Gainesville’s Evergreen Cemetery hosts Memorial Day service to remember those who paid the ultimate sacrifice
Share and Follow

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Gainesville’s Evergreen Cemetery Memorial Day service held on Monday offered a chance for community connection to veterans, active-duty servicemen and women, and their loved ones.

Kim Davis, Director of Alachua County Services, is a Navy veteran and former member of the National Guard. She said this event serves a broader purpose than just honoring those who gave their lives while serving our country.

“As a community,” she said, “We veterans bond together and we become a veteran family.”

Retired Army Major General Dave Hill spoke to the dozens who gathered to pay their respects. “Events like this,” he said, “are opportunities for veterans and soldiers to bond – and what better place than a cemetery?”

He recalled receiving his assignment during the Vietnam War while living in Washington, D.C., and the lives he saw lost afterward.

“This is a day of remembrance for me,” he said, “and is not a day for partying and getting drunk.”

Dozens gathered Monday morning to honor fallen service members in observance of Memorial Day. (Morgan Plotka/WUFT News)

Forest Hope, who was raised in Gainesville and attended Gainesville High School, served in the Marine Corps during the Vietnam War and spoke about the people who fought in the war and their sacrifice.

“Since Vietnam, many men have been sent to many countries to fight,” he said. “Too many have died. We have them buried all over the world in all seven seas. But from Vietnam, there are still 1,579 missing. Missing in action.”

An American flag marks the grave of a veteran at Gainesville’s Evergreen Cemetery. (Morgan Plotka/WUFT News)

Hope encouraged the audience to engage with veterans every day not just Memorial Day, impressing the importance of what we can learn from them and also to let them know someone cares.

Col. Jare Pattycook attended the event as a guest with his wife. Pattycook was in the Air Force for 38 years and came to mark the somber holiday as a remembrance of his and his brother’s former services. He said he is proud to be a part of the Gainesville community because of events like this.

“I am fortunate to be here and able to share my thoughts and feelings towards the community who honor my time in the Air Force,” he said.

Mimi Carr is a board member of the Evergreen Cemetery of Gainesville Association which helps organize the annual ceremony. “I was very impressed with the citizen activism that was involved with the board and with this cemetery,” said Carr. “How they embraced it and want to not forget our history.”

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

First ship passes through Key bridge wreckage in Baltimore thanks to new deep-water channel

BALTIMORE (AP) — The first cargo ship passed through a newly opened…

Students from Central Illinois pay tribute to a Civil War soldier by providing him with a dignified burial.

PONTIAC, Ill. (WCIA) — This week marked a ceremony 105 years in…

Fatal Crash Claims Life of One Person in Effingham County

EFFINGHAM COUNTY, Ill. (WCIA) — One person is dead following a multi-vehicle…

Potential Early Emergence of Cicadas in Central Illinois

URBANA, Ill. (WCIA) — The cicada countdown continues, and an expert with…

Woman with cancer rescues father-in-law from house fire in Colorado

LAFAYETTE, Colo. (KDVR) — Days after coming home from cancer surgery, a…

Advocates emphasize that the Weinstein verdict does not stop the progress of the #MeToo movement

NEW YORK – #MeToo founder Tarana Burke has heard it before. Every…

The windmill sails at Paris’ iconic Moulin Rouge have collapsed. No injuries are reported

PARIS (AP) — The iconic windmill sails of the Moulin Rouge, a…

Meeting for Parents of 3rd and 4th Graders at Andrew Johnson Elementary to Discuss TCAP Retention

KINGSPORT, Tenn. (WJHL) – Andrew Johnson Elementary School held a TCAP retention…