Memorial Day 2015

8
Addison County Celebrates Memorial Day May 25th A Publication of the Addison Independent, Thursday, May 21, 2015 Rotary club’s Flag Raising Project raises funds, flags Flower girl tradition spans generations ADDISON COUNTY — Many have seen an abundance of U.S. flags around Middle- bury on the five major flag holidays over the past two years. In the spring of 2013 the Middlebury Rota- ry Club launched its Flag Raising Project, in which club members in exchange for an an- nual subscription will raise a flag in front of a home or business for Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day, Labor Day and Veterans Day. This year, in ad- dition to these flags, Middlebury Rotary is kicking off a new endeavor, The Veteran’s Flag Project, to promote patriotism and to raise funds for local charities. For a $50 annual sub- scription, they will affix a 3-inch-by-5- inch plaque to a 10-foot flag pole and dis- play it in Cannon Park on those five holidays. The plaque will display the name, rank, service, tour of duty and years of service of the veteran of one’s choice, and anyone may visit the flag at their leisure in Cannon Park in downtown Middlebury across from the Ils- ley Library. Tim Hollander, president of the Middlebury Rotary, thinks this will be a pop- ular addition to the organization’s annual Flag Raising Project. For more information email rotaryflagproj- [email protected] or fill out and return the form in the Addison Independent. All proceeds will fund charitable needs in Addison County. This year’s beneficiaries are HOPE, Elderly Services, The Turning Point Center and Vermont Special Olympics. (See Flower girls, Page 8) By LEE J. KAHRS BRANDON — Every year on the last Monday in May, a group of first-grade girls in white dresses clutch bunches of fresh lilacs in their small hands. They walk single file up Center Street from the Brandon Post Office, smiling and waving to their families and friends. They follow the American Legion Color Guard and the Otter Valley and Neshobe School marching bands, and are joined by the Pittsford and Brandon fire department engines. The small parade with a purpose makes its way to the gazebo in Central Park. There, the girls stand waiting, some fidgeting, some listening, others quietly looking around as the chaplain gives the blessing, and a young boy recites the Gettysburg Address. At the appointed time, after the pa- triotic songs have been played, the little girls cross Route 7 to the Bran- don Civil War monument. They circle the monument twice, then lay their flowers to honor the fallen. The Color Guard fires a 21-gun salute, and in conclusion, two high school trumpeters blow “Taps” in echo, one answering the other with those singular, plaintive notes. That is Memorial Day in Brandon, and it is unlike Memorial Day anywhere else. The tradition of the flower girls is one that goes back at least to the first decade of the last century, and it is a tradition often handed down through families. Everyone knows someone who was a flower girl in Brandon. As so many traditional Brandon institutions fall by the wayside, like the Rotary Club and the Neshobe Sportsman Club, the tradition of the Memorial Day Flower LISA RADER, LEFT, her daughter Stella, and Lisa’s mother, Rhoda, pose during the 2012 Memorial Day ceremony in Brandon. Rader was a flower girl in 1981, and Stella is wearing the same dress her mother wore that day.

description

 

Transcript of Memorial Day 2015

Page 1: Memorial Day 2015

Addison County

Celebrates Memorial DayMay 25th

A Publication of the Addison Independent, Thursday, May 21, 2015

Rotary club’s FlagRaising Project raises funds, flags

Flower girl tradition spans generations

ADDISON COUNTY — Many have seen an abundance of U.S. flags around Middle-bury on the five major flag holidays over the past two years.

In the spring of 2013 the Middlebury Rota-ry Club launched its Flag Raising Project, in which club members in exchange for an an-nual subscription will raise a flag in front of

a home or business for Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day, Labor Day and Veterans Day.

This year, in ad-dition to these flags, Middlebury Rotary is kicking off a new

endeavor, The Veteran’s Flag Project, to promote patriotism and to raise funds for local charities. For a $50 annual sub-scription, they will affix a 3-inch-by-5-

inch plaque to a 10-foot flag pole and dis-play it in Cannon Park on those five holidays.

The plaque will display the name, rank, service, tour of duty and years of service of the veteran of one’s choice, and anyone may visit the flag at their leisure in Cannon Park in downtown Middlebury across from the Ils-ley Library. Tim Hollander, president of the Middlebury Rotary, thinks this will be a pop-ular addition to the organization’s annual Flag Raising Project.

For more information email [email protected] or fill out and return the form in the Addison Independent. All proceeds will fund charitable needs in Addison County. This year’s beneficiaries are HOPE, Elderly

Services, The Turning Point Center and Vermont Special Olympics.

(See Flower girls, Page 8)

By LEE J. KAHRSBRANDON — Every year on the last Monday in May, a group of

first-grade girls in white dresses clutch bunches of fresh lilacs in their small hands. They walk single file up Center Street from the Brandon Post Office, smiling and waving to their families and friends. They follow the American Legion Color Guard and the Otter Valley and Neshobe School marching bands, and are joined by the Pittsford and Brandon fire department engines. The small parade with a purpose makes its way to the gazebo in Central Park.

There, the girls stand waiting, some fidgeting, some listening, others quietly looking around as the chaplain gives the blessing, and a young boy recites the Gettysburg Address. At the appointed time, after the pa-triotic songs have been played, the little girls cross Route 7 to the Bran-don Civil War monument. They circle the monument twice, then lay their flowers to honor the fallen. The Color Guard fires a 21-gun salute, and in conclusion, two high school trumpeters blow “Taps” in echo, one answering the other with those

singular, plaintive notes. That is Memorial Day in Brandon, and it is unlike Memorial Day anywhere else.

The tradition of the flower girls is one that goes back at least to the first decade of the last century, and it is a tradition often handed down through families. Everyone knows someone who was a flower girl in Brandon.

As so many traditional Brandon institutions fall by the wayside, like the Rotary Club and the Neshobe Sportsman Club, the tradition of the Memorial Day Flower

LISA RADER, LEFT, her daughter Stella, and Lisa’s mother, Rhoda, pose during the 2012 Memorial Day ceremony in Brandon. Rader was a flower girl in 1981, and Stella is wearing the same dress her mother wore that day.

Page 2: Memorial Day 2015

MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS!

YOUR YARD, GARDEN and PET PLACE™ www.MiddleburyAgway.com

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY FARM & GARDEN338 Exchange St., Middlebury, VT • 388-4937

Monday - Friday 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4

Open 7days a weekOpen Memorial Day 8-4

OFFINDOOR &OUTDOOR

CLAY POTTERY

Look for Sales – Flyer Specials & More at Agway!Great Deals on Lawn & Garden Tools, Weed Controls, Lawn Fertilizers, Mulches and More!

20%Get Grilling! Best Prices, Best Selection – Anywhere!Gas & Charcoal Grills in a variety of colors in stock.

FREE Propane fill up w/gas grill purchase

Middlebury Agway Coupon

NURSERY CUSTOMER BUCKS❏ $5 off ❏ $15 off ❏ $25 offany $50 Nursery Purchase

The more you buy, the more you save!

any $100 Nursery Purchase any $150 Nursery PurchaseCombined nursery purchases include Trees, Shrubs, Annuals, Herbs, Perennials, Bird Baths & Statuary.

In-stock items only only – while supplies last. Expires June 1, 2015

Middlebury Agway Coupon

In-stock items only – while supplies last • Expires June 1, 2015

$10SAVEon any

Men’s • Women’s & Kids’

Phot

o by

Don

’t Bl

ink

Phot

ogra

phy

purchase of $50 or more.

Sale thruJune 1, 2015

Special Memorial Day Sale (starting 5/22 thru 5/25)

Propane fi ll only $16.99!

Marble WorksMiddlebury • 388-3784

187 Main StreetVergennes • 877-1190

61 Pine StreetBristol • 453-2999

FREEDELIVERY

Your Health is Our ConcernWe are your independent, hometown community pharmacy for all your

prescription needs, with a full line of over-the-counter items, cards and gifts. Stop in today and see why our customers are so loyal.

PROUD TO SERVE THOSE WHO SERVED!

www.marbleworkspharmacy.com

The Medicine Chest is Addison County’s complete source for all your home medical equipment sales, rentals and service needs.Have questions? Our experienced staff is here to help!

Visit us at the Marble Works in Middlebury • 388-9801

For more info. and store hours go to www.marbleworkspharmacy.com

PAGE 2 • Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015

BRISTOL — The guest speaker at this year’s Memorial Day observances in Bristol will be Maj. Jacob Roy, the S3 Operations Officer for the 86th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 86th IBCT (MTN), Vermont Army National Guard.

He will deliver his address on the village green on Monday afternoon at the conclusion of a parade that will leave from Mount Abra-ham Union High School at 1 p.m. and march down West Street to the green.

Maj. Roy enlisted in the Vermont Army National Guard in 1998 as a flight operations specialist. He attended Officer Candidate School and was commissioned a second lieu-tenant engineer officer in 2000.

In the 131st Engineer Company, Maj. Roy held positions of platoon leader, company executive officer and assumed command in 2003. In July 2006, he deployed the 131st Engineer Company to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The members of the unit were deployed as a route clearance company with the primary purpose of finding and destroying improvised explosive devises, known as IEDs.

Upon his return from Iraq in 2007, Maj. Roy was assigned as the Logistics Officer (S4) for 3-172d Mountain Infantry Battalion. In 2008, he was reassigned as the Commander for Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3-172d Mountain Infantry Battalion, and was deployed to Afghanistan in 2009 and 2010. While in Afghanistan, he was assigned the ad-

ditional duty of task force engineer for Paktya Province.

Upon his return from Afghanistan, Maj. Roy was assigned as the operations officer for J3-Joint Force Headquarters, and then in 2013 he was assigned as the plans and operations officer for the Director of Military Support. He was assigned to his present position in 2014.

Among other distinctions and decorations, Maj. Roy has been awarded two Bronze Stars, a Meritorious Service Medal, Army Com-mendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Joint Service Achievement Medal, Iraq Cam-paign Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, German Armed Forces Achievement Badge, Aviation Badge, and the Combat Action Badge.

Maj. Jacob Roy resides in Bristol with his wife, Elizabeth, and their children, Oliver, Ab-igail and Evan.

MAJ. JACOB ROY

Vt. Guard official to speak in Bristol

Peter Welch to address thecrowd at Vergennes parade

VERGENNES — Congressman Peter Welch will be the principal speaker at the annual Vergennes Memorial Day parade and ceremonies this coming Monday.

The theme to this year’s Memorial Day events is “Honor and Remember.” The pa-rade will begin at Vergennes Union High School at 9 a.m. and end at the City Green around 1 p.m. With Mayor Bill Benton and other local, state and national dignitaries in attendance, as well as Ver-gennes American Legion Post 14 Commander Paul Paquin, Welch will deliver his address.

Born in Springfield, Mass., in 1947, he graduated magna cum laude from Holy Cross College in 1969. After work-ing a year in Chicago fighting housing discrimination as one of the first Robert F. Ken-nedy Fellows, Welch enrolled in law school at the University of California Berkeley and graduated in 1973.

Welch settled in White River Junction and worked as a public defender before found-ing a small law practice. He was first elected to represent Windsor County in the Vermont Senate in 1980. In 1985 he was unanimous-ly elected by his colleagues to lead the

chamber, becoming the first Democrat in history to hold the position of president pro tempore.

In 2006, Welch was elected to Vermont’s sole seat in the U.S. House of Representa-tives. The 2006 campaign gained nation-

wide attention for being the only congressional race in the country where both can-didates agreed not to run neg-ative ads. Welch was re-elect-ed by wide margins in 2008 and 2010.

As a member of the U.S. House, Welch has cham-pioned making homes and buildings more energy effi-cient, making college more affordable, and expanding access to health care. He took on the banks and credit card companies who were rip-ping off small businesses and consumers. And he fought to

block efforts to repeal health care reform, give tax breaks to millionaires and big oil companies, and restrict women’s right to choose. Welch has been recognized in Wash-ington as a skillful and effective legislator.

After the solemn services at the park, the Vergennes American Legion will hold its annual chicken barbecue.

PETER WELCH

Page 3: Memorial Day 2015

John Fuller, Master Plumber • 388-2019Serving Addison County since 1989

Proud to provide service to those who served.

Telecommunications Sales & Service Data Cabling & Fiber Optics

Remembering & Thanking Those Who Serve

John & Jim Fitzgerald 802-388-8999

Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015 • PAGE 3

A time of reflectionBUGLER TIM HEFFERNAN of Bristol plays Taps, left, during a ceremony at the Scouting Salute to

Veterans Parade in Bristol this past November while veterans from around Vermont listened solemnly. Around 900 people — American Legion delegations, bands, Scouts and veterans — participated in the 16th annual parade, which rotates to different towns around the state each year.

File photos by Mark Bouvier

Page 4: Memorial Day 2015

PAGE 4 • Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015

Jackman Fuels, Inc.

Vergennes • 877-2661 • jackmanfuels.com

Serving Addison & Chittenden Counties Since 1945

Fuel Oil • LP Gas • K-1 Kerosene

“Let us always remember & salute our veterans”

Know the protocol for displaying Old Glory

(See Flags, Page 6)

Editor’s note: This piece was provided by the U.S. Department of Veterans Af-fairs.

Public Law 94-344, known as the Fed-eral Flag Code, contains rules for han-dling and displaying the U.S. flag. While the federal code contains no penalties for misusing the flag, states have their own flag codes and may impose penalties. The language of the federal code makes clear that the flag is a living symbol.

In response to a Supreme Court deci-sion that held that a state law prohibiting flag burning was unconstitutional, Con-gress enacted the Flag Protection Act in 1989. It provides that anyone who know-ingly desecrates the flag may be fined and/or imprisoned for up to one year. However, this law was challenged by the Supreme Court in a 1990 decision that the Flag Protection Act violates the First Amendment free speech protections.IMPORTANT THINGS TO REMEMBER

Traditional guidelines call for display-ing the flag in public only from sunrise to sunset. However, the flag may be displayed at all times if it’s illuminated during darkness. The flag should not be subject to weather damage, so it should not be displayed during rain, snow and wind storms unless it is an all-weather flag.

It should be displayed often, but espe-cially on national and state holidays and special occasions.

The flag should be displayed on or near the main building of public insti-tutions, schools during school days, and polling places on election days. It should be hoisted briskly and lowered ceremo-niously.

• When carried in procession with oth-er flags, the U.S. flag should be either on the marching right (the flag’s right) or to the front and center of the flag line. When displayed on a float in a parade, the flag should be hung from a staff or suspended so it falls free. It should not be draped over a vehicle.

• When displayed with another flag against a wall from crossed staffs, the U.S. flag should be on its own right (left

We remember and honor those who have given their lives defending our freedom

and democracy.

Sanderson -Ducharme Funeral HomeLocally Owned and Operated • On Site Cremation

117 South Main St. • Middlebury • 388-2311

to a person facing the wall) and its staff should be in front of the other flag’s staff.

• In a group of flags displayed from staffs, the U.S. flag should be at the center and the highest point.

• When the U.S. flag is displayed other than from a staff, it should be displayed flat, or suspended so that its folds fall free. When displayed over a street, place the union so it faces north or east, depending upon the direction of the street.

• When the U.S. flag is displayed from a staff projecting from a building, the union of the flag should be placed at the peak of the staff unless the flag is at half staff. When suspended from a rope ex-tending from the building on a pole, the flag should be hoisted out, union first from the building.

• When flags of states, cities or orga-nizations are flown on the same staff, the U.S. flag must be at the top.

• The flag should never be draped or drawn back in folds. Draped red, white

www.JackmansInc.com32 Pine Street, Bristol

453-2381

In honor of those who have served and who continue to serve.

Thank You.

In honor of those who have served

57 Main Street (next to the Post Offi ce) New Haven • 453-3433Open Monday - Friday • 10-5 or by appointmentVisit us online at: www.cleggsmemorials.com

Cemetery Lett ering, Cleaning & Restoration

� ank you to all our veterans!85 years of honoring memories

Page 5: Memorial Day 2015

Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015 • PAGE 5

In Flanders FieldsIn Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row, That mark our place; and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fly. Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the dead. Short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow Loved, and were loved, and now we lie In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high. If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders fields.

— John McCrae

This was the poem written by World War I Colonel John McCrae, a surgeon with Can-ada’s First Brigade Artillery. It expressed McCrae’s grief over the “row on row” of graves of soldiers who had died on Flanders’ battlefields, located in a region of western Belgium and northern France. The poem presented a striking image of the bright red flowers blooming among the rows of white crosses and became a rallying cry to all who fought in the First World War. The first print-ed version of it reportedly was in December

1915 in the British magazine Punch.McCrae’s poem had a huge impact on

two women, Anna E. Guerin of France and Georgia native Moina Michael. Both worked hard to initiate the sale of artificial poppies to help orphans and others left des-titute by the war. By the time Guerin estab-lished the first sale in the U.S., in 1920 with the help of The American Legion, the pop-py was well known in the allied countries — America, Britain, France, Canada, Aus-tralia and New Zealand — as the “Flower of Remembrance.” Proceeds from that first sale went to the American and French Chil-dren’s League.

Guerin had difficulty with the distribu-tion of the poppies in early 1922 and sought out Michael for help. Michael had started a smaller-scaled Poppy Day during a YMCA conference she was attending in New York and wanted to use the poppies as a symbol of remembrance of the war. Guerin, called the “Poppy Lady of France” in her homeland, and Michael, later dubbed “The Poppy Prin-cess” by the Georgia legislature, went to the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) for help. Following its first nationwide distribution of poppies, the VFW adopted the poppy as its official memorial flower in 1922.

However, a shortage of poppies from French manufacturers led to the idea of using unemployed and disabled veterans to produce the artificial flowers. In 1924, a

poppy factory was built in Pittsburgh, pro-viding a reliable source of poppies and a practical means of assistance to veterans. Today, veterans at VA medical facilities and veterans homes help assemble the poppies, which are distributed by veterans service organizations throughout the country.

Donations received in return for these

artificial poppies have helped countless veterans and their widows, widowers and orphans over the years. The poppy itself continues to serve as a perpetual tribute to those who have given their lives for the na-tion’s freedom.

Editor’s note: This piece was provided by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

Poppies have a direct signifigance to our veterans

Home at lastSALISBURY NATIVE CARROLL

“Bobby” Dyer died in the crash of his Air Force plane 63 years ago in Alaska. His remains were finally recovered last year and on this past Aug. 15 they were interred at the West Salisbury Cemetery during a ceremony with full mil-itary honors. Military personnel from the Vermont Air National Guard, the 109th Airlift Wing in Scotia, N.Y., and Hanscom Air Force Base were on hand to pay tribute to Dyer’s service and sacrifice.

Independent file photos/Trent Campbell

Page 6: Memorial Day 2015

PAGE 6 • Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015

Bristol American Legion, Inc. Post 19

Salutes all Veterans-those that served in the pastand those currently serving.

Brick forms for the

memorialare still

available.

The BristolAmerican

Legion Post 19

meets at 7pm the 4th

Wednesday of every month.

Veterans Are NeverTo Be Forgotten

Honoring our country’sArmed Forces past,present and future

VERGENNESAmerican Legion Post #14 • Ladies Auxillary Unit # 14

Sons of the American Legion Sq. #14

802-877-3118

“Serving the Champlain Valley Since 1887”

Thank you for your Service.

ration, with the blue at the top and red at the bottom.

The flag may be flown at half-staff to honor a newly deceased federal or state government official by order of the pres-ident or the governor, respectively. On Memorial Day, the flag should be dis-played at half-staff until noon.OTHER THINGS NOT TO DO WITH THE FLAG

Out of respect for the U.S. flag, never: • Dip it for any person or thing, even

though state flags, regimental colors and

other flags may be dipped as a mark of honor.

• Display it with the union down, ex-cept as a signal of distress.

• Let the flag touch anything beneath it: ground, floor, water, merchandise.

• Carry it horizontally, but always aloft. • Fasten or display it in a way that will

permit it to be damaged or soiled. place anything on the flag, including letters, in-signia, or designs of any kind.

• Use it for holding anything. • Use it as wearing apparel, bedding or

drapery. It should not be used on a cos-tume or athletic uniform. However, a flag patch may be attached to the uniform of patriotic organizations, military person-nel, police officers and firefighters.

• Use the flag for advertising or promo-tion purposes or print it on paper napkins, boxes or anything else intended for tem-porary use and discard.

During the hoisting or lowering of the flag or when it passes in parade or review, Americans should stand at attention fac-ing the flag and place their right hand over the heart. Uniformed military members render the military salute. Men not in uni-form should remove any headdress and hold it with their right hand at their left shoulder, the hand resting over the heart. Those who are not U.S. citizens should stand at attention.

Flags(Continued from Page 4)

Page 7: Memorial Day 2015

Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015 • PAGE 7

Saluting our Veterans

Middlebury American Legion49 Wilson Rd., P.O. Box 28, Middlebury, Vt. 05753 • 802-388-9311 • [email protected]

With great appreciation & gratitude to:

Bristol American Legion, Post #19Middlebury American Legion, Post #27Vergennes American Legion, Post #14

From the Addision County Legion BaseballPlayers and Coaches ~ past & present

Page 8: Memorial Day 2015

PAGE 8 • Memorial Day, A publication of the Addison Independent, May 21, 2015

THESE LITTLE GIRLS from the Neshobe School first grade waited patiently for their moment on Memorial Day in Brandon a few years ago. Since at least 1902, it has been a tradition in Brandon that a group of little girls in white dresses walk around the Civil War monument at the foot of Park Street and lay flowers to honor Brandon’s fallen soldiers.

Photo by Lee J. Kahrs

Girls in Brandon is perennial, enduring and unchanging. According to Brandon historian and University of Vermont History Professor Kevin Thornton, the first reference to the flower girl tradition was found in a program for the 1902 Brandon Memorial Day ceremony. Thornton, however, is certain that the tradition began well before that, there is just no documentation to support that theory.

The Brandon Civil War Monument was erected at the intersection of Park Street and Route 7 in 1886, and children have perennial-ly laid flowers at the foot of the monument on Memorial Day every year since at least 1902.

“It used to be a common part of Memorial Day across New England,” Thornton said of children laying flowers. “But now Brandon is the only town left that still does it. I think we’re pretty safe in declaring we’re the only town that still has this tradition.”

For the first decade after the Civil War mon-ument was erected, Thornton said Brandon’s Memorial Day ceremony, like so many, was very much by, for and exclusively about vet-erans. Then, in 1896, the emphasis shifted to the passing on of legacies and the younger generations.

“That’s when they started incorporating kids into the ceremony,” Thornton said.

From there, Brandon’s tradition grew, to the point when, even in 1907, Thornton said, there are references to Brandon as having “an uncustomary dedication to Memorial Day.”

And that dedication endures today. At the 2012 Memorial Day ceremony, Stella An-

drews wore the same white dress her mother Lisa Rader wore when she was a flower girl in 1981. Rader’s mother, Rhoda, made the dress in 1977 for Rader’s older sister, Lorelei, who wore it first. The dress is kept in a box, and Stella’s younger sister, Eva, wore it in the Flower Girls Ceremony last year.

Rader vividly recalls her day as a flower girl, saying the feeling of tradition and the se-riousness of the day were palpable to her, even as a seven-year-old.

“I certainly remember we were part of something,” she said. “I clearly remember the guns going off, and lining up at the post office and walking all through the town and being the focus of the parade. I remember being part of this special role.”

The woman who has been in charge of orga-nizing and shepherding the flower girls for the last 28 years is Neshobe School kindergarten teacher Ellen Knapp. Thornton’s admiration for the job Knapp does is clear.

“She’s the real hero,” he said. “She has kept this tradition going and miraculously unchanged for so long … and I hope it never changes.”

Knapp inherited the job from longtime physical education teacher Carolyn Memoe, who organized the tradition from the mid-1960s to 1987, taking up the task from Sem-inary Hill School first-grade teacher Mary Huntley. Huntley did it through the 1950s and ’60s, Knapp said.

Knapp and Memoe were both flower girls themselves and marched in the Independence Day Parade in 2013 along with roughly 40

Flower girls(Continued from Page 1)

other flower girls, past and present, including Lisa Rader and her daughter Stella. Brandon’s big Independence Day parade that year cele-brated town history, including the flower girls.

As an adult and a parent, Rader sees Bran-don’s Memorial Day ceremony with fresh wisdom and a nod to her own past.

“It’s pretty emotional, and it always catches me by surprise,” she said, adding that she ap-preciates the solemnity of the event.

“It’s always understated … There’s no can-dy throwing, no politicians,” she said. “It’s the reading of the Gettysburg Address. It’s the vet-erans. It’s just really poignant and meaningful, that we’re trying to remember our veterans

and the sacrifices they’ve made. It’s sincere and it’s in the right place.”

As for as the flower girls, Rader agrees that the incorporation of children is key to the cer-emony.

“The girls wearing white, it’s a clear focus on innocence and that makes the sacrifice our veterans have made so clear,” she said.

As for Knapp, she hasn’t lost her excitement for the flower girls ceremony.

“I really enjoy tradition, and this is one Brandon can be really proud of,” she said. “It’s another thing that makes Brandon unique. It’s been a pleasure and an honor to be part of this. It really is something special.”

33 Seymour Street, Midd. • M-F 8-5, Sat 8-Noon 388-7620 [email protected] • www.countytirecenter.com

COUNTY TIRE CENTER33 SEYMOUR STREET, MIDDLEBURY - 388-7620

www.countytirecenter.com

HO

UR

S: M

on

day - F

riday 8-5 • S

aturd

ay 8-12

WiFi while you wait!

YOU CAN GET

BY MAIL ON A

WHEN YOU BUY FOUR ELIGIBLE TIRES.FIRESTONE VISA® PREPAID CARD**

OFFER VALID MAY 15–JULY 15, 2015

** Prepaid card is issued by MetaBank®, Member FDIC, pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. The prepaid card is given to you as a reward and no money has been paid by you for the card. No cash access or recurring payments. Card valid for up to 6 months, unused funds forfeit at midnight EST the last day of the month of the valid thru date. Card terms and conditions apply; see MyPrepaidCenter.com/site/visa-promo. ∆ Offer good in the U.S. Claim form required. Certain restrictions and limitations apply. For complete details, see your participating Firestone retailer or FirestoneTire.com. Eligible tires: DestinationTM A/T, DestinationTM M/T, DestinationTM LE & LE2, FirehawkTM Wide OvalTM Indy 500® or FirehawkTM Wide OvalTM A/S. Eligible tires must be purchased from a participating Firestone retailer’s inventory May 15–July 15, 2015. OFFER EXCLUDES COSTCO PURCHASES. Void in Puerto Rico. Call 1-877-TIRE USA to �nd a retailer near you. Cannot be combined with any other offer.

County Tire Center, Inc. 33 Seymour Street

Middlebury VT

05753 (802) 388-7620