Memorial Day, Never Forget The Sacrifices

Ratickle

Founding Member / Super Moderator
Almost everyone of us know someone who has lost their life so that we can enjoy our freedom. Plus there are many others around the world who also have the opportunity to live a better life than what they may have without our servicemen and servicewomen putting their lives on the line. To all of our lost military personnel, thanks. To those in harms way currently, thanks for what you are doing.


A few facts about Memorial Day you may not know:

It was originally called Decoration Day

To honor the deceased, soldiers would decorate graves of their fallen comrades with flowers, flags and wreaths. Hence Decoration Day. Although Memorial Day became its official title in the 1880s, the holiday wouldn’t legally become Memorial Day until 1967.

It wasn’t always celebrated the last Monday of May

After the Civil War, General John A. Logan, commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, called for a holiday commemorating fallen soldiers to be observed every May 30. But due to the Uniform Monday Holiday Act, which took effect in 1971, Memorial Day was moved to the last Monday of May to ensure long weekends. Some groups, like the veterans’ organization American Legion, have been working to restore the original date to set the day apart and pay proper tribute to the servicemen and women who sacrificed their lives defending the nation.

It’s legally required to observe a National Moment of Remembrance

In December 2000, Congress passed a law requiring Americans to pause at 3 p.m. local time on Memorial Day to remember and honor the fallen. But this doesn’t appear to be common knowledge, or if it is, by 3 p.m. most people seem to be too deep into a hot dog-induced food coma to officially observe the moment.


I had no idea about the 3:00 PM requirement.

http://time.com/110697/memorial-day-facts/
 
The number of service members we are honoring today is almost unfathomable.

1,049,454, Total American service members killed in all wars
World War II (1941-1945)405,399
Civil War (Union) (1861-1865)364,511
World War I (1917-1918)116,516
Vietnam War (1955-1975)58,220
Korean War (1950-1953)36,574
Revolutionary War (1775-1783)25,000
War of 1812 (1812-1815)15,000
Mexican-American War (1846-1848)13,283
Iraq War (2003-2011)4,599
Philippine-American War (1899-1902)4,196
Afghanistan War (2001-2021)2,461
Spanish-American War (1898)2,446
Quasi-War (1798-1800)514
Gulf War (1990-1991)383
Anti-ISIS (2014-present)93
War on Terror (other) (2001-present)50
Dominican Republic (1965-1966)44
Somalia (1992-1994)43
Barbary Wars (1801-1805)35
Panama (1989-1990)23
Grenada (1983)19
Iran 2026 (2026-present)13
Bosnia (1995-2004)12
Somalia (AFRICOM) (2007-present)8
Bay of Pigs (1961)4
Niger/Sahel (2013-2024)4
Kosovo (1998-1999)2
Yemen (2015-2025)2


Those numbers do not count the wounded, and all those who have served. The numbers of military personnel buried in National Cemetaries:

United States Military Cemeteries

Total Number of Buried in U.S. National Cemeteries

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) National Cemetery Administration (NCA) maintains 4,348,556 graves across its network of national cemeteries National Cemetery Administration.

The United States maintains a significant number of military cemeteries both domestically and abroad. Within the U.S., the Department of Veterans Affairs oversees 157 national cemeteries across 44 states and Puerto Rico, along with 35 soldiers' lots and monument sites Veterans Affairs. Internationally, the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC) manages 26 permanent American military cemeteries in 17 foreign countries, honoring over 200,000 fallen service members
 
Back
Top