Author Topic: The Significance of Memorial Day  (Read 259 times)

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Offline Graybeard

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The Significance of Memorial Day
« on: May 31, 2021, 10:22:16 AM »


Monday, May 31, 2021 is Memorial Day, when we honor those who died while in service of this nation.  We visit their graves, attend Memorial Day ceremonies, and thank their families.  We thank surviving veterans around us and their families too.

Memorial Day’s roots lie in the US Civil War (1861 to 1865). Waterloo, New York is the official birthplace of Memorial Day, but at many places like Savannah and Gettysburg, people made a point of decorating graves of their Civil War dead and often the dead on both sides. Freed slaves held a very large event honoring dead soldiers at Charleston in 1865.

Across several years, these ad hoc events became annualized. Some states adopted commemorations statewide, and these events often went by the rubric of Decoration Day. By 1865, states like Virginia and Mississippi and by 1871 Michigan and by 1890 all Northern states had precedents to Memorial Day or official state holidays.

In subsequent decades, ceremonies expanded to honor the dead of all wars and coalesced around May 30 as the standard commemoration date. The 30th was chosen because it did not fall on the day of any major battle. In 1967, the official federal name became Memorial Day. The following year, Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act. This moved what is now Presidents Day along with Memorial Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day and Veterans Day from fixed dates to set Mondays.

So now, we honor fallen Americans of all conflicts, from the American Revolution to the current War on Terror, and from peacetime service too. They are men and women of all ages and from all branches of the US military.

Today we express our gratitude to our fallen heroes.  Thank you to the brave men and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice.

* We honor those who died in COMBAT and those who died in SUPPORT.
* We honor those who died OVERSEAS and those who died here at HOME.
* We honor those who died in WAR and those who died in PEACE.

Rough numbers paint an important picture. Across of this nation’s 245 years of history, we have the following wartime casualties:

1. Two-thirds of a million who died due to combat.

2. About the same number have died in war of non-combat losses, such as 60,000 succumbing to influenza near the end of World War I.

3. The total is roughly 1.4 million.

4. Another 1.4 million were wounded in combat.

5. Thus, total wartime casualties are roughly 2.8 million.

In the US Civil War, 520 died every day.  This is considered the highest daily fatality rate.  World War II also had tremendous daily fatalities.  However, the deadliest war based on combat days was probably World War I.  America declared war April 6, 1917, but American soldiers didn’t see combat until late Spring 1918, and then they fought through November 11, 1918. Roughly 116,000 died in seven months of war or roughly 555 deaths per day.

We should also consider armed services’ peacetime deaths.  For perspective, combat is currently not in the Top 5 causes of death in the armed forces. Per recent figures, combat counted for 9% of deaths.  Three times this died of suicide.  More died in homicides and transportation accidents.  This means many things.  But among others, being in the armed forces is a tough job.  It means it never hurts to reach out to someone in the armed forces who may need someone to talk to.  Tell those serving currently you appreciate their service and give them a much-deserved word of thanks.

Please think of veterans all around you: family members, neighbors, strangers, etc. Ponder what they gave up serving our nation in times of war or even in times of peace.

In many cases, they signed up or were drafted without knowing when they would return home, what conditions they would face, whether they would be in combat or whether they would see their loved ones again.  They questioned if they would come home in one piece.  Sometimes they did.  Often, they didn’t.  And regardless, countless suffered terrible traumas in what they saw or experienced.  They had children they didn’t see.  They had relationships that ended. Many never saw their loved ones again and vice-versa.

It seems virtually all Americans agree we cannot be anti-veteran.  They did what they had to do, vastly simplifying the choice for the rest of us who didn’t serve.  Thanking them on just Memorial Day and Veterans Day isn’t enough.  Thank them any time.  Get to know them.  Ask them their stories.  And listen.

And if you are a veteran, we thank you most profoundly and gratefully.


Bill aka the Graybeard
President, Graybeard Outdoor Enterprises
256-435-1125

I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life anyone who believes in Him will have everlasting life!

Offline Goldie

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Re: The Significance of Memorial Day
« Reply #1 on: May 31, 2021, 10:39:45 AM »
Very well put Bill. My 21 years was a handful to say the least but damn I'm still alive and a lot of my buddies didn't make it. I think about some daily and it makes my blood boil how some people treat vets. 

Offline Dee

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Re: The Significance of Memorial Day
« Reply #2 on: May 31, 2021, 12:51:24 PM »
All three of our boys were in the military. My youngest did 3 combat tours with the 82nd Airborne. The other two missed Afghanistan. and Iraq.
They named a street after an uncle of mine who earned 7 Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart in WWII. He was involved in every major island invasion in the Philippines. I've often wondered what a 19 year old from a little town I grew up in, went through to accomplish such a thing.
His son had three helicopters shot out from under him in Vietnam, and has paid for it physically every day since.
Another uncle was 30 years Air Force, two tours in Vietnam, and died of a heart attack while still on active duty.
I think my youngest, my uncle, and cousin saw in 3 years, what it took me 21 years to see doin what I did.
I doubt any of us (especially me) saw anything close to what my eldest uncle experienced.
Without our veterans we wouldn't have a history, because we wouldn't have a country.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline DEACONLLB

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Re: The Significance of Memorial Day
« Reply #3 on: June 01, 2021, 01:55:28 PM »
Sunday I drove over to Fort Gibson National cemetery just east of Muskogee to put flowers on my late wife grave and when you leave the main high way to go up to the cemetery the road is call the trail of honor and every 12 to 15 feet there was a large American flag.  Every grave had a small American flag by the head stone they had cleaned every head stone they were almost snow white very pretty. After I placed the flowers a older vet came up to me and I helped him find his wife plot . We talked for some time he and his wife had also been married over 60 years. Turns out he was a army vet and a sniper was up at the DMZ same time I was back at Kimpo air force base 20 miles south 1952. While I was there a very nice young lady came over thanked us for our service and wanted to hear our story. I ask her if she knew or had a love one buried here she said no she and her husband just wanted to come over and thank some of the vet for serving our country. Turned out they had driven over 75 miles to be there. There was a very large turn out, must have been over 200 when I was there at 11 am.

Deaconllb
Korean war vet. NRA Member
Fourth fighter wing K14 Kimpo Korea 1952 Fourth but first, the mig killers.
533rd material ,air defense Oxnard AFB 1953-1955
Pastor of the  CBCG-Fellowship group Tulsa Oklahoma.