 6, 2020

Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park. The area that contained the missing last 19 granite timepieces. [Photo: David Kramer, 11/10/20]

The first piece, The Beginning. [Photo: David Kramer, winter 2019] From 75 years ago when Imperial Japan surrendered and the Timeline at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park

Photo of the last timepiece. The piece itself has been missing since 2006. [Provided by Barry Culhane]
A few weeks ago, I finally had the chance to meet the creator of the Timeline, Barry Culhane. Although Barry now uses a motorized wheel chair, he was eager to meet at the Timeline, his decades long labor of love.

Dream realized Barry Culhane, the driving force behind the new Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park South, leans on a bollard honoring his third cousin Gerald Culhane. The memorial is lined with 280 of these markers honoring the area’s dead and missing. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, 9/6/96

(left) Barry Culhane at the VVM Veterans Garden, Photo: David Kramer 11/09/20; (right) Barry Culhane, who led the effort to create the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park, calls the memorial “the hardest thing I have done and one of the most rewarding.” Officials will proclaim Friday “Barry Culhane Day” and events will mark the 10-year anniversary of the memorial’s dedication. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, 9/07/06
As we toured the Memorial, Barry pointed to features of the Walk I didn’t know, describing how the area was carefully landscaped to represent the undulating hills of Vietnam. We spoke with about six people, some of whom were experiencing the Timeline for the first time. They were thrilled to meet the its creator, thanked Barry for his work and told their own stories of relatives who served in Vietnam.
Barry also cleared up one mystery. When I’ve walked the Timeline, I’ve wondered why the trail ends abruptly in March 1973 although many important events in the Indochinese conflicts occurred after 1973.
(left) Currently, the final piece on the Timeline; (right) Part of the area that contained the missing last 19 granite timepieces. [Photos: David Kramer, 11/18/20 and 11/10/20]

The prints on bench inscribed with the one of the Memorial mottos: To Commemorate, To Heal, and To Educate [Photo: David Kramer, 12/05/20]
If you have any information or ideas as to how we can locate the pieces, email David Kramer at [email protected] or leave a comment in the comment section at the end of the article.
During our walk, Barry explained his sense of urgency. Recently, Barry has suffered some health setbacks. His fervent desire is to see the Timeline restored, leaving it intact for future generations to be educated and moved.

On the entrance to the Memorial. See Women (not many) at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Timeline in Highland Park
As we talked, it was clear that Barry is not motivated by vanity or ego. Barry’s primary concern is that the memory of veterans who served and all those who suffered be preserved. Barry talked about the efforts by so many to build the timeline, bollards, gardens, sculptures and monuments. The empty spots where stood the pieces feels like a hole in the mosaic of the Memorial. Barry wants to make the Memorial whole again.
For more information, see Save the Memorial, Vietnam Veterans Memorial: A Walk Through Time: 300 B.C – 2001 by Barry Culhane

From Save the Memorial, Vietnam Veterans Memorial: A Walk Through Time: 300 B.C – 2001 by Barry Culhane
Also on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial of Greater Rochester
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial of Greater Rochester: A Meditation on the Cost of War
On Veteran’s Day at Buckland and Highland Parks. And the Moral Equivalent of War
Remembering 9/11 at Monroe Community College, Highland Park and the War Memorial
The Timeline series
Women (not many) at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Timeline in Highland Park
The Communist Party of China at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park
The Eisenhower presidency (and nuclear armageddon) at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park
Sports and the ’60’s at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Highland Park