Posted on 05/27/2002 12:02:56 AM PDT by Snow Bunny
Those souls who were just like us in every way, except that we did things for people we knew.
They fought for us, whom they didn't even know.
Memorial Day gives us the opportunity to show our respect and to pay our tribute to those great soldiers, and we have made an attempt to do the same.
Across our great land, thousands of American flags, proudly waving, mark the final resting place of soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, Coast Guardsmen and merchant mariners who had their lives cut short so that we may live freely and enjoy the blessings of liberty
Memorial Day is the one day of the year that we set aside to remember and honor our country's patriots, yet we owe them a debt of gratitude, every day of every year.
This Memorial Day finds our Nation at war -- a war we did not seek, but one we will decisively win. However, our victory will not come without its costs.
Once again, we are witnesses to America's sons and daughters being brought home, solemnly and respectfully, in flag-draped coffins. They join those who lost their lives in the attacks of September 11, 2001.
We are deeply saddened by their deaths, but eternally grateful for their sacrifice. It remains our challenge to do our very best to remain true to the principles and beliefs in which they so fervently believed and which they so valiantly fought to preserve. Their loved ones who carry on remain in our thoughts and prayers.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff and I join every American this Memorial Day, to pause and reflect upon the sacrifices made by so many of our fellow citizens in times of war and conflict throughout our Nation's history. We also salute the dedicated men and women of today's Armed Forces, whether defending our homeland or serving around the world.
They are preserving and adding to this noble legacy.
Gen. Richard B. Myers, USAF
Most didn't die throwing themselves on a hand grenade, charging a bunker or manning a machine gun until their ammunition was gone.
Most didn't die diving their airplane into an enemy ship or marching in the infamous Bataan Death march -- but they are heroes because they fought when asked to fight.
They left their families, friends and good times behind and went to fight for our freedom without hesitation.
But they were heroes because they were there, ready to fight for America - for family, flag and country.
Most were scared to death as they prepared to meet the enemy. Their stomachs were turned upside down and they prayed to God and wished they were with their moms, dads and sweethearts rather than being where they were.
But they were where they were, fighting an enemy that was threatening their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
They were fighting an enemy because they believed in America, they loved Her flag and they wanted to protect American's right to worship as they chose.
They were there, without hesitation, fighting for what they believed in and dying for what they believed in so you and I could live the way we chose in a free country. But they did not die so that we would stop fighting for what they believed and died for.
They fought and died knowing that we, the living, would go on fighting for that same freedom, that same country, that same flag and for that same right to worship as we choose. Abraham Lincoln, at Gettysburg, said:
"It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us--that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion--that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain--that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom--and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the Earth."
If when we attacked Guadalcanal and landed at Salerno, we found that "they" were going to fight back, we didn't give up because they fought back. We continued to fight because we knew our cause was right!
When Americans rode in the landing craft before storming the beaches at Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Sicily, Anzio, Normandy, Peleliu, Saipan, Iowa Jima, Okinawa, Inchon and many other places we had never heard of before and when they fought in North Africa, the Philippines, Italy, France, Bastonne, Germany, Korea and Vietnam -- most were scared to death; their stomachs were turned upside down and they wanted to be back home with their loved ones.
But that did not stop them from attacking America's enemies bravely and without hesitation. They fought, and many died, but they did not give up because someone shot back at them.
It is for us the living to continue to defend and keep known what they fought and died for -- what they gave up all of their tomorrow's for.
They did not die so that we could become complacent; nor did they die so that when we, the living, reached a single obstacle --- we should quit
They died knowing that we would go on defending their actions, defending history and defending what they gave up all their tomorrow's for.
How many of them and you who fought for our flag and our country and remember the feeling as Old Glory" was being raised over a piece of land we fought for ---- and many died for?
How many remember seeing or hearing about our valiant warriors, who were fighting on Iowa Jima, as they stood and cheered when they saw the flag being raised over Mt. Suribachi.
Regards to all.
From the early days of our nation men have fought and died for the ideals that made this nation great. Men and women are defending them at this moment. Those who have fallen, and those who still serve deserve our heartfelt thanks. But more than that, they deserve to have those ideals defended at home, the loss of their lives and the blood, sweat and hard fought victories never to have gone in vane.
Will we surrender those ideals? Will we relinquish our God given rights? Will we hand over the keys to our nation to foreign nationals and leaders too morally bankrupt to grasp the enormity of what they are doing? I hope not. For those who have gone before, I certainly hope not. And for all those to come, I hope it even more.
That is my heartfelt Memorial Day wish for our fallen men. It is that this nation will return to the values and ideals they fought and died for. Is there any honor greater than this, that we could give them? Is there any more of a moral debt that we could owe them?
~~MEMO to self:
all right now the font color is green
How do you turn it off
and do you really want to?~~
Sorry I haven't visited lately Snow Bunny, but we've been working massive overtime again.
Just wanted to stop by and pay tribute to those who have sacrificed their lives for our freedom and liberty.
May the Lord bless their souls.
TOTALLY AWESOME!
Thank you!
Lest we forget our fallen 4-legged heros:
My thoughts are always reflected in a poem by Lawrence Binyon:
They shall not grow old, as we that are left grow old,
Age shall not weary them...nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun, and in the morning,
We will remember them!
Bump for man's best friend...
Does anyone know a good online source for finding information on people that served in WW2. I would love to find and talk to someone that served with my Granddad.
I have tried google, but to no avail...
Thanks,
Kermit
The making of Portsmouth naval hospital Read more about local history
The Portsmouth Naval hospital
To finance the construction of the naval hospital in Portsmouth, the pay of every seaman, officer and marine was docked 20 cents a month in 1826. Money collected from disciplinary fines was also used to erect the four-story granite structure that admitted its first patient in 1830.
Today, the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth which recently underwent a $330-million expansion is the oldest continuously running hospital in the Navy. It serves the Navy family active duty personnel, dependents and retirees of Hampton Roads.
The original building, designed by Philadelphia architect John Haviland, was erected on the site of Fort Nelson, a coastal defense built by the colonists but captured in 1779 by the British. Bricks from the old fort were used in building the hospital.
Havilands design called for a Doric portico of 10 columns, and they still stand today and have long been considered the "grand ornament" of the harbor and a masterpiece of monumentality in the classical form. The portico was kept in place although the 1830 structure was rebuilt and modernized in 1909.
Hospital facilities were greatly expanded at the outset of World Wars I and II. The high-rise hospital building was completed in 1960.
The hospital received its first combat casualty patients during the Mexican War. In 1855, the staff treated nearly 600 civilians during the yellow fever epidemic during which nearly 10 percent of the population of Norfolk and Portsmouth died. During the Civil War, it was a Confederate hospital until 1862, and after that, a Union hospital. The Navys first hospital ship, the Solace, brought the wounded from the Spanish-American War to Portsmouth. Influenza patients taxed hospital facilities during the First World War. Combat wounded from Europe, the Pacific, Korea and Vietnam were treated there.
A few people who died at the hospital are buried in a national cemetery on the hospital compound at Hospital Point. The oldest gravestone is that of a sailor who died in 1838 after falling from a yardarm of Old Ironsides, the frigate Constitution.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.