Help support TMP


"Memorial Day 2025" Topic


5 Posts

All members in good standing are free to post here. Opinions expressed here are solely those of the posters, and have not been cleared with nor are they endorsed by The Miniatures Page.

Please use the Complaint button (!) to report problems on the forums.

For more information, see the TMP FAQ.


Back to the Today in History Message Board


Areas of Interest

General

Featured Hobby News Article


Featured Link


Featured Ruleset


Featured Showcase Article

Back to the Plastic Forest

More exotic landscape items from the dollar store!


Featured Workbench Article

Filling With 3M Wall Repair Compound

Personal logo Editor in Chief Bill The Editor of TMP Fezian discovers a better way to fill in hollow plastic bases.


Current Poll


360 hits since 25 May 2025
©1994-2025 Bill Armintrout
Comments or corrections?

Personal logo Legion 4 Supporting Member of TMP25 May 2025 9:39 a.m. PST

As I posted last year …

Saw this on Military.com … Worth a look.

And may all our and our allies' war dead RIP …


Aside from a nationwide surge in parades, burger and beer sales and visits to veterans' cemeteries, there are certain traditions that happen every Memorial Day. Even if you aren't planting flags at a cemetery or you don't know anyone who fell in service to their country, there are still things you can learn, observe and even teach to others.
1. The Moment of Silence
Every Memorial Day at 3 p.m. local time, whether you're at home, at a parade or in the middle of a speech, please take a moment to observe the National Moment of Remembrance. For just one full minute, Americans everywhere should pause to remember all the men and women who died in service to our country.

The idea is to keep Memorial Day from becoming just another holiday, one that Americans use to get an extra day of swilling beer in the sun.

Since 2000, Public Law 106-579 has asked that we shut our burgerholes for 60 seconds and "pay tribute to individuals who have made the ultimate sacrifice in service to the United States and their families."

How 'Decoration Day' Became Memorial Day

2. It's Not Veterans Day
As much as we enjoy the extra attention afforded to vets on Veterans Day, this is not the time for that sort of thing. Memorial Day is about honoring the fallen men and women who died in service to their country -- not just anyone. A lot of people will confuse the day, conflate the day or worse, forget the day.

Most veterans will not expect to be thanked for their service, but this especially true on Memorial Day. Instead of smiling and saying whatever it is we say when someone thanks you, vets can take the time to explain the meaning of Memorial Day to them like we're Linus explaining the true meaning of Christmas.

3. When to Raise and Lower the Flag
The rules for where and when the American flag is raised and lowered are different for Memorial Day. We may collectively remember to render proper salutes while the flag is being raised and lowered. We might even remember to raise the flag "briskly" and lower it slowly and ceremoniously. But if you're the emcee of a Memorial Day event, you should be sure to observe the proper timing for where Old Glory should be throughout the day.

The Stars and Stripes should of course be raised briskly first thing in the morning. But on Memorial Day, the flag is raised only to half-staff (here are directions for how to properly raise a flag at half-staff). At noon, the flag should be raised to full-staff until it's taken down at sunset. Memorial Day is the only day that observes both positions on the flagpole. If you fly a flag from the porch of your house and can't lower it, simply attach a black mourning streamer to the top for when it's supposed to be lowered.

4. What Day Memorial Day Is On
Memorial Day started as a good idea from an organization made up of Union Civil War veterans, the Grand Army of the Republic. These veterans lobbied state and local governments across the former union to recognize May 30 as a day of remembrance, originally known as "Decoration Day."

They chose May 30 because no battles happened on that day. Over the next 100 years, Decoration Day morphed into Memorial Day, which is now observed on the last Monday in May.

By 1968, all of the Civil War vets had died, and Memorial Day belonged to the fallen veterans of all eras.

Congress eventually changed the observance to the last Monday in May as a way to give federal employees a set of standard three-day weekends -- and widen the observance of the day.

dBerzerk25 May 2025 10:27 a.m. PST

"To the Lost!"

torokchar Supporting Member of TMP25 May 2025 11:23 a.m. PST

My flag will fly, as my dad did every year until his death in memory of all fellow infantrymen who served with him in the 30th Infantry Division during WWII.

35thOVI Supporting Member of TMP25 May 2025 12:21 p.m. PST

🫡

Bismarck26 May 2025 8:29 a.m. PST

"Let us not mourn the dead, but thank God that such men(and women) lived" George S. Patton.
Let us always remember and
those will never be forgotten for their sacrifice.

Sorry - only verified members can post on the forums.