Home | Virginia
Politics
| National
Politics
Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Poll
If Newt's the Nominee, What Will the Nov. Election Results Be?
Obama landslide win, Dems win House/hold Senate
Obama wins big, Dems win House/hold Senate
Obama wins medium, Dems win House, lose Senate
Obama wins small, Republicans win House, Senate
Newt wins small, Republicans win House, Senate
Newt wins medium, Republicans win House, Senate
Newt wins big, Republicans win House, Senate
Newt landslide win, Republicans win House, Senate
Other

Results

Weather
Click for Arlington, Virginia Forecast

Search




Advanced Search


The Stench
Stench

Find out how Cooch took $55,000 from the disgraced "U.S. Navy Veterans Association," in apparent exchange for his promise to get the Virginia Office of Consumer Affairs (which had "notified Thompson's group that it no longer qualified for an exemption from state registration requirements") off the group's back. Can we say "pay-to-play?" Find out more.


Blog Roll
Virginia Blogs
All Politics is Local
Article XI
Assembly Access
Augusta Free Press
Bacon's Rebellion
Bob's for Bob
Coarse Cracked Corn
Crew of 42
DemRulz
Dixie Pig
Equality Loudoun
Fairfax City Dems
The Fix (WaPo)
Greater Greater Washington
The Green Miles
Heartland of Va
In Through The Out Door
The Journeying Progressive
Leaving My Marc
Leesburg Tomorrow
Loudoun Progress
Moonhowlings
New Dominion Project
Not Larry Sabato
Off K Street
Old Dominion Blogs
Ox Road South Blog
Rachels' Rants, Raves and Recollections
Renaissance Ruminations
Retire Frank Wolf
Richmonder
Richmond Sunlight
RTD VA Politics blog
Roanoke Times blog
RockDem
Shad Plank
SlantBlog
Southeast Virginia
Southwest Virginia
Too Conservative
True Adventures of the Doorbell Queen
VB Dems
VB Progressives
Virginia Education Report
Virginia Liberaltarian
WaPo - Virginia Politics Blog
Waldo Jaquith
Waldo's VA Political Blogroll
Without Supervision
xcurmudgeon

National Blogs
All Things Education
Crooks and Liars
DailyKos
Five Thirty Eight
Gristmill
Huffington Post
Matthew Yglesias
Memeorandum
OpenLeft
Scaling Green
TPM


Progressive Legal Directory www.criminallawyervirginia.net
www.virginia-duilawyers.com
www.virginia-personalinjurylawyer.com
www.recklessdrivinglawyer.net
www.helpdisabilitylawyer.com
www.criminallawdc.com
www.duilawsdc.com

ADT Home Security in Virginia

Memorial Day

by: Elaine in Roanoke

Sun May 30, 2010 at 10:13:39 AM EDT


Once again, we Americans are relishing a three-day weekend holiday, one that now traditionally kicks off summer. No doubt, too few of us will stop to think about the origins of what began as perhaps our most solemn commemoration.

I can't actually find a definitive moment when the first Memorial Day was celebrated, but most people accept that it grew out of the actions of southern women who decorated the graves of  Confederate dead soldiers soon after the end of the Civil War. Also, there were similar commemorations of various kinds, including decorating graves with flowers and small flags, in many northern communities to honor the Union dead.

The first national declaration of "Memorial Day" was General Order No. 11, issued by Gen. John A. Logan, commander of the Grand Army of the Republic, on May 5, 1868.

The 30th day of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village, and hamlet church-yard in the land. In this observance no form of ceremony is prescribed, but posts and comrades will in their own way arrange such fitting services and testimonials of respect as circumstances may permit...Let no vandalism of avarice or neglect, no ravages of time testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic.
Elaine in Roanoke :: Memorial Day
In 1966 President Lyndon Johnson declared Waterloo NY to be the "birthplace" of Memorial Day because the town had organized an annual community-wide celebration that included placing decorations on the graves of their war dead shortly after the end of the Civil War. In 1971 Congress made Memorial Day a national holiday, one that memorialized those killed in all the wars that the United States has fought. Later, the original May 30 date for Memorial Day became the last Monday in May. Hence, the three-day weekend.

There are other commemorations that have been melded onto Memorial Day. A poem written by John McCrae inspired the sale of paper poppies to honor those who died in World War I. The American Legion has continued that tradition to this day.

"In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Unfortunately, like so many of our holidays, Memorial Day has morphed into just another three-day weekend, dedicated to visiting now-open swimming pools and having a cookout. Plus, the standard "fill-in-the blank" holiday sales will be going on at malls all over the country.

Perhaps we all would benefit from following then-President Clinton's May 2000 resolution asking all Americans to pause for one minute at 3 p.m. on Memorial Day in order to "consider the true meaning of this holiday. Memorial Day represents one day of national awareness and reverence, honoring those Americans who died while defending our Nation and its values."

One minute is not asking too much from all of us in memory of all those lives cut short, all the possibilities denied to those who died in war after war throughout our national history.

Tags: , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Memorial Day | 8 comments
The Clinton Memorial Day Tradition Lives On (0.00 / 0)
And will be observed tomorrow at every Major League Baseball game in progress.  

We called it "Decoration Day" (0.00 / 0)
when I was a child in upstate New York. That referred, of course, to what everyone did: go to the churchyard and place flowrs and flags on the graves of veterans.

There still were members of the GAR (Grand Army of the Republic) around who had fought the "Seecesh" (Secessionists, or Confederates), often living in veteran's homes or nursing homes, and they showed up in every 4th of July parades, along with vets from the Spanish-American War and The Great War.

I was about eight years old before I discovered that what the Northern half of my family called the Civil War, was the same war the Southern half of my family called, simply "The" War, and that Bull Run was the same battle as Manassas. Not long after that discovery, I asked for and received Doughlas Southall Freeman's 3-volume history of "The" War, called Lee's Lieutenants as a birthday present. About the end of World War II a friend of my father's, Colonel Forrest Carraway (from Arkansas), walked me over the field of battle at Bull Run/Manassas, showing me how an eye for terrain was a handy ability for a commander to have, how a swale could conceal a whole squadron from the view of an enemy as you moved to attack.  


Teddy: (0.00 / 0)
I too remember the event as Decoration Day: we did not have any GAR members at the parades and speeches, but the Spanish American and Great War veterans all showed up!

[ Parent ]
Charles Ives (0.00 / 0)
the great American composer who died in 1954, was the son of George Ives, who had been the youngest bandmaster in the Union Army in the Civil War.  Charles wrote a Holidays Symphony, of which one movement was called "Decoration Day":

Peace.


Thank you (0.00 / 0)
The symbolic picture was as touching as the music, the old barn with scythes hanging, the changing light....

[ Parent ]
Beautiful Music (0.00 / 0)
Thanks for that beautiful music. Fitting tribute to lives lost before they were lived.

(Every Memorial Day I try to take time to think of my two  great-great grandfathers killed in the Civil War. I also think of GG-Grandmother Proffitt, who was widowed in 1962 and left with three small children, one an infant, having to survive on a farm. I hope I have faced the problems in my life with half of her strength and courage.)  


[ Parent ]
A time to reflect on peace & justice (4.00 / 1)
Thanks for a great post Elaine. As you say, this holiday should not pass us by with just Memorial Day Sale commercials and cookouts. There should be serious thought given to the sacrifices that others have made on our behalf. With so many loved ones overseas, Memorial Day is also a good time to reflect on how, in honor of their sacrifice, we build a safer world with peace and justice so that fewer will need to die in future wars.

I've mentioned your post in my own blogpost over at Learn.Pray.Blog. --
http://www.learnprayblog.org/2010/05/memorial-day-reflections-over-5000-deployed-virginians/


Memorial Day | 8 comments
Advertising

Donate to Blue Virginia

About
The purpose of Blue Virginia is to cover Virginia politics from a progressive and Democratic perspective. This is a group blog and a community blog. We invite everyone to comment here, but please be aware that profanity, personal attacks, bigotry, insults, rudeness, frequent unsupported or off-point statements, and "trolling" (NOTE: that includes outright lies, whether about climate science, or what other people said, or whatever) are not permitted and, if continued, will lead to banning. For more on trolling, see the Daily Kos FAQs. Also note that diaries may be deleted if they do not contain at least 2 solid paragraphs of original text; if not, please use the comments section of a relevant diary. For more on writing diaries, click here. Thanks, and enjoy!

P.S. You can contact us at lowell@raisingkaine.com and you can subscribe to Lowell's Twitter feed here. If you'd like to subscribe to Miles Grant's Twitter feed, click here. For Teacherken, click here. For Kindler, click here.

P.P.S. To see the Blue Virginia archive, please click here. To see the Raising Kaine archive, please click here. To see the Blue Commonwealth archive, please click here.



RSS Feed

Subscribe to Blue Virginia - Front Page


Powered by: SoapBlox