View allAll Photos Tagged Memorialday

*Explored: May 28, 2023 - Thank you!

. “Those who have long enjoyed such privileges as we enjoy forget in time that men have died to win them.”-. Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Vicksburg NMP. Memorial Day weekend.

We celebrate and remember those in military service who never returned home and others in our family as a time to remember.

Used the Rock Island National Cemetery for this image. This is where my parents are buried.

"Home of the free, because of the brave."

Remembering Our Veterans With Love and Gratitude.

for all those who lost their lives that we may enjoy our freedoms-- thank you

Vicksburg NMP. The reason for Memorial Day.

Black Mountain Veterans cemetery

It’s not all about sales and bargains.

Fort Rosecrans National cemetery

Point Loma, California

Taken on Memorial Day,2016

Never forget those who have given so much for our freedom.

Service men on a hot Memorial Day !

Memorial Day. For some, the holiday brings up thoughts of barbecues, boating, the first long weekend of summer. Others will honor the true meaning of Memorial Day. This day is for honoring those who served and those who gave all to their country. Originally called “Decoration Day,” this was a day chosen to honor the memories of the fallen.

Before taking the day off of building the new I-74 bridge as a Memorial Day salute, all the cranes were turned to face east and a large flag was raised.

Sean Henderson of Lower Burrell, Pa., joins other Patriot Guard Riders in forming a large color guard at the rear of Memorial Day services today in the National Cemetery of the Alleghenies in Cecil Township. Observer-Reporter

Remembering my Grandfather Thomas (left) who served in WWI and my Uncle Bill (right) who served in WWII. I never met my Grandfather, he died long before I was born but I did know my Uncle. Both men had shrapnel in their bodies and lived with it until their death. The photo of my Grandfather was taken around 1916 and my Uncle in the 60's sometime.

Soft focus

Ludington Park, Delta County, Michigan

One of my favorite folk songs. It is a circular song, meaning it ends where it starts, and it summarizes the consequences of war. While some consider it an antiwar song, I also see it as a recognition of those who have had to make the ultimate sacrifice for their country, as well as those of their families. Having served my country for over twenty years in the military, I give those who have given all my utmost respect and admiration.

 

Lyrics:

Where have all the flowers gone, long time passing?

Where have all the flowers gone, long time ago?

Where have all the flowers gone?

Young girls picked them, ev’ry one.

Oh, When will they ever learn? Oh, when will they ever learn?

 

Where have all the young girls gone, long time passing?

Where have all the young girls gone, long time ago?

Where have all the young girls gone?

Gone to young men, ev’ry one.

Oh, when will they ever learn? Oh, when will they ever learn?

 

Where have all the young men gone, long time passing?

Where have all the young men gone, long time ago?

Where have all the young men gone?

Gone for soldiers, ev’ry one.

When will we ever learn? Oh, when we ever learn?

 

Where have all the soldiers gone, long time passing?

Where have all the soldiers gone, long time ago?

Where have all the soldiers gone?

Gone to graveyards, ev’ry one.

When will they ever learn? Oh, when will they ever learn?

 

Where have all the graveyards gone, long time passing?

Where have all the graveyards gone, long time ago?

Where have all the graveyards gone?

Gone to flowers, ev’ry one.

When will they ever learn? Oh, when will they ever learn?

-Pete Seeger

We enjoy our freedom because

they gave theirs.

 

God bless our

troops.

Carson Oil Refinery

Carson, California

Congressional Cemetery . 1801 E Street, SE . Washington DC . Memorial Day, 28 May 2001.

 

Memorial Day at Congressional Cemetery www.congressionalcemetery.org/HTML/ClipFiles/MemorialDay_...

  

Engraving reads:

 

Prophet

American Indian

Winnebego Tribe

September 5, 1862

 

Congressional Cemetery

www.geocities.com/elvertbarnes/CongressionalCemetery-DC.html

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Honoring those that have gone before

Civil War Memorial in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Millville, NJ, USA

 

This monument, erected in 1910, honors some of those souls from Millville, NJ, who lost their lives in the Civil War.

Serendipitous. This is Cedar Memorial Cemetery. When I pulled in and parked, the wind was calm. I barely noticed where I had parked. When I was ready to leave, though, the breeze had picked up, and the photo presented itself to me. Without the license plate, of course, the image wouldn't have worked.

.

After a hearty push from his big sister, my cousin's little grandson careened down the roller coaster and then sped away down the hill!

A beautiful tree, in the Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, shading some of the graves of the soldiers we honor on Memorial Day in the USA.

Many of those of us who have served in America's Wars feel a bit selfish on Memorial Day because we survived and lived to raise a family and enjoy Grandchildren. A life that so many of our comrades missed out on.

But we remember them sadly, and praise their heroism.

 

This is the Korean War Memorial site in Washington, DC

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