Daily Breeze photo editor Chuck Bennett just posted his photo gallery of images taken at today's annual Memorial Day tribute at Green Hills Cemetery. And you can read the full story now at the Daily Breeze website.
I've covered this event for the paper for several years running now and it's always impressive -- from the sky divers to the patriotic music and moving speeches, this is a first-class program that you really should take the time to attend if you haven't already.
But it's interviewing some of the families and individuals who attend that often moves me the most.
This year, as the crowd began to clear out, I spotted a woman sitting with an old Army jacket draped across her lap.
The jacket?
That belonged to the family patriarch, Edward Lawrence Michaelis who served in Europe during World War II, collecting a host of decorations and awards (including one from the French government).
From spending three months in a fox hole to liberating a concentration camp, Michaelis saw more action -- 10 campaigns altogether -- than many of the U.S. troops that arrived later on the scene, his family told me.
Michaelis was single and living in Long Beach when he joined the Army after Pearl Harbor was attacked.
He served in North Africa and in many of the European centers of combat.
"He was there when the Americans arrived," his son, John, said.
Edward Michaelis died in 1985 at the age of 65. The family told me they attend the RPV service each year to represent him and the service he gave to his country.
Son Tom served in Vietnam in 1968-69 during the Tet Offensive, and every year on Memorial Day Tom hangs both his and his dad's service jackets out by way of reminder.
This year, it seemed appropriate, he said, to bring his father's jacket with them to the Green Hills service.
Few people leave the annual observance with dry eyes, me included. My dad and uncle both served in the Navy during World War II and I never fail to react when the band strikes up "Anchors Away."
I took some of my own photos today (above & on the jump. But trust me. Chuck's are much better on the Daily Breeze website. So be sure to check those out under our photo galleries.
