Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2016

Memorial Day 2016 - A Time to Remember Those Who Made the Ultimate Sacrifice

Graves at Arlington National Cemetery
Memorial Day started as Decoration Day-- intended for placing flowers and other mementos on the resting places of friends or family who died while serving their country. 

We recognize them for the exceptional sacrifice they made to protect this country. We care for their families and friends with grateful, understanding hearts, acknowledging the enormous loss they have suffered.

Memorial Day 2016


On the morning of Memorial Day, the U.S. flag is raised quickly, then slowly lowered to half-staff to commemorate the more than 1 million we've lost in battle, almost half of them on our own soil in the Civil War. 

At twelve noon, the flag rises again, a pledge by the living to hold their memory alive and to continue the fight for liberty and justice.


The First Memorial Day


There are competing claims to the first Memorial Day, and many of the stories are tough to confirm. However they all have their foundation in reverence, and a desire never to forget the great price of guarding what's most valuable to us.

With such thoughtful roots, it's odd that Memorial Day has expanded to herald summer, observed with parades and shows, remembered with barbecues and first vacations to the beach. 

Not so odd, however, when we consider these festivities as a vital part of the life we prize, and part of what many died protecting.

So, while remembering the service men and women who never made it back, let's always keep in our thoughts and feelings the multitudes who continuously serve, and those who have become civilians. 

So many of them need help and support, and they have to know how profoundly we value exactly what they have done for our sake.

Memorial Day History


Memorial Day was created to honor fallen soldiers of the Civil War communities in the North and South. The first memorial days started in 1865 by laying flowers on headstones in the months after the war ended. 

It quickly evolved into an annual tradition, "Decoration Day" was typically set for early summer. The day eventually became known as Memorial Day and it now honors American soldiers killed in all wars and conflicts.

The first Memorial Day celebration was held in Boalsburg, Pa., Waterloo, N.Y., Carbondale, Ill. and a few other towns, including Richmond and Columbus, Ga. they lay some claim to originating of the tradition. Historians haven't settled on a definitive answer, though in 1966 Congress declared Waterloo the "birthplace" of Memorial Day

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Memorial Day - The Day We Remember Our Fallen Soldiers

Picture of graves decorated with flags at Arli...Image via Wikipedia
Today, Memorial Day, we take time to remember the soldiers that gave the ultimate sacrifice in American wars. Millions of families will gather together to eat a meal and spend some time together. Yet many families will have an empty chair at their table because their loved one sacrificed for our country. We can 't ever forget these men and women who left friends and family behind and never returned. Let's also keep in our hearts and prayers the families that must go on in anguish because of their loss.


Here are 10 facts about the last Monday in May.

10. Memorial Day was originally known as Decoration Day.

9. It was first widely observed on May 30, 1868.

8. Originally, the day was to honor soldiers killed in the Civil War.

7. After World War I, people began to observe and honor those who were killed in all of America's wars.

6. The day was declared a national holiday by Congress in 1971.

5. The birthplace of Memorial Day is Waterloo, New York. The town first celebrated the day on May 5, 1866, by closing businesses, and residents decorated soldiers' graves with flowers.

4. Waterloo was declared Memorial Day's birthplace by President Lyndon Johnson.

3. About 5,000 people attend the Memorial Day ceremony every year at Arlington National Cemetery.

2. Some southern states set aside a special day for honoring the Confederate dead. It's known as (surprise) Confederate Memorial Day.

1. On Memorial Day, a wreath is typically laid at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by the president or vice president.


A video tribute to the fallen heroes:






Today we will be enjoying the freedom that has been paid for in the blood of our fallen sons and daughters. Let's remember them today and everyday.



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