Millerton’s Memorial Day

MILLERTON - From their resting places in the smallest of graveyards guarded with ferns and fallen stones to the most manicured of cemeteries, the veterans of North East were recognized during Monday’s Memorial Day commemoration.

Beginning at 6 a.m., under grey skies, members of American Legion Post 178, accompanied by the chirping of birds and the quiet attention of those who had come to remember, performed traditional rites at the town’s six cemeteries. There hundreds of veterans’ graves, some from the French and Indian War, were marked by newly placed flags.

The day celebrated the Centennial of the end of World War I, according to Post Historian Sean Klay, whose organization has sponsored the event since the 1920s.

A 10 a.m., the traditional parade went from the fire station, down Main Street, to Irondale Cemetery and ended at Memorial Park.

There, Klay read the Killed in Action Tribute, and the list of those recently lost. In his address, he touched on  the ironies of war and spoke of veterans from long ago who lost their lives in war. 

He referenced the newest memorial stone, this for the Persian Gulf War, and exhibited a 1919 panoramic photo of a “Welcome Home Party.” It will be on permanent display at the Post, where games and a community lunch took place at noon.

The photo unveiled by Klay was an aluminum copy of the panoramic photo, 44 inches long, 6 inches high, which was taken at a party at Memorial Park in October, 1919. 

Klay said, “It is a tribute, remembering all those who served a hundred years ago in what was truly the defining moment of the 20th century, tying a global event like this to your hometown.”

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