When I was in the Army I was stationed in Hawaii for 6 years. I was privileged to be able to re-enlist on the Arizona, they gave me a really nice plaque AND the flag that flew over the ship that day. Tremendous Honor for me to have that flag.Thought y'all might enjoy this pic of US flag from inside the USS Arizona Memorial.
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Another one.
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Very Majestic and Patriotic!
Ron
I’ll have to ask the kids tonight if their teachers talked about it in school at all.
SnoKing,
Thanks for the special pic's. I can't understand what standing there is like, closest I can compare it to is when we visited in OKC at the Murrah bldg memorial before it was built and the Flt 93 Memorial when it was a chain link fence. Flt 93 memorial is a few miles from my Dad's home town.
Folks,
I've started watching The Walton's at lunch time and it's surprising how relevant some of their story lines really were. Today they ran the December 7th show and how it hit in the days w/o digital communication they were sitting around the radio listening to updates and they played FDR's speech and showed how folks watched and responded.
Was this the birth of The Greatest Generation? Many served in many ways to support what was needed from material to rationing, war bonds and a whole host of sacrifices that they made.
Regards,
Gary
Going to Hawaii for a week is on my bucket list... not for the beaches or other tourist stuf, but to personally go visit the Arizona. AS we travel the US, we spicifically target Civil War and Indian battlegrounds... these are Sacred Places to be reverred and honored. Of all my military assignments, Andrews AFB was the best, largely due to the military history dating back to America's Origin. I visited The Tomb of the Unknowns many times and will again when we go back.
Antietum was the single bloodiest day in American history and is all but forgetten EXCEPT for the locals. Thanks to my friend Larry Willard, we participated in one of the most wonderful ceromonies honoring the fallen... the Luminaries where 23,000 candles placed in sand weighted bags are placed on the reverred battlegound, lighted. Then the participants are allowed to begin the drive through the area, truly inspiring and saddening sight.
One thing for sure, although all the wars began BECAUSE of politics, the hallowed battlegrounds and memorials are completely DEVOID of politics, and rightly so.
Thanks all for posting...we can count on each other to keep memories alive and honored.
Ron