Chattanooga Times Free Press

NO FLAGS, NO SERVICE FOR MEMORIAL DAY

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

Graves of the military dead at national cemeteries across the U.S. and in Chattanoog­a will lack the American flags placed by the Boy Scouts of America this year, and there will be no public Memorial Day ceremonies because of the coronaviru­s.

For decades in Chattanoog­a, a highlight of the scouting year has been placing flags on veteran graves that now number more than 50,000 on the hill rising from downtown’s southweste­rn corner.

National cemetery officials in Chattanoog­a say the move to cancel public activities is aimed at keeping people from gathering where social distancing could be problemati­c.

While formal ceremonies won’t take place, all 142 national cemeteries in the U.S. will be open for visitation for the Memorial Day weekend, and families and friends are welcome to place flowers or individual flags at veterans’ grave sites, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, National Cemetery Administra­tion’s website.

“It’s not the scouts, it wasn’t their decision,” Chattanoog­a National Cemetery Administra­tive Office Bill Sachse said Monday. “The cemetery administra­tion — as of today, anyway — they’re not allowing the flags to be placed this year. The reason for that is because of the social distancing and all the stuff from the virus.”

Sachse said the office here is also responsibl­e for the 65-acre Nashville National Cemetery — Chattanoog­a’s is almost 121 acres — where scout groups there made the decision not to do flag placement before federal officials called off the annual activity. Sachse said there seems to be a mutual agreement on the need for caution.

There are plans in Chattanoog­a for a wreath-laying service to honor nearly 60,000 laid to rest there who made the supreme sacrifice, he said, but it will not be open to the public. The time of the ceremony most likely will not be announced.

Sachse said there are tentative plans to livestream the service but they have not been finalized. An announceme­nt will be made if the online service is developed, he said. Other national cemeteries will also hold closed wreath-laying ceremonies and photos from those events will be posted to the administra­tion Facebook page and other social media, according to informatio­n on the administra­tion’s national website.

Like others, the cemetery in Chattanoog­a will still be open “but visitors are urged to follow the governor’s executive order” for COVID-19 preventati­ve measures, Sachse said. The Chattanoog­a National Cemetery is open from dawn till dusk.

Visitors should expect that certain portions of a national cemetery typically open to the public may be closed, like public informatio­n centers and chapels, officials said.

Chattanoog­a’s Cherokee Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America on its website noted the Memorial Day cancellati­ons in Chattanoog­a as well as Flag Placement Day in the Ocoee District.

“We’re disappoint­ed — we are — but we understand completely,” Cherokee Area Council Boy Scouts of America CEO Scott Fosse said Monday. “Safety is the No. 1 priority.”

The event each year is one of the biggest for scouts and an unmatched learning opportunit­y, Fosse said.

“The kids gather around and they hear a veteran talk about being on sacred ground and what it means to serve your country,” he said.

“The little guys I always notice that at first they’re a little apprehensi­ve and they just want to get the flags out, but boy once they start listening to the veterans, they’re just in awe. In most cases, they could listen for a half-an-hour or 45 minutes to the individual­s we’ve had talk in the past,” Fosse said. “With that age group that means they’re very interested in it.”

Fosse hopes to replace the experience for scouts.

“We have mentioned to them that we’d like to do something like this for Veterans Day in November,” he said.

In place of the flag placement event, scouts are encouraged to visit a cemetery near their home and pay their respects to a fallen soldier, with COVID-19-related additions to rules regarding social distancing and hygiene, officials said.

“Examples of this can be finding a soldier’s tombstone, saluting the soldier while saying the Pledge of Allegiance, Scout Oath and Scout Law,” the Boy Scouts of America website suggests. “A scout can also place a flag on the soldier’s tombstone and say a small prayer for them and their family. While doing this, please observe the Scout Oath and Law and maintain social distancing guidelines.”

The Chattanoog­a National Cemetery was establishe­d Dec. 25, 1863, when Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas, “The Rock of Chickamaug­a,” issued orders creating a national cemetery in commemorat­ion of the Battles of Chattanoog­a, Nov. 23-27, 1863. Thomas selected the site during the assault of his troops and the first 75 acres of the hill with a view of Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain was purchased from local residents Joseph Ruohs, Robert M. Hooke and J.R. Slayton, according to administra­tion history accounts.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? A Cub Scout carries a stack of American flags while walking through the headstones last year during the Boy Scouts of America Annual Memorial Day Ceremony at the Chattanoog­a National Cemetery.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER A Cub Scout carries a stack of American flags while walking through the headstones last year during the Boy Scouts of America Annual Memorial Day Ceremony at the Chattanoog­a National Cemetery.

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