By Linda Hosek
American Forces Press Service
ARLINGTON, VA - Over the weekend, they came from around the country, some with tears in their eyes, putting holiday demands on hold to honor veterans most never knew.
On Saturday, December 15, 2007, in a few hours in freezing temperatures, about 3,000 volunteers
placed more than 10,000 balsam fir wreaths with blazing red
bows on graves at Arlington National Cemetery here.
"I
wish I could lay one on all of them," said Charles Wright, a
Vietnam War Marine veteran and commander of the Kansas City Composite
Squadron, a civil air patrol unit. "This is a tribute I'll
remember forever."
Morrill Worcester, owner of Worcester
Wreath Company in Harrington, Maine, donated the wreaths "to
remember the fallen, honor those who serve and teach our children the
value of freedom," he said.
"It touches so many
people, it just continues to grow," said Worcester, who launched
the Arlington Wreath Project at the cemetery in 1992 with about 5,000
wreaths and 25 volunteers, mostly from the Maine State Society of
Washington, D.C. This is the first year he doubled his donation.
"There are graves that have not seen anyone visiting to
pay respects for years," said Wayne Hanson, the wreath
coordinator for the society, which continues to supply volunteers.
"You're paying tribute to those forgotten people."
Cemetery Superintendent John C. Metzler Jr. designated
section 33 as the area to decorate.
"I just feel very
proud," said Metzler, who has watched the project evolve since
the beginning. "People are taking time out to decorate the
graves and to do it right. And the kids are being taught that this is
something good to do."
One child placing wreaths was
getting the message. "I'm learning that there are really nice
people in the world because they donated like a million wreaths so
the people in the graves could feel nice and warm up in heaven,"
said 11-year-old Zachary Coyle, of Westminster, Md.
Worcester
and his wife, Karen, traveled with two truckloads of wreaths and
stopped along the way in part to talk to students at schools.
"I
don't think they realize that the ultimate sacrifice by these
veterans happened for them," he said, adding that more than
740,000 troops have been killed or listed as missing in action since
World War I. "It's a tremendous loss of life."
Worcester
also stopped at several towns for ceremonies during his 740-mile trip
to transport the wreaths, all made in Maine. Two Maine companies
donated trucks, which were escorted by Maine State Police troopers
and members of the Patriot Guard Riders, a nationwide group of
veteran bikers.
Other volunteers who handed out wreaths by
the armfuls included members of the Maine Civil Air Patrol, local
Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion posts, military units,
congressional staffers, scout troops and school children.
Worcester
got into the wreath business to earn money when he was a University
of Maine student in animal science, but said he now serves as the
sole supplier for L.L. Bean and operates the biggest mail-order
wreath business in the country.
He also said he started the
wreath project "by mistake," explaining that he had extra
wreaths in 1992 and decided to decorate graves at Arlington National
Cemetery. He had visited the cemetery at 12 after winning a trip to
the area for adding a certain number of customers to his newspaper
route.
"I wasn't all that patriotic at the time,"
he said. "But I was impressed with the size of the cemetery, how
well-kept it was and with the changing of the guard at the Tomb of
the Unknown Soldier."
This year's event included placing
special wreaths at the Tomb of the Unknowns as well as the USS
Battleship Maine Monument and the graves of President John F.
Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Edmund Muskie, former secretary
of state and Maine senator.
"This comes at a time when
we need a little shot of patriotism," said Maine State Rep.
Joseph L. Tibbetts, who also served with the 9th Infantry in Vietnam.
Tibbetts adjusted the wreath on Muskie's grave and looked
around the cemetery, uplifted by the flashes of red and green against
the rows of white headstones.
"This is a beautiful
place," he said. "It doesn't take much to turn beautiful
into wonderful."
Worcester has expanded the Arlington
project to Wreaths Across America, a non-profit organization with the
goal of placing wreaths on graves at more than 200 cemeteries and
monuments nationwide. He estimated that, with contributions from the
public, volunteers would decorate about 35,000 graves nationwide this
season.
Cadets from the Civil Air Patrol's Kansas City
Composite Squadron alone raised $17,000 in wreath sponsorships for
the national effort, said Cathy Metcalf, the squadron's deputy
commander.
"We felt it was an important event for our
cadets to take on," she added. "It's because of the
veterans that we're here walking in a free country."
Worcester
had a personal mission during the event: to place a wreath on the
grave of U.S. Navy Adm. William "Bull" Halsey for a friend
who recently had a stroke and couldn't make the trip. He found the
grave and did what he tells others to do: to think about the veteran
and the sacrifices he or she made.
"I'm not a veteran,
but I'm behind what they're doing," he said, adding that the
wreath project will continue "as long as there's a Worcester."
He also said he'd like to place a wreath on every veteran's
grave, but added, "That's a tall order."
But
Worcester said he sees support growing and gratitude for what's been
done as volunteers tap him on the shoulder to shake his hand.
"God
bless you," said Kathy Pickett, of Sykesville, Md. "I just
think this is amazing. You want everyone to have a wreath on their
grave for what they've sacrificed."
Source: US Department of Defense



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What a wonderful story!!
What a wonderful story!!
Great Story!
Great Story!