Worth More Than A Sound Bite
Worth More Than A Sound Bite
Morrill Worcester:
Owner of Worcester Wreath Company of Harrington, Maine, was a 12 year old paper boy for the Bangor Daily News when he won a trip to Washington D.C. His first trip to our nation’s capital was one he would never forget, and Arlington National Cemetery made an especially indelible impression on him. This experience followed him throughout his life and successful career in business, reminding him that his good fortune was due, in large part, to the values of this nation and the Veterans who made the ultimate sacrifice for their Country.
The Associated Press/Army Times
ARLINGTON, Va. — Volunteers honored veterans buried at Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday with a massive effort to lay tens of thousands of holiday wreaths at their tombstones.
Morrill Worcester, of Harrington, Maine, has arranged for up to 100,000 wreaths to be placed on gravesites at Arlington Cemetery on Dec. 10 in his biggest wreath-laying undertaking yet.
Maine’s Gov. Paul LePage and Sen. Olympia Snowe joined thousands of volunteers in placing the wreaths with red bows at the gravesites of about 90,000 veterans. It was the most wreaths ever placed at the cemetery in a 20-year-old tradition. The most wreaths ever given in the past was 25,000, spokeswoman Amber Caron said.
Organizers said they hoped to place 100,000 wreaths this year, but donations fell short of that goal. Still, the nonprofit group Wreaths Across America said they aim to honor every veteran at the cemetery by placing 220,000 wreaths there in the future.
About 15,000 people joined the effort, Caron said. Within a few hours, all the wreaths were distributed across the large cemetery.
“It was pretty incredible,” she said. “We weren’t expecting that many people … we were really impressed.”
A convoy of more than 20 trucks left Maine last Sunday, bound for the cemetery just across the Potomac River from the nation’s capital. The tradition began 20 years ago with little fanfare. Morrill Worcester, owner of Worcester Wreath Co. in Harrington, Maine, and others laid 5,000 wreaths on headstones that first year to give thanks to the nation’s veterans.
Since then, it has grown into its own organization with ceremonies across the country.
The wreaths will remain in place at Arlington and on view until Jan. 28 when volunteers will return to remove them.
Owner of Worcester Wreath Company of Harrington, Maine, was a 12 year old paper boy for the Bangor Daily News when he won a trip to Washington D.C. His first trip to our nation’s capital was one he would never forget, and Arlington National Cemetery made an especially indelible impression on him. This experience followed him throughout his life and successful career in business, reminding him that his good fortune was due, in large part, to the values of this nation and the Veterans who made the ultimate sacrifice for their Country.
The Associated Press/Army Times
ARLINGTON, Va. — Volunteers honored veterans buried at Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday with a massive effort to lay tens of thousands of holiday wreaths at their tombstones.
Morrill Worcester, of Harrington, Maine, has arranged for up to 100,000 wreaths to be placed on gravesites at Arlington Cemetery on Dec. 10 in his biggest wreath-laying undertaking yet.
Maine’s Gov. Paul LePage and Sen. Olympia Snowe joined thousands of volunteers in placing the wreaths with red bows at the gravesites of about 90,000 veterans. It was the most wreaths ever placed at the cemetery in a 20-year-old tradition. The most wreaths ever given in the past was 25,000, spokeswoman Amber Caron said.
Organizers said they hoped to place 100,000 wreaths this year, but donations fell short of that goal. Still, the nonprofit group Wreaths Across America said they aim to honor every veteran at the cemetery by placing 220,000 wreaths there in the future.
About 15,000 people joined the effort, Caron said. Within a few hours, all the wreaths were distributed across the large cemetery.
“It was pretty incredible,” she said. “We weren’t expecting that many people … we were really impressed.”
A convoy of more than 20 trucks left Maine last Sunday, bound for the cemetery just across the Potomac River from the nation’s capital. The tradition began 20 years ago with little fanfare. Morrill Worcester, owner of Worcester Wreath Co. in Harrington, Maine, and others laid 5,000 wreaths on headstones that first year to give thanks to the nation’s veterans.
Since then, it has grown into its own organization with ceremonies across the country.
The wreaths will remain in place at Arlington and on view until Jan. 28 when volunteers will return to remove them.
You should all be so proud. Unlike here in Calgary where the crosses put up just before Remembrance/Memorial Day were vandalized. A couple of days later two teenage girls kicked over and defaced a bunch of old gravestones in one of our local cemeteries.
Wreaths are a much better way to go.
Wreaths are a much better way to go.
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