In my
youth Memorial Day was different. It was a day of remembrance, honor and
appreciation of those who died in the service to our nation. I don’t remember
sales and bargains and deals as being part of it.
I lived
in a small villages and parades were loosely organized. School bands marched
playing Souza’s tunes and the service anthems.
The Boy
Scouts, Girl Scouts and Cub Scouts paraded in uneven lines as the local fife
and drum corps headed up the volunteer firemen and a police contingent.
The
Ladies Auxiliary from the VFW posts was there too. They always seem to march
with a grace that the vets couldn’t muster.
I rode
my bike festooned with red, white and blue crinkled crape paper woven in the
wheel spokes with a piece of cardboard attached to the bike frame and moved by
the spokes. It rattled like a motor as the wheel turned. We kids would ride
between the marching groups; little American flags taped to our handlebars
fluttered in the peddled breezes.
The
guests of honor were always the veterans. Some wore their old uniforms and
proudly displayed battle and campaign ribbons. Tight fitting uniforms kept the
bulges of time from being too noticeable. Their step was proud as they kept
their eyes ahead and heads held high.
The
veteran contingents marched together by the war in which they served. In my
youth, in my small town in central New York, the largest groups at that time
were the vets from World War Two; that war had ended only a few years earlier.
Then came the doughboys from World War One.
They
were older and fewer. The oldest veterans, two from the Spanish American War rode
in a convertible at the head of the parade. The next year they were gone and a
Medal of Honor recipient rode at the head of the parade.
The
parade ended at a local monument honoring all those from the area who died in
war. Their names were embossed in bas-relief bronze on a plaque bolted to
chiseled granite.
Memorial
Day Celebrations in those days engendered a reverence for the fallen. Even as
youngsters we felt a connection to those who had passed. We all knew someone
whose Father didn’t come home.
Little
did we know then that Korea, Quemoy and Matsu, Vietnam, Iraq one, Grenada and
Iraq two and Afghanistan would follow and there would be new war veterans
marching.
Wouldn’t
it be wonderful that in some future time Memorial Day would have no new names
to remember?
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