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By Scooter MacMillan, Editor
Sarah Stein and Oliver Smith closed Monday’s Memorial Day ceremony by playing “Taps.” Photo by Scooter MacMillan.
At least 40 people participated in the inaugural Memorial Day celebration on the Charlotte Town Green. The names of 31 Charlotters who gave their lives for the United States during war were read aloud by town residents.
After each name was read, there was a pause for reflection …
In years past, members of the Charlotte Grange have celebrated Memorial Day by putting flags on the graves of town residents who have served in the country’s armed forces.
Jordan Paquette talks about the significance of Memorial Day. Photo by Scooter MacMillan.
“This year we wanted to do something more,” said Grange member Linda Hamilton. “We wanted to honor the soldiers who had some connection to Charlotte, who died in military service, and we wanted to remember them as individual people. They had names. We don’t know much about their lives, but we can imagine they were people just like us. They had families, they had friends, they had plans.”
Jordan Paquette, a Charlotte fire fighter and a combat veteran in Iraq and Afghanistan, said, “It’s so important to remember, especially for our young folks, that everything we have today, everything is because someone said, ‘Yes, I’m going to stand up for what I believe in.’”
The 31 people remembered at Charlotte’s Memorial Day commemoration were:
More than 40 people showed up to the Charlotte Memorial Day commemoration on the Charlotte Town Green. Photo by Scooter MacMillan.
Many people from Charlotte served in the Revolutionary War but, Hamilton said, they don’t have good information on who they were.
After the reading and quiet contemplation of these names, trumpeters Sarah Stein and Oliver Smith played “Taps.”
Then those gathered gradually dispersed, returning to doing the kinds of activities that these fallen 31 Charlotters had helped ensure they would be able to do …
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