Various movements proposing museums dedicated to warfare arose during
World War I, and the consensus amongst those involved was that they should be regional in nature. Preliminary ideas for a Scottish museum were drawn up in 1917 by
Alexander Ormiston Curle, curator of the
National Museum of Scotland, under advice from organisers in London, as well as a civic committee of the Edinburgh council, set up by Lord Provost
John Lorne MacLeod.
John Stewart-Murray, 8th Duke of Atholl, was also a supporter of the idea. The committee worked through 1918 and 1919 on ideas for the museum, including plans for procuring exhibits. After the end of the war, however, priority was given to the construction of the
Scottish National War Memorial, which opened in 1927, and the museum project was put on hold. The museum project was resurrected in the late 1920s by the Duke of Atholl, Construction took more than three years, and the museum was opened by Lord High Commissioner
John Buchan on 23 May 1933 as the Scottish Naval and Military Museum. In 1949, recognising the importance of the Air Force to the war effort in
World War II, the museum was renamed to the United Services Museum. The museum was refurbished in 2000, and upon reopening was renamed to its present name of the National War Museum. ==See also==