Honoring Our
Loved Ones on Memorial Day
Our nation will celebrate Memorial Day
with parades and picnics, fireworks and friends. As with other
holidays, many lose sight of the meaning of the special day and
consider it to simply be a day off work or school or merely the
unofficial beginning of summer.
This year, consider what you and your
family can do to celebrate the holiday by truly memorializing
departed family and friends. Share in the tradition of this
important national holiday, a tradition that dates back to the U.S.
Civil War.
A Brief History
Historians debate the first observance of a Memorial Day. Some
claim the practice of honoring war dead began in Boalsburg,
Pennsylvania. Others say the tradition began when women in Virginia
decorated the graves of Confederate and Union soldiers at the end
of the Civil War. In 1868, a Union General declared May 30 as a day
to honor fallen Union soldiers, yet the U.S. government officially
recognizes the birthplace of Memorial Day (formerly known as
Decoration Day) as Waterloo, New York, when Civil War veterans were
honored at a ceremony in 1865.
The practice of decorating gravesites
endured throughout the 20th century. Since the 1950s, small
American flags have been placed at the more than 260,000
gravestones at Arlington National Cemetery, with troops standing
guard the entire weekend to ensure the flags remain standing.
What You Can
Do?
As a national holiday, Memorial Day serves to remember and honor
those that lost their life defending their country. And there are
many ways to celebrate this holiday today, remembering those who
served our country in the military, but also remembering and
honoring all departed friends and family. Here are some ideas.
- Visit local cemeteries and place flags or flowers over the
graves of departed friends or family members.
- Visit or research memorial sites in the community.
- Fly the U.S. flag at half-staff until noon.
- Participate in the "National Moment of Remembrance," at 3 p.m.
to pause and reflect on the meaning of Memorial Day.
Of course Memorial Day should be a day of celebration, relaxation,
and spending time with our families. But among the picnics and
parades, take time to reflect upon the history and meaning of this
day.
For additional online resources on the history and celebrations of
Memorial Day, visit www.usmemorialday.org.