Since 2012, March 29th has been commemorated as National Vietnam War Veterans Day. It was declared as Vietnam Veterans Day by President Barack Obama, but it wasn’t made official until 2017 when Congress signed into law the Vietnam War Veterans Recognition Act.
You Are Not Forgotten
March 29 is significant as on that date more than 50 years ago, the last combat troops were withdrawn from Vietnam and the last prisoners of war held in North Vietnam arrived home on U.S. soil.
50th Vietnam War Commemoration To The Vietnam Veteran To Those Who Been Told PTSD Would Go Away In Time. To Those Who Returned But Are Still Haunted By The Nightmares Of War. To Those Who Suffer From Agent Orange Exposure And Are Still Fighting The Last Battle. To Those Who Have More Friends On The Vietnam Memorial Wall Then Alive Today.
THANK YOU!
Sgt Terry Leon Wilson Vietnam Veteran [My Vietnam Veteran]
Sgt Terry Leon Wilson served in the United States Army and fought for his country in Vietnam while I was in my last years of high school. He was over in Vietnam for three years serving his country. He was/is one of 2,709,918 Americans who served in Vietnam. Remember he and all Vietnam Veterans were not properly welcomed home. No mention of Welcome Home, no fanfare, no parade, no recognition when they arrived back on American soil.
Whenever you meet a Vietnam Veteran or any Veteran, please thank them for their service to this country. Let them know their bravery, sacrifice, and strength hasn’t gone unnoticed and America will always be indebted to them for all they have given to the country.
Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans!
God Bless. Remember and Honor Vietnam Veterans. Thank you for sharing your time and thoughts with me. I appreciate y’all very much.
Normally, most people would only think about wreaths and or the laying of wreaths at cemeteries around the Christmas holiday season. The Christmas Season being the annual time for wreaths to be laid in the Arlington National Cemetery as well as other cemeteries across America.
Wreaths Across America Mobile Unit
Wreaths Across America was formed in 2007 by the Worcestershire Family with the support of Veterans Organizations and a variety of other groups. These groups had previously helped with their annual wreath ceremony in Arlington. Wreaths Across America was formed as a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, to continue and expand this effort, and support others around the country who wanted to do the same.
Welcome Home Wreaths Across America
The organization’s mission which was established is to Remember. Honor. Teach.
WELCOME HOME [Signabove Door]
Wreaths Across America is dedicated to teaching all generations about the value of their freedoms, and the importance of honoring those who sacrificed so much to protect those freedoms.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE
In 2022, the organization launched its expanded TEACH Program and collaborated with like-minded organizations focused on character development and service projects for young people of all ages, with lesson plans for all grade levels and learning abilities.
POW-MIA WELCOME HOME Wreaths Across America
The Wreaths Across America (WAA) continues its commitment to remember our fallen servicemen and women all throughout the year. One way they do this is with the Remembrance Tree Program.
The Remembrance Tree Program was established as another way to remember and honor our veterans. WAA established this program for families of veterans to provide a living memorial to their lost loved ones.
Wreaths Across America Mobile Unit
The Remembrance Tree Program is a part of the Wreaths Across America organization that we ( my daughter and I) had not been familiar with prior to visiting the Wreaths Across America Mobile Unit when it came to Fort Mill, South Carolina.
The WAA purchased their own dog-tag machine which allows feed families of the veteran the ability to customize their message for the dog-tag. The family or their representative is taken out to the balsam tip land, in Harrington, Maine, to find a tree that will become a living memorial to their loved one. The dog-tag is then placed on the trunk of an evergreen tree of their choosing and a red marker is placed on the tree to show that it has been chosen as a memorial.
One of the Volunteers with Wreaths Across America was kind enough to inform us of this special program and gave us the opportunity to provide the information for a dog-tag to be made. The information has been given and we are waiting to hear when it will be placed on a tree as a living memorial to my late husband and father to my children, Sgt. Terry Leon Wilson Vietnam Veteran (1954-2018).
“To be killed in war is not the worst that can happen. To be lost is not the worst that can happen… to be forgotten is the worst.”
— Pierre Claeyssens (1909-2003)
The WAA is continuing doing all they can to ensure that no veteran is ever forgotten. They have been traveling all across America with their mobile unit to provide support and assistance to honor their commitment to Remember. Honor. Teach.
To all who have served and or are serving, Thank You for your Service. To all Vietnam Veterans, Welcome Home!