052014_YKMV_A17.pdf
May 20, 2014 • Page 17
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The history of Memorial Day
Though many people
are quick to refer to
Memorial Day as the
unofficial beginning of
summer, the day is
much more than that.
Initially known as
Decoration
Day,
Memorial Day is a day
to remember those
military members who
died in service of the
country.
The
origins
of
Memorial Day remain
a topic of debate. In
1966,
President
Lyndon
Johnson
declared
Waterloo,
N.Y. as the official
birthplace of Memorial
Day. However, the
roots of Memorial Day
likely
run
much
deeper, as researchers
at Duke University
note that during the
Civil War, organized
women's groups in the
south had begun to
decorate the graves of
fallen soldiers.
Memorial Day as we
know it today can
likely be traced to
Charleston, S.C., where
teachers, missionaries
and some members of
the press gathered on
May 1, 1865 to honor
fallen soldiers. During
the Civil War, captured
Union soldiers were
held at the Charleston
Race Course and
hundreds died during
captivity. Upon their
deaths, soldiers were
buried in unmarked
graves. When the Civil
War ended, the May
Day gathering was
organized
as
a
memorial to all the
men who had died
during captivity. The
burial ground was
landscaped, and those
freed as a result of the
Civil War played an
integral role in the
event
at
the
Charleston
Race
Course.
While the event in
Charleston might have
been
the
first
Memorial Day-type
celebration in the
southern
United
States, General John A.
Logan is often cited as
inspiring
similar
events in the north. As
commander-in-chief of
the Grand Army of the
Republic, a veterans'
organization for men
who served in the Civil
War, General Logan
issued a proclamation
just five days after the
Charleston event that
called for Decoration
Day to be observed
annually across the
country.
Logan
preferred the event not
be held on the
anniversary of any
particular battle, and
thus the day was
observed for the first
time on May 30.
Celebrating the day in
May
also
was
significant to event
organizers because
May is a month when
flowers are in bloom,
making it easier for
observers of the
holiday to place
flowers on the graves
of fallen soldiers.
In 1868, events were
held at more than 180
cemeteries in 27
states, and those
figures nearly doubled
in 1869. By 1890, every
northern
state
officially recognized
Decoration Day as a
state holiday. But
southern
states
honored their dead on
a different day until
after World War I,
when the holiday was
changed to recognize
Americans who died in
any war and not just
the Civil War. Nearly
every state now
celebrates Memorial
Day, a name for the
holiday first used in
1882, on the last
Monday in May.
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