AARP Hearing Center
Scores of trucks full of holiday wreaths are traveling from Columbia Falls, Maine, to all corners of the country to honor and remember deceased veterans at more than 4,600 cemeteries nationwide on Saturday, Dec. 14.
The nonprofit Wreaths Across America was inspired by balsam farmer Morrill Worcester, the owner of Worcester Wreaths Co., whose annual tradition of placing wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery gained the spotlight in 2005, after a photo of his handiwork in the snow became popular on the internet. Two years later, the organization was launched, in response to overwhelming demand for wreaths for cemeteries across the country and the desire of many people to get involved in the project.
This year, Wreaths Across America plans to distribute millions of evergreen wreaths across cemeteries in all 50 states.
“Morrill’s goal is to place a wreath on every veteran’s grave throughout the country, and that’s something like 24 million veterans that are buried out there,” says Wayne Hanson, chairman of the nonprofit’s board and former coordinator for Arlington National Cemetery’s wreath ceremony.
Wreaths Across America aims not only to honor and remember veterans but also to teach the next generation about the sacrifices made for freedom. It asks the millions of volunteers who assemble across the country to say the veteran's name as they place the wreath on the deceased’s headstone.
“You die once when your heart stops beating — you take that last breath physically,” Hanson says. “But then you die a final time when your name is spoken for the last time, and then you’re forgotten. We don’t want our veterans to be forgotten.”
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