As we get
ready to celebrate Memorial Day with a long weekend let us take a moment to
reflect on why we have this extra day off. It is easy enough to confuse
Memorial Day with other holidays, and even easier to be foggy on what it is all
about or even how it started. In my youth I thought Memorial Day was a day to remember
everyone who had died, in war or otherwise, although I am positive that my dad
told me the facts. He was a war veteran after all. But, once you get older and
realize that somehow what you remember as a child isn’t exactly what the truth
really is, you feel embarrassed. So some time ago I decided to research it
myself and here is a little of what I found out.
Memorial Day
started out as Declaration Day just three years after the Civil War ended. It
was a day set aside in order to decorate, with flowers, the graves of those who
had died during the war. The first large observance was held in 1868 at Arlington
National Cemetery. Over the years various other cities across the nation, both
in the North and South, have held their own ceremonies and observances, several
claiming to be the first. Some Southern states even held their own Confederate
Memorial Day on the last Monday of April. Finally, in 1966 Congress declared Waterloo, N.Y., the “birthplace” of Memorial Day.
The
expansion to include those who have died in all American wars did not happen
until after World War I. And, it wasn’t until 1971 that Congress made Memorial
Day a National Holiday putting it on the last Monday in May. The latest law
passed by Congress regarding Memorial Day was the “National Moment of Remembrance Act,” P.L. 106-579 in
December 2000. This law was designed to encourage us, the people of the United
States of America, to take a moment to remember those that died for our country
and our freedom.
So, this Memorial Day, wherever you are and whatever you are
doing…. At 3:00 pm local time….
STOP…PAUSE…BE SILENT…REMEMBER.
But most of all…
HONOR
those who fought for everything that we hold dear and seem
much too often to take for granted....
OUR FREEDOM.
Then…
CELEBRATE! ! !
Because you know they would want us to be happy and proud of
what they worked so hard for us to have.
HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY!!!
No comments:
Post a Comment