Armed Forces Day
"AMERICA SUPPORTS YOU!!"
To learn more about the men and women of our Armed Forces
and their families, and how people and communities are supporting them, here
are some helpful links:
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Reposted from the Joe Foss Institute
By - Edward Palmer
President Harry S. Truman led the effort to establish a
single holiday for citizens to come together and thank our military members for
their patriotic service in support of our country.
On August 31, 1949, Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson
announced the creation of an Armed Forces Day to replace separate Army, Navy
and Air Force Days. The single-day celebration stemmed from the unification of
the Armed Forces under one department -- the Department of Defense. Each of the
military leagues and orders was asked to drop sponsorship of its specific
service day in order to celebrate the newly announced Armed Forces Day. The
Army, Navy and Air Force leagues adopted the newly formed day. The Marine Corps
League declined to drop support for Marine Corps Day but supports Armed Forces
Day, too.
In a speech announcing the formation of the day,
President Truman "praised the work of the military services at home
and across the seas" and said, "it is vital to the security
of the nation and to the establishment of a desirable peace." In an
excerpt from the Presidential Proclamation of Feb. 27, 1950, Mr. Truman stated:
"Armed Forces Day, Saturday, May 20, 1950, marks the
first combined demonstration by America's defense team of its progress, under
the National Security Act, towards the goal of readiness for any eventuality.
It is the first parade of preparedness by the unified forces of our land, sea,
and air defense."
The theme of the first Armed Forces Day was "Teamed
for Defense." It was chosen as a means of expressing the unification of
all the military forces under a single department of the government. Although
this was the theme for the day, there were several other purposes for holding
Armed Forces Day. It was a type of "educational program for
civilians," one in which there would be an increased awareness of the
Armed Forces. It was designed to expand public understanding of what type of
job is performed and the role of the military in civilian life.
The first Armed Forces Day was celebrated by parades,
open houses, receptions, and air shows. In Washington D.C., 10,000 troops of
all branches of the military, cadets, and veterans marched pass the President
and his party. In Berlin, 1,000 U.S. troops paraded for the German citizens at
Templehof Airfield. In New York City, an estimated 33,000 participants
initiated Armed Forces Day "under an air cover of 250 military planes of
all types." In the harbors across the country were the famed mothballed
"battlewagons" of World War II, the Missouri, the New Jersey, the
North Carolina, and the Iowa, all open for public inspection. Precision flying
teams dominated the skies as tracking radar was exhibited on the ground. All across
the country, the American people joined together to honor the Armed Forces.
According to a New York Times article published on May
17, 1952:
"It was a day for the military to show
'state-of-the-art' equipment to the civilian population they were protecting.
And it was a day to honor and acknowledge the people of the Armed Forces of the
United States.
"This is the day on which we have the welcome
opportunity to pay special tribute to the men and women of the Armed
Forces...to all the individuals who are in the service of their country all
over the world. Armed Forces Day won't be a matter of parades and receptions
for a good many of them. They will all be in line of duty and some of them may
give their lives in that duty."
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