Ƶapp

Despite foul weather, tens of thousands volunteer lay wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery

Some people lay wreaths while others look for family members at the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Some people lay wreaths at headstones of veterans they don’t know while others look for family members at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Paula Carolan and Joanne Trust of New Jersey volunteered at the annual wreath laying ceremony.  (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Paula Carolan and Joanne Trust of New Jersey volunteered at the annual wreath laying ceremony. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Paula Carolan and Joanne Trust drove in from New Jersey for the ceremony. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Paula Carolan and Joanne Trust drove in from New Jersey for the ceremony. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Wreaths Across America Board Chair Wayne Hanson delivered a message to volunteers (Ƶapp/Kristi King). (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
People lay tributes and wreaths at the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
People lay tributes and wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid about 253,000 wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid about 253,000 wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The wreaths are made in Maine every year. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The wreaths are made in Maine every year. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A reverent send off for wreath laying volunteers. (Ƶapp/Kristi King) (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers braved the cold and rain to honor those who served. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers braved the cold and rain to honor those who served. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The Wreaths Across America caravan traveled for a week from Maine. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The Wreaths Across America caravan traveled for a week from Maine. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Thousands of volunteers showed up for a rainy day of wreath-laying at the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Thousands of volunteers showed up for a rainy day of wreath-laying at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
wreaths (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The Wreaths Across America ceremony aims to “remember the fallen…honor those who serve…teach our children the value of freedom.”  (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Trucks unloaded wreaths starting at about 9 a.m. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Trucks unloaded wreaths starting at about 9 a.m. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The opening ceremony for this year’s Wreaths Across America. (Ƶapp/Kristi King) (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Tractor trailers carried over a quarter of a million wreaths. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Tractor trailers carried over a quarter of a million wreaths. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid wreaths across the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid wreaths across the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Busy day for the founders: “It’s not enough to remember and honor. The most important thing is to TEACH.” (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Busy day for the founders: “It’s not enough to remember and honor. The most important thing is to teach.” (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
More than 150,000 wreaths are expected to be placed Saturday. (Ƶapp/Kristi King) (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Katie Smith of Fairfax Station, Virginia, volunteered to lay wreaths. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Katie Smith of Fairfax Station, Virginia, volunteered to lay wreaths. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A volunteer honors a fallen classmate. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A volunteer honors a fallen classmate. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The Wreaths Across America ceremony honors the fallen. (Ƶapp/Kristi King) (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A family honors their grandfather, who served in WWII. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A family honors their grandfather, who served in WWII.  (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
(1/22)
Some people lay wreaths while others look for family members at the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Paula Carolan and Joanne Trust of New Jersey volunteered at the annual wreath laying ceremony.  (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Paula Carolan and Joanne Trust drove in from New Jersey for the ceremony. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
People lay tributes and wreaths at the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid about 253,000 wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The wreaths are made in Maine every year. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers braved the cold and rain to honor those who served. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
The Wreaths Across America caravan traveled for a week from Maine. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Thousands of volunteers showed up for a rainy day of wreath-laying at the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
wreaths (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Trucks unloaded wreaths starting at about 9 a.m. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Tractor trailers carried over a quarter of a million wreaths. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid wreaths across the Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Busy day for the founders: “It’s not enough to remember and honor. The most important thing is to TEACH.” (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Katie Smith of Fairfax Station, Virginia, volunteered to lay wreaths. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A volunteer honors a fallen classmate. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
A family honors their grandfather, who served in WWII. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)
Volunteers laid about 253,000 wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery. (Ƶapp/Kristi King)

WASHINGTON — Wrapped in rain gear, carrying umbrellas and draped in plastic ponchos, almost 57,000 volunteers gathered Saturday morning for the Wreaths Across America event at Arlington National Cemetery.

Some volunteers, carrying multiple wreaths, walked purposefully toward the graves of family members or fallen comrades. And others wandered contemplatively, searching for just the right place.

“I say there’s a story behind every stone,” Wayne Hanson, board chair for Wreaths Across America, said.

At the event’s opening ceremony, Hanson asked volunteers to read the head stones where they were placing wreaths and to say the name out loud.

“There’s a saying: ‘you die twice,” Hanson said. “Once when your heart stops beating and you take that last breath. But, you die a final time when your name is spoken for the very last time.”

Hanson believes many of those honored Saturday might not have had their names spoken aloud since the last Wreaths Across America last year.

At Arlington National Cemetery, 253,000 wreaths were laid. Across the region, 267,000 wreaths were laid, including those placed on graves at the in Washington, D.C.

National Wreaths Across America day takes place at cemeteries around the U.S. and the globe. In all, 1.8 million graves received wreaths nationally at 1,640 locations on Saturday.

After sloshing through puddles, choosing a headstone, carefully placing and arranging wreaths, some people would then salute; some made signs of the cross; and many paused contemplatively.

“As these families, these kids and parents place a wreath on a veterans grave and say their name out loud, they make a connection with their own history, and that’s how we teach,” said Karen Worcester, the executive director for Wreaths Across America. “We take it from being a sea of stones to being a group of individuals who are worthy to be honored and remembered because their sacrifice has given us the freedom that we enjoy.”

The group’s mission is to “Remember, Honor and Teach,” but, Worcester said most important of all is to teach.

“We have to teach our children about the courage and sacrifice of these people,” she said. “What makes them step up. What makes America worth fighting for.”

Watching the grow over 27 years, its founder now has a new mission in mind.

“The ultimate goal that we have is: we want to place a wreath on every single American veteran’s grave in the world,” Morrill Worcester said. “And there are many overseas. It’s a tall order. We know that.”

But, Karen Worcester, the executive director and Morril’s wife, believes it can happen.

“If he doesn’t get it done, it’s what he wants our kids to do,” Karen Worcester said.

Kristi King

Kristi King is a veteran reporter who has been working in the Ƶapp newsroom since 1990. She covers everything from breaking news to consumer concerns and the latest medical developments.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your Ƶapp account for notifications and alerts customized for you.