Veterans' Day
(November 11)

In 1918, on
the eleventh hour of the eleventh day in the eleventh month, the world rejoiced and
celebrated. After four years of bitter war, an armistice was signed. The "war to end
all wars" was over.
November 11
was set aside as Armistice Day in the United States, to remember the sacrifices that men
and women made during the war in order to ensure a lasting peace. On Armistice Day,
soldiers who survived the war marched in a parade through their home towns. Politicians
and veteran officers gave speeches and held ceremonies of thanks for the peace they had
won.
Congress
voted Armistice Day a legal holiday in 1938, twenty years after the war ended. But
Americans realized that the previous war would not be the last one. World War II began the
following year, and nations great and small again participated in a bloody struggle. After
the Second World War, Armistice Day continued to be observed on November 11.
In 1953
townspeople in Emporia, Kansas called the holiday Veterans' Day in gratitude to the
veterans in their town. Soon after, Congress passed a bill introduced by a Kansas
congressman renaming the national holiday to Veterans' Day.
Americans
still give thanks for peace on Veterans' Day. There are ceremonies and speeches, and at
11:00 in the morning, most Americans observe a moment of silence, remembering those who
fought for peace.
After the
United States' involvement in the Vietnam War, the emphasis on holiday activities has
shifted. There are fewer military parades and ceremonies. Veterans gather at the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. to place gifts and stand quiet vigil at the names of
their friends and relatives who fell in the Vietnam War. Families who have lost sons and
daughters in wars turn their thoughts more toward peace and the avoidance of future wars.
Veterans of
military service have organized support groups such as the American Legion and Veterans of
Foreign Wars. On Veterans' Day and Memorial Day, these groups raise funds for their
charitable activities by selling paper poppies made by disabled veterans. This bright red
wildflower became a symbol of World War I after a bloody battle in a field of poppies
called Flanders Field in Belgium.

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