05-23-2009, 08:56 PM
Our flag is flying too.
If you haven't seen our Memorial Day post, please take a look here:
(I just moved the post above and several others into this section, so I removed the link that was here)
SMiles,
Mare
Our flag is flying too.
If you haven't seen our Memorial Day post, please take a look here:
(I just moved the post above and several others into this section, so I removed the link that was here)
SMiles,
Mare
Just sitting here watching Public Television. The had the Memorial Day concert from Washington on earlier, and now they are showing D Day: The Price of Freedom. It was beautiful. There was a scene in the cemetery where a group of returning veterans were met by a group of school children. They treated them as if they were rock stars. Everyone wanted their pictures taken with them.
The world can still be an awesome place.
Our flag is flying too.
If you haven't seen our Memorial Day post, please take a look here:
http://www.6thcorpscombatengineers.com/eng...?showtopic=5616
SMiles,
Mare
I made my comment there. Today I will be busy, also going to the
WW 1 Liberty Memorial to participate. Rocky
Many have sent me countless items to post here this week, but I only have so many hours in the day. I would appreciate if individual members could post items of interest, themselves, if at all possible. I apologize, but I simply don't have the man-power (woman-power)!
This item is from a non-member of the forum, who just sent this to me a few minutes ago, via email.
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As we reflect on Memorial Day 2009... and with special thanks to members of the Past Residents of Midway Island http://www.midwayIsland.com, this sound video shows the Battle of Midway as it was originally recorded by Hollywood Director John Ford. June 3-4, 2009 marks 67 years since the Battle of Midway...
(This video presentation was broadcast on the Kim Kommando show - May 21, 2009.)
This video features some amazing footage from World War II. The Battle for Midway is considered the most important Pacific engagement. It turned the tide against the Japanese.
The Hollywood director John Ford happened to be on Midway. He was serving as photographic and intelligence officer. He was merely in transit to another location. But when the Japanese struck, he started filming.
The Navy had broken the Japanese code. So, American commanders knew the Japanese were planning to attack. The Japanese did not have that advantage. The Navy lost the carrier Yorktown and about 300 men. But three Japanese carriers were sunk, and more than 3,000 Japanese were killed.
Ford shot some of this footage from a tower on Midway. He was injured during the battle by shrapnel.
Tom Helvig
There were several posts throughout our forum regarding Memorial Day, and I am merging them with this one in the Veterans Tribute Section. Makes it a lot easier for everyone to read if they are all in one place.
God Bless America's Best....both those who are still living and those who sacrificed all their tomorrows so the rest of us might live in Freedom.
MEMORIAL DAY.
In distant field of sunny France
Where strangers come and go,
Amid the farms of Flanders, where
The fragrant breezes blow,
Our solder-dead in quiet sleep
'Neath crosses row on row.
Here shrapnel shells once shrieked and burst
And took their toll of death;
The very wind, itself a foe,
Bore poison on its breath.
Above their graves the birds now sing
As round that home of yore,
When, carefree boys, they romped and played;
Those childhood days soon o’er,
The boys to brave and strong men grown,
They romped and played no more.
They put aside their childish toys,
A man’s work each must do,
And when their country called for them,
To her they answered true.
"We must protect our native land:
She shall not suffer wrong
For she has reared and nurtured us,
We’re men and we are strong.
We’ll bid good-by to those we love;
It will not be for long."
With aching hearts and tear-dimmed eyes
We watched them go away.
Some have returned but many sleep
In foreign lands today.
Where English roses bloom and fade,
In France where lilies grow,
Among the fields of Flanders, where
The scarlet poppies blow,
Our soldier-dead are not forgot
Though strangers come and go.
~By Eula Gladys Lincoln~