Saturday, May 25, 2013

Taps

Long, three-day holiday weekends lose some of their appeal when you are retired, or as I call myself, semi-retired, which I have learned means not getting paid much, if any, for work.  Still, here it is Memorial Day Weekend.


When I worked at 2201 C Street, NW, in Washington, D.C., parking was available for the midnight shift in the basement. However, daytime parking was reserved for the Secretary of State, undersecretaries, assistant secretaries, and deputy assistant secretaries and their highest level staffs. Clerical and technical employees like me were on our own. Parking on the street near the State Department guaranteed tickets, booting, and/or towing, an experience you did not want to have a second time. I often parked along the Tidal Basin and walked past the hallowed Lincoln Memorial and between there and the Einstein bronze at the National Academy of Sciences. Eventually, these grounds would be selected for the Vietnam Memorial. Even before the first shovel of dirt was moved or the first wall panel set in place and the first of 58,209 names inscribed, there was a hush that made you pause.



Memorial Day is about young men and women who are sent off to war and never come back. It is not about veterans. It does not celebrate the birth of the country. It is not just an occasion for picnics, stock car races, and double-header baseball games. Originally called Decoration Day, because southern ladies and schoolchildren decorated the graves of fallen Confederate solders, it was later adopted nationwide to remember all Americans who died in all wars.

Here are some examples of total United States war dead  from 1775 to the present, according to Wikipedia:

Revolutionar War--25,000 dead
War of 1812--19,260 dead
Mexican-American War--13,283 dead
Civil War--624,511 dead
Spanish-American War--2,446 dead
Philippine-American War--4,196 dead
World War I--116,516 dead
World War II--405,399 dead
Korean War--36,516 dead
Vietnam War--58,209 dead
Afghanistan--2,031 dead
Iraq War--4,487 dead.


Special note: the high number for the U.S. Civil War is because we count both sides, which were ourselves.



Memorial Day, Monday, there will be ceremonies at the final resting places of those who gave what Lincoln called, the "last full measure." Drop by one near you. They may play "Taps." Take a handkerchief, just in case.


1 comment:

Cotter Pen said...

Conflict Dead Commander-in-Chief
Vietnam 58,209 Eisehower, Kennedy,
Johnson,Nixon,Ford

Lebanon 6 Eisenhower
Bay of Pigs 4 Kennedy
Cuban Missile Crisis 20 Kennedy
Dominican Republic 47 Johnson
USS Liberty 34 Johnson
Iran Hostage Rescue 8 Carter
El Salvador 37 Carter,Reagan,Bush I
Clinton
Beirut 266 Reagan
Persian Gulf 39 Reagan
Granada 19 Reagan
Libya 2 Reagan
Panama 40 Reagan
Gulf War 294 Bush I
Kurds 19 Bush I, Clinton
Somalia 43 Bush I, Clinton
Haiti 4 Clinton
Colombia 8 Clinton
Bosnia 12 Clinton
Kosovo 18 Clinton
Afghanistan 2,216 Clinton,Bush II,Obama,Trump
ISIS, Iraq,Syria 61 Obama
Yemen 1 Obama

 

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