Memorial
Day, a Time for Healing
Memorial Day, perhaps more than any other holiday, was born of human
necessity. Deep inside all of us lies a fundamental desire to make sense
of life and our place in it and the world. What we have been given, what
we will do with it and what we will pass to the next generation is all
part of an unfolding history, a continuum that links one soul to
another.
Abraham Lincoln pondered these thoughts in the late fall of 1863. His
darkest fear was that he might well be the last president of the United
States, a nation embroiled in the self-destruction of what he described
as "a great civil war..testing whether that nation, or any nation
so conceived and so dedicated can long endure." He began his
remarks with those words as he stood on the battlefield near Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania on November 19th of that year.
The minute's speech that became known as Lincoln's Gettysburg Address
turned into what might be called the first observance of Memorial Day.
Lincoln's purpose that day was to dedicate a portion of the battlefield
as a cemetery for the thousands of men, both living and dead, who
consecrated that soil in the sacrifice of battle. Said Abraham Lincoln:
"That from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that
cause which they gave the last full measure of devotion...that this
nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom..."
The next year, a pleasant Sunday in October of 1864 found a teenage
girl, Emma Hunter, gathering flowers in a Boalsburg, Pennsylvania
cemetery to place on the grave of her father. He was a surgeon who had
died in service to the Union Army in that great Civil War. Nearby, Mrs.
Elizabeth Meyer was strewing flowers upon the grave of her son Amos, a
private who had fallen on the last day of the battle of Gettysburg. Emma
respectfully took a few of her flowers and put them on the grave of
Amos. Mrs. Meyer, in turn, laid some of her freshly cut blooms on the
grave of Dr. Hunter. Both women felt a lightening of their burdens by
this act of honoring each other's loss, and agreed to meet again the
next year. This time they agreed they would also visit the graves of
those who had no one left to honor them.
Both Emma Hunter and Elizabeth Meyer returned to the cemetery in
Boalsburg on the day they had agreed, Independence Day, July 4, 1865.
This time, though, they found themselves joined by nearly all the
residents of the town. Dr. George Hall, a clergyman, offered a sermon,
and the community joined in decorating every grave in the cemetery with
flowers and flags. The custom became an annual event at Boalsburg, and
it wasn't long before neighboring communities established their own
"Decoration Day" each spring.
About that same time in 1865, a druggist in Waterloo, New York, Henry
C. Welles, began promoting the idea of decorating the graves of Civil
War veterans. He gained the support of the Seneca County Clerk, General
John B. Murray, and they formed a committee to make wreaths, crosses and
bouquets for each veteran's grave. On May 5, 1866, war veterans marching
to martial music led processions to each of three cemeteries, where the
graves were decorated and speeches were made by General Murray and local
clergymen. The village itself was also decorated with flags at
half-mast, evergreen boughs and mourning black streamers.
Also, as the Civil War was coming to a close in the spring of 1865,
Women's Auxiliaries of the North and South moved from providing relief
to the families and soldiers on their own sides to joining in efforts to
preserve and decorate the graves of both sides. A woman of French
extraction and leader of the Virginia women's movement, Cassandra Oliver
Moncure, took responsibility of coordinating the activities of several
groups into a combined ceremony on May 30. It is said that she picked
that day because it corresponded to the Day of Ashes in France, a solemn
day that commemorates the return of the remains of Napoleon Bonaparte to
France from St. Helena.
In 1868, General John A. Logan, first commander of the Grand Army of
the Republic issued a General Order establishing May 30 as an official
memorial day to pay respect to all those who had died, in war or peace.
His order was that the men in his command should spend a portion of that
day policing the gravesites, decorating them and supporting whatever
ceremonies they could. He hoped that this would spark enough interest to
make Memorial Day a permanent national observance. In the intervening
decades, Memorial Day has been observed every year, though the day was
re-established from May 30 to the last Monday in May. In 1966, President
Lyndon Johnson also sanctioned Waterloo, New York as the
"official" birthplace of Memorial Day because of the extensive
ceremonies established there in 1866.
Perhaps General Logan was simply making official what the nation
yearned for and spontaneously began to form after the near total
destruction of the Civil War. It is that sharing of loss, honoring the
sacrifices of those who made possible the lives we enjoy today, and
family connections across the generations that keep Memorial Day in our
hearts...and always will
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