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    422nd ABG honors fallen at Brookwood ceremony

    422nd ABG honors fallen at Brookwood ceremony

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Brian Stives | Col. Brian Kelly, 501st Combat Support Wing commander, and Chief Master Sgt. Steven...... read more read more

    BROOKWOOD , SRY, UNITED KINGDOM

    05.26.2013

    Story by Staff Sgt. Brian Stives 

    501st Combat Support Wing

    BROOKWOOD, United Kingdom – Since American service members first gave their lives for their country, their country has remembered their sacrifice. The 422nd Air Base Group honored all of them during a Memorial Day Ceremony at Brookwood Military Cemetery, United Kingdom, May 26.

    “It is such a gift that we live in a free and open society, I can think of no better place to be on Memorial Day weekend than standing among the brave men and women that gave us that gift,” said Brig. Gen. John Quintas, the Defense Attaché at the U.S. Embassy in London.

    Memorial Day started out as Decoration Day as a day to remember those killed in service of the nation and always fell on May 30, regardless of the day of the week it fell on. In 1968, Congress changed the date to the last Monday in May.

    “Changing the date resulted in it always being a three-day weekend, which I think we all appreciate, but unfortunately it has also resulted in many Americans thinking about barbecues, picnics, traveling and easing from the hardships of daily life,” said Quintas. “More and more they’ve forgotten this day is about remembering the more than 1.3 million Americans who gave their life defending freedom.”

    For the members of the 422nd ABG in attendance being a part of the ceremony carries a big honor.

    “It really gives you a sense of gratitude and unbelievable thanks for what they did for our country,” said Master Sgt. Jeremy Carlson, 422nd Civil Engineer Squadron and wreath bearer for the ceremony.

    For some airmen this was the first time they attended a Memorial Day Ceremony in the United Kingdom.

    “I would definitely do it again,” said Staff Sgt. Cesar Ponce, 422nd Communications Squadron, who was a wreath bearer for the ceremony. “It was definitely different than going out and barbecuing. It really meant a lot to come out here and honor them, to cherish their name, and remember them for what they sacrificed for us.”

    Brookwood, the final resting place for 468 service members and 41 unknown service members from World War I, is one of the smallest American cemeteries in the United Kingdom. The service members who rest in the Brookwood American Cemetery were brought there after the Armistice from various temporary sites throughout England, Scotland and Ireland; the first American burial at Brookwood was in 1918.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.26.2013
    Date Posted: 05.29.2013 05:53
    Story ID: 107682
    Location: BROOKWOOD , SRY, GB

    Web Views: 55
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN