Even with the slippery bad weather Wreaths Across America will go on this morning at Arlington National Cemetery.
— Kathy Stewart (@KStewart海角社区app)
Volunteers enduring the rain and the cold to lay wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery with Wreaths Across America.
— Kathy Stewart (@KStewart海角社区app)
Tractor trailers full of wreaths to be laid at Arlington National Cemetery arrive...240-thousand of them!
— Kathy Stewart (@KStewart海角社区app)
These are brave souls who are on a mission to come out early Saturday morning to place wreaths at the graves of our fallen veterans.
— Kathy Stewart (@KStewart海角社区app)
High school students from New Jersey say this experience was life-changing for them.
— Kathy Stewart (@KStewart海角社区app)
ARLINGTON, Va. —聽More than 44,000 volunteers turned out even in the icy, cold and rainy weather to carefully lay 245,000 remembrance wreaths at聽t Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday, as part of “Wreaths Across America.”
It was the 25th year that wreaths have been placed at Arlington National Cemetery. The theme for this year鈥檚 event was #SayTheirNames.
The wreaths 聽are placed at grave sites nationwide to honor and remember fallen veterans and their service. After placing a wreath, volunteers are encouraged to take time to read the headstone, to honor the memory of that fallen hero and to say the veteran鈥檚 name out loud.
For Julie Hunter from Mt. Laurel, New Jersey, this has become an annual pilgrimage. The experience, for her, is a somber one.
鈥淵ou see all kinds of people that come together from all different walks of life just being grateful for the service and the lives that were lost,鈥 Hunter said.
This year was the first time that Wendy Nixon from North Carolina volunteered to place the wreaths. She lost her 21-year-old brother-in-law; he was killed in Iraq. She was awe-struck by the event at Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday.
鈥淧eople come from all over just to do this,” she said. “No words can even describe, you know?鈥
And when the volunteers鈥 work was all done, the scene left behind is breathtaking: a sea of beautiful balsam wreaths with red bows at Christmastime.
In 1992, a wreath maker from Maine had 5,000 extra wreaths and decided to head to Arlington National Cemetery to honor fallen veterans. That was the beginning of what is now known as 鈥淲reaths Across America.鈥
Amber Caron of the “Wreaths Across America” organization said Morrill Worcester brought 5,000 wreaths to Arlington without any fanfare for 13 years.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until it got a little more attention that ‘Wreaths Across America’ was formed in 2007,鈥 Caron said.
Saturday was known as聽National Wreaths Across America Day, with wreath-laying ceremonies at hundreds of veterans cemeteries and at various other locations in all 50 states.