Posted on

TOWNSHIP OF WASHINGTON DEDICATES A NEW VETERAN’S MEMORIAL

10497927 927089773975056 6472451122864528481 o

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Twp. of Washington NJ, The Township of Washington Veteran’s Memorial is the Eagle Scout Project by the town’s own Eagle Scout Candidate, James Stickel. Located on the front lawn of the Library overlooking Schlegel Lake, the now completed Veteran’s Memorial will stand as a dignified assembly area for veteran’s ceremonies. The dedication ceremony will take place of on Saturday, November 9th, at 10:00 a.m. at the Township Library. All are invited and encouraged to attend.

Continue reading TOWNSHIP OF WASHINGTON DEDICATES A NEW VETERAN’S MEMORIAL
Posted on

Midland Park Veterans Day Memorial Service

10497927 927089773975056 6472451122864528481 o

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Midland Park NJ, Veterans Day Service to honor the men and women who have served and are serving will be at 11:00 a.m. on Monday, November 11th at Veterans Plaza in Wortendyke at Central and Greenwood Avenues. All are invited to attend. In the event of inclement weather, services will be held at 11:00 a.m. at the Midland Park Fire Station.

Posted on

Ronald Reagan’s 1985 Veterans Day Address

Official_Portrait_of_President_Reagan_1981

 

Watch: Ronald Reagan’s 1985 Veterans Day Address 

In 1985, President Reagan gave his Veteran’s Day Address at Arlington National Cemetery. With the Cold War a fresh threat, Reagan emphasized the importance of peace while insisting, “strength is a declaration that cannot be misunderstood. Strength is a condition that declares actions have consequences. Strength is a prudent warning to the belligerent that aggression need not go unanswered.”

This Veteran’s Day, we humbly offer our utmost gratitude to all who have fought to preserve the greatest country man has ever devised. While words hardly seem sufficient, we can offer this: we remember.

Here’s the full text of Reagan’s address:

A few moments ago I placed a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and as I stepped back and stood during the moment of silence that followed, I said a small prayer. And it occurred to me that each of my predecessors has had a similar moment, and I wondered if our prayers weren’t very much the same, if not identical.

We celebrate Veterans Day on the anniversary of the armistice that ended World War I, the armistice that began on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. And I wonder, in fact, if all Americans’ prayers aren’t the same as those I mentioned a moment ago. The timing of this holiday is quite deliberate in terms of historical fact but somehow it always seems quite fitting to me that this day comes deep in autumn when the colors are muted and the days seem to invite contemplation.

We are gathered at the National Cemetery, which provides a final resting place for the heroes who have defended our country since the Civil War. This amphitheater, this place for speeches, is more central to this cemetery than it first might seem apparent, for all we can ever do for our heroes is remember them and remember what they did — and memories are transmitted through words.

Sometime back I received in the name of our country the bodies of four marines who had died while on active duty. I said then that there is a special sadness that accompanies the death of a serviceman, for we’re never quite good enough to them-not really; we can’t be, because what they gave us is beyond our powers to repay. And so, when a serviceman dies, it’s a tear in the fabric, a break in the whole, and all we can do is remember.

It is, in a way, an odd thing to honor those who died in defense of our country, in defense of us, in wars far away. The imagination plays a trick. We see these soldiers in our mind as old and wise. We see them as something like the Founding Fathers, grave and gray haired. But most of them were boys when they died, and they gave up two lives — the one they were living and the one they would have lived. When they died, they gave up their chance to be husbands and fathers and grandfathers. They gave up their chance to be revered old men. They gave up everything for our country, for us. And all we can do is remember.

And the living have a responsibility to remember the conditions that led to the wars in which our heroes died. Perhaps we can start by remembering this: that all of those who died for us and our country were, in one way or another, victims of a peace process that failed; victims of a decision to forget certain things; to forget, for instance, that the surest way to keep a peace going is to stay strong. Weakness, after all, is a temptation — it tempts the pugnacious to assert themselves — but strength is a declaration that cannot be misunderstood. Strength is a condition that declares actions have consequences. Strength is a prudent warning to the belligerent that aggression need not go unanswered.

Peace fails when we forget what we stand for. It fails when we forget that our Republic is based on firm principles, principles that have real meaning, that with them, we are the last, best hope of man on Earth; without them, we’re little more than the crust of a continent.

We endanger the peace and confuse all issues when we obscure the truth; when we refuse to name an act for what it is; when we refuse to see the obvious and seek safety in Almighty. Peace is only maintained and won by those who have clear eyes and brave minds.

Each new day carries within it the potential for breakthroughs, for progress. Each new day bursts with possibilities. And so, hope is realistic and despair a pointless little sin. And peace fails when we forget to pray to the source of all peace and life and happiness. I think sometimes of General Matthew Ridgeway, who, the night before D-day, tossed sleepless on his cot and talked to the Lord and listened for the promise that God made to Joshua: “I will not fail thee, nor forsake thee.”

We’re surrounded today by the dead of our wars. We owe them a debt we can never repay. All we can do is remember them and what they did and why they had to be brave for us. All we can do is try to see that other young men never have to join them. Today, as never before, we must pledge to remember the things that will continue the peace. Today, as never before, we must pray for God’s help in broadening and deepening the peace we enjoy. Let us pray for freedom and justice and a more stable world. And let us make a compact today with the dead, a promise in the words for which General Ridgeway listened, “I will not fail thee, nor forsake thee.”

In memory of those who gave the last full measure of devotion, may our efforts to achieve lasting peace gain strength.

Thank you. God bless you all, and God bless America.

 

Posted on

Ridgewood Police Honor Guard presented the colors at Saturday’s Veterans Day Ceremony

Ridgewood Police Honor Guard presented the colors at Saturday’s Veterans Day Ceremony

Photo courtesy of Ridgewood Police Department

November 12,2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, The Ridgewood Police Honor Guard presented the colors at Saturday’s Veterans Day ceremony at Van Neste Square Park. Even the cold weather could not stops people from honoring our men and women in uniform.  Thank you to our friends at American Legion Post 53 and all Veterans who have served our country ?? — at Van Neste Square.

Posted on

Veterans Day celebration at Paramus Park Mall included a Flash Mob by the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus featuring patriotic songs

Orpheus Club Men's Chorus of Ridgewood

Orpheus Club Flash Mob Honors Veterans

Veterans Day celebration at Paramus Park Mall included a Flash Mob by the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus featuring patriotic songs.

November 15,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Paramus NJ, The Paramus Park Mall was the scene on Saturday, November 12, 2016, of a flash mob staged in honor of veterans and Veterans Day by the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus. The performance began as Orpheus tenor Charles Brown of Hackensack stepped out alone in the atrium beneath the food court, and sang the opening words of “America the Beautiful” to the unsuspecting crowd of shoppers nearby. Quickly, he was joined by other singers until the full chorus had formed. Before long a large crowd of shoppers stood by as the Chorus’ voices swelled with patriotic fervor and filled the atrium with their second song, “God Bless America.”

Many shoppers sang along. More than a few onlookers had tears in their eyes. Some stated that they were thrilled to feel once again uncomplicated patriotism without faction or partisan discord. It was a pure, magical moment with no agenda save to honor those who served. To that end Orpheus accomplished its mission.

The Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus has been a keystone of the cultural life of the region for 106 years. Founded in 1909, it is the oldest cultural institution in all of Bergen County. Now almost 50 voices strong, the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus is directed by John Palatucci and accompanied by pianist Ron Levy.

Your next chance to hear Orpheus perform will be at their Gala Holiday Concerts on Saturday, December 17, 2016 at 7:30 pm, and on Sunday, December 18, 2016 at 4:00 pm, both at the Ridgewood United Methodist Church, 100 Dayton Street, in downtown Ridgewood. Tickets for these concerts may be purchased online, with a 20% advance purchase discount, at the Orpheus website: www.ridgewoodorpheusclub.org.

Posted on

The Heroes I’m Remembering Today

Jimmy Stewart

 

by Robert Matzen

There is an affectionate term for the planes that helped win the fight against Hitler: warbirds. I saw all the warbirds of World War II in our recent visit to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where my new book, Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe, was launched the evening of October 27.

This Veterans Day, it’s easy to think about the boys who stormed Normandy’s beaches 72 years and 5 months ago because they’ve been memorialized in the neat and tidy The Longest Day, and in the stunningly realistic Saving Private Ryan, and as one who sees and hears and feels and smells and tastes history, I don’t know how they did what they did that day. You know how you blanch when facing headwinds and slanting rain and the natural sense is to squint from it and recoil and run for cover. Well imagine the raindrops are eight-ounce parcels of lead coming at you like slanting rain. We’re all waterproof so the rain can’t really hurt us although we act as if it could. None of us are bulletproof and for thousands of those guys that day, the rainstorm ended in instant death or worse.

Where do the warbirds fit in this story? Well, I didn’t know before writingMission exactly how the war had played out up to the point that the LSTs hit the beaches of France. I knew there was an air war and a ground war in Europe, but it didn’t sink in that the air war came first and made the ground war possible, which means that for Americans over a two-year period, the front lines in the war for Europe were manned by flyers of the U.S. Army Air Forces. They climbed into their warbirds every morning not knowing if they’d ever walk the earth again. They’d give a thumbs-up and take off not into a glorious sunrise but into pea soup because, after all, this was England and the English weather is usually dreary.

And the warbirds themselves; yikes. Sure you had your sleek and nasty fighter planes, your Warhawks and Thunderbolts and Mustangs and the kids who climbed into them fought like the glamorous swashbucklers they were. Theirs was the grave responsibility of guarding and defending the most unglamorous of warbirds, the heavy bombers. And that is the core story of Mission.

Two heavy bombers flew for America in WWII, the B-17 Flying Fortress and the B-24 Liberator. The relative beauty of the 17 and its lethal firepower made it the media darling of the war. Think Memphis Belle. The 24 was described as “the packing crate the B-17 came in.” It was boxy; it was decidedly unglamorous. Imagine this as a verbal portrait of your airplane: “On the ground it looks like a slab-sided prehistoric monster wading through swamps.”

But the boys assigned to the B-24 Liberators loved their airplanes. They cared for each as if it were a hotrod, as if the thing wasn’t a flying death trap. The Liberators Jim Stewart flew exclusively in the war had real problems, like controls that required muscle at all times, and leaks in the fuel lines that would, all of a sudden, cause them to blow up in the air, usually on ascent when loaded with gas and bombs. Ka-BOOM! Ten men obliterated over friendly skies because of spark meeting fuel leak: pilot, copilot, bombardier, navigator, radio operator, engineer, waist gunners, ball turret gunner, tail gunner, all gone. This happened to Lt. Earle Metcalf and crew of Stewart’s squadron one morning. There one moment and vanished the next, with no trace ever found.

On each mission to Germany, missions sent up every possible day, hundreds of planes would take off from a cluster of bases each five miles from the next in eastern England into that pea soup I described earlier featuring low cloud cover. If the pilot didn’t fly precisely in that cloud cover, as in, fly straight for 47 seconds after takeoff while climbing to 5,000 feet at an air speed of 150 and then on the 48th second turn right to a precise compass heading, ka-BOOM! Two bombers both flying blind would collide—loaded with gas and bombs—and not 10 but 20 men would be erased from the roster. That happened more than once on missions Jim commanded. He would hear the deafening explosion close by, muscle the controls as the shock wave hit his plane, and know that a score of fine flyers alive five seconds ago were now dead. Young men he had just seen and eaten breakfast with.

Dear readers, we haven’t even left friendly airspace yet! This was the easy part before hitting an enemy coastline that featured hundreds of anti-aircraft batteries aimed at Forts and Libs lumbering straight and level across the sky as if targets in a carnival shooting gallery. Each plane held 10 males somewhere between 19 and 26, except for Jim, the old man of 35. They were kids, so very young, so very brave, so very skilled who died by the hundreds and thousands for the two years leading up to D-Day in an ongoing effort to smash Hitler’s ability to manufacture weapons of war. Not until they had succeeded in the task of fighting and fighting and fighting on endless brutal missions to knock out enough of the German air fleet did D-Day even become possible.

I spend a great deal of time in Mission driving home the point that, yes, Jim was a hero, but the band of brothers he flew with every day were people who lived and breathed. Each represented the best the United States had to offer. On the morning of a mission, they rode out to their slab-sided reptile of an airplane, a beast that might turn around and bite them at any moment. They struggled inside it while loaded down with flying gear. They held their breath through a lumbering takeoff, each focused on all the tasks essential to keeping that plane in the air for a flight to and from Germany. For many, too many, something would go wrong and they would fly on to glory.

I am writing about the men of the Eighth Air Force today, but I think of them every day. They inspire me to be an American worthy of their bravery and sacrifice.

Robert Matzen is the author of seven books, including the bestsellers Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3 andMission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe. Connect with Robert Matzen on GoodreadsAmazonTwitter, Facebook, and at https://robertmatzen.com/

Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe [GoodKnight Books] is available via Amazon and in brick-and-mortar retailers across the U.S.

Posted on

the Ridgewood Blog Honors Veterans Day

thankful-for-veterans
November 11,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Veterans Day is an official United States public holiday, observed annually on November 11, that honors military veterans; that is, persons who served in the United States Armed Forces. It coincides with other holidays, including Armistice Day and Remembrance Day, celebrated in other countries that mark the anniversary of the end of World War I; major hostilities of World War I were formally ended at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, when the Armistice with Germany went into effect. The United States previously observed Armistice Day. The U.S. holiday was renamed Veterans Day in 1954.

Veterans Day is not to be confused with Memorial Day; Veterans Day celebrates the service of all U.S. military veterans, while Memorial Day honors those who died while in military service.

Posted on

Ridgewood Veterans Day Service, 2015

Ridgewood Veterans Day Service, 2015

Ridgewood NJ, American Legion Post #53 hosted a Veteran’s Day Service at 11AM in Memorial Park at Van Neste Square.

All photos by Boyd Loving

DSCF3804

DSCF3851

lots of photos : https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.947147355324110.1073741866.115857291786458&type=3

Posted on

Congressmen Scott Garrett: Today we thank our veterans for preserving the rights and freedoms we hold dear

12241110_10153369888113402_6608660165367768700_o

“While many of us hear about the threats facing our country, a few extraordinary men and women have come face to face with them. They looked our enemies in the eyes and took a stand against tyranny, violence, oppression, and terror. Today we thank our veterans for preserving the rights and freedoms we hold dear. May God bless our veterans, and may God bless the United States of America.” Congressmen Scott Garrett

12241085 10153369888273402 4694460323909440258 o

12239182 10153369888253402 7989600205365669645 o

12238446 10153369888128402 7524901196702854595 o

The values and  principles  of the United States are preserved by the willingness of  brave men and women to stand and defend our nation. These men and women—our veterans—sacrifice time with their families, the comforts of home, and their very safety in the name of freedom. Today our country stops to recognize their service. It is Congress’ responsibility to ensure our veterans receive the benefits and recognition that they deserve when they return home from the front lines.

Last year, we were all disturbed to learn that thousands of veterans waited more than 90 days to see a doctor at the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) health care facilities. In the aftermath of these revelations, I led the New Jersey delegation in demanding answers about the VA health care facilities that service New Jersey veterans to ensure our heroes are receiving the best possible care.

In addition to this request, the House of Representatives took legislative action. We built on last year’s Veterans’ Access to Choice and Accountability Act by passing the VA Accountability Act of 2015. These pieces of  legislation would help get veterans off wait lists and expand the VA secretary’s ability to fire employees who have been negligent in serving veterans.

I am also a cosponsor of the Keeping our Promises to Veterans Act and the Military SAVE Act. These bills would expand the eligibility for participation in the Veteran Choice Program by allowing veterans to find health care outside the VA health care system that is closer to home and by shortening wait time goals from 30 to 15 days.

Finally, if you or someone you know is a veteran that is having a difficult time with the VA or other  federal agencies, please let me help. My offices in Newton and Glen Rock have helped countless veterans receive the benefits they’ve earned and they’re available to you any time.

While many of us hear about the threats facing our country, these brave men and women have come face to face with them. They looked our enemies in the eyes and took a stand against tyranny, violence, oppression, and terror. Today we thank our veterans for preserving the rights and freedoms we hold dear. May God bless our veterans, and may God bless the United States of America.

Posted on

Ridgewood Veteran’s Day Service – Wednesday, November 11

VetsDay2011V_theridgewood blog

American Legion Post #53 will host a Veteran’s Day Service at 11AM in Memorial Park at Van Neste Square.

All are welcome to attend to honor our veteran’s.

Veteran’s Day – Village Hall Closed In observance of Veteran’s Day, Ridgewood Village Hall will be closed.
Additionally, sanitation and recycling collection will be suspended that day and resume the following day, November 12th

Posted on

Holocaust Survivor Pens ‘Thank You’ To Vets And Liberators

imgres-2

Holocaust Survivor Pens ‘Thank You’ To Vets And Liberators

(Newsmax) – A survivor of the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps who would forge a new life in America as a famed tailor says he owes everything to God and the “soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines of the U.S. Armed Forces” who liberated him.

“Everything I am or will ever be I owe to God and the soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines of the U.S. Armed Forces who fought and died to liberate me,” writes Martin Greenfield in a New York Post column.

Greenfield, who came to the United States after the war, says that Americans who believe “that America has seen her best days” just need to look to the members of the armed forces to be proven wrong.

“America is bigger and stronger than the vexing problems we now face. Lest one doubt this, simply look at our nation’s 2.4 million Armed Forces members. There you will find the best of us,” he says.

Greenfield, whose first job after arriving in America was as a floor boy in a Brooklyn garment factory, would eventually work his way up the ladder and within a decade was making suits for the factory and its famous clients, according to a Washington Post profile.

The author of the new book “Measure of a Man: From Auschwitz Survivor to Presidents’ Tailor,” Greenfield says of the men and women who liberated the concentration camps, “they rescued me, and America welcomed me here and eventually claimed me as one of her own.”

He also praises the families of the veterans.

– See more at: https://www.teaparty.org/holocaust-survivor-pens-thank-vets-liberators-66895/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=holocaust-survivor-pens-thank-vets-liberators#sthash.MyFjw1nl.dpuf

Posted on

Thanking America’s Heroes on Veterans Day

10352140_10152512727728402_1821463145185055233_n

Rep Garrett with two vets at the Glen Rock street fair 

Dear Friend,
 
Today, our nation pauses to remember the sacrifices that have been made by our veterans—every man and woman who proudly defended our country. To a brave few, duty and service are more than words, they are a way of life. 
 
As Americans, our freedoms and liberties have been secured because of our veterans.  From the Continental Armies of the American Revolution to those returning home today from places abroad, our veterans have proven, time and again, to be among our greatest national treasures.

As President John F. Kennedy—himself an American war hero—once said, “A nation reveals itself not only by the men it produces, but also by the men it honors, the men it remembers.”  Today, and every day, please join me in remembering and honoring our veterans.

Sincerely,


Rep. Scott Garrett

Posted on

Got Freedom? Thank a Veteran

VetsDay2011V_theridgewood+blog.net_

Got Freedom? Thank a Veteran
NJ Tea Party Coalition

On the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918 an armistice between Germany and the Allied nations came into effect. On November 11, 1919, Armistice Day was commemorated for the first time.

In 1919, President Wilson proclaimed the day should be “filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s service and with gratitude for the victory”. There were plans for parades, public meetings and a brief suspension of business activities at 11am.

In 1926, the United States Congress officially recognized the end of World War I and declared that the anniversary of the armistice should be commemorated with prayer and thanksgiving. The Congress also requested that the president should “issue a proclamation calling upon the officials to display the flag of the United States on all Government buildings on November 11 and inviting the people of the United States to observe the day in schools and churches, or other suitable places, with appropriate ceremonies of friendly relations with all other peoples.”

An Act (52 Stat. 351; 5 U. S. Code, Sec. 87a) was approved on May 13, 1938, which made November 11 in each year a legal holiday, known as Armistice Day. This day was originally intended to honor veterans of World War I.

 A few years later, World War II required the largest mobilization of service men in the history of the United States and the American forces fought in Korea. In 1954, the veterans service organizations urged Congress to change the word “Armistice” to “Veterans”.

Congress approved this change and on June 1, 1954,

November 11 became a day to honor all American veterans, where ever and whenever they had served.

The following is a list of Veterans Day discounts on restaurants, goods, services and events for 2014.

https://www.military.com/veterans-day/veterans-day-military-discounts.html

Eight Ways to Express Appreciation on Veterans Day:

https://www.military.com/veterans-day/8-ways-to-express-appreciation-on-veterans-day.html?comp=7000023121580&rank=3

Posted on

Mission: Letters From Home – from Rush Revere

unnamed-15

Mission: Letters From Home – from Rush Revere

Writing to Our Troops: Don’t Know Where to Start? Tips:

The Adventures of Rush Revere Series is a proud sponsor of Operation Gratitude, a tremendous organization that sends care packages to military heroes serving overseas. Every package and letter from home reminds our troops how much we all care.

In honor of Veterans Day, we need your help with Mission: Letters From Home! The mission involves teaming up with Operation Gratitude to send letters to service personnel. This is a wonderful and simple homeschool, or class, project for your students to bring lasting joy to our troops.

Here are a few simple tips on writing letters to our troops:

Start with a salutation such as, “Dear Service Member,” or “Dear Hero.”
Share a little about your class, or your life, what the military means to you.
If you can’t find the right words, consider making a drawing or painting.

Please send your class letters or artwork in one big envelope to:

Letters From Home
c/o KARHL Holdings, LLC.
4521 PGA Boulevard, Box 258
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida 33418

Special prizes will be awarded to the school, class, or student that shows enthusiasm for the mission. Here is a great example: https://opgrat.wordpress.com/2014/10/30/a-simple-thank-you-with-a-lasting-impact/

Posted on

The Ridgewood Concert Band “A Salute to Our Veterans ”

unnamed-15

The Ridgewood Concert Band “A Salute to Our Veterans ” 

November 9th 2014

Ridgewood NJ, The Ridgewood Concert Band “A Salute to Our Veterans ”  Friday November 14th at West Side Presbyterian Church and is FREE for Veterans and Active Duty Military Members .

The Ridgewood Concert Band (RCB) will continue their 32nd Season with their annual “Salute to Our Nation’s Veterans” concert.  As a sign of our appreciation for their service, this concert is free of charge for veterans and active duty military members.  

The RCB is pleased to welcome back Col. Arnald Gabriel, conductor emeritus of the U.S. Air Force Band, as a guest conductor.  It is fitting that Col. Gabriel joins the RCB for their annual salute to veterans as he was a combat machine gunner with the United States Army’s famed 29th Infantry Division during World War II and received two awards of the Bronze Star Medal, the Combat Infantryman’s Badge, and the French Croix de Guerre.

The program will include a wide variety of music ranging from patriotic classics to a new clarinet concerto by Michael Gandolfi performed by the RCB’s Concertmaster Richard Summers. The RCB will also perform Camille Saint-Saëns’ “Hail! California”, which has not been performed in 100 years.  (See “Program Note” below.)

The Mahwah High School Band under the direction of Jeffrey Bittner will open with a prelude performance at 7:30pm and the RCB program will begin at 8:00pm.