VFW Post 7327 Highway Clean-up – 05 October 2024
Please join us on Saturday, 05 October 2024 at 0800 at Pure Hockey Parking Lot (in front of TGI Fridays near Springfield Towne Center); rain date 12 October 2024
This is the catagory every post will have!!
Please join us on Saturday, 05 October 2024 at 0800 at Pure Hockey Parking Lot (in front of TGI Fridays near Springfield Towne Center); rain date 12 October 2024
Event Details: 05 October 2024, 0800 until 1100-1200 (rain date: 12 October 2024)
Location: Pure Hockey Parking Lot (in front of TGI Fridays near Springfield Towne Center)
All supplies are provided – this is a great opportunity to volunteer!
VFW’s Voice of Democracy and Patriot’s Pen Scholarship competition. Local high school and middle school students can compete for thousands of dollars in scholarships. The National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP) has again approved both contests for its National Advisory List of Contests and Activities.
VFW’s Voice of Democracy and Patriot’s Pen Scholarship competition. Local high school and middle school students can compete for thousands of dollars in scholarships.
PATRIOT PEN
Each year, nearly 68,000 students in grades 6-8 enter the VFW’s Patriot’s Pen youth essay contest for a chance to win their share of more than $1.4 million in state and national awards. Each first-place state winner receives a minimum of $500 at the national level, and the national first-place winner wins $5,000!
The 2024-2025 theme is: My Voice in America’s Democracy?
VOICE OF DEMOCRACY
Established in 1947, our Voice of Democracy audio-essay program provides high school students with the unique opportunity to express themselves in regards to a democratic and patriotic-themed recorded essay. Each year, nearly 25,000 9-12 grade students from across the country enter to win their share of more than $2 million in educational scholarships and incentives awarded through the program.
The national first-place winner receives a $35,000 scholarship paid directly to the recipient’s American university, college or vocational/technical school. A complete list of other national scholarships range from $1,000-$21,000, and the first-place winner from each VFW Department (state) wins a minimum scholarship of $1,000.
The 2024-2025 theme is: “Is America Today Our Forefathers’ Vision?”
The poppy movement was inspired by the poem “In Flanders Fields” written by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae of the Canadian forces, before the United States entered World War I. Poppies were flowering in the spring of 1915 on the battlefields of Belgium, France and Gallipoliow, growing wild amid the ravaged landscape which was the inspiration for Colonel McCrae’s poem.
Selling replicas of the original Flanders’ poppy was originally sold to provide relief for the people of war-devastated France. Shortly after World War I, Madame E. Guerin, founder of the American and French Children’s League, became concerned that the free world was forgetting too soon those sleeping in Flanders Fields. Guerin began attending the conventions of any serviceman’s organization that would allow her to speak. Her request was always the same – to enact the following resolution: “Be it resolved that every member, if possible, and his or her family shall wear a silk red poppy.”
In April 1919, the “Poppy Lady”, as Madame Guerin was now known, arrived in the United States. When the Poppy Lady turned to the VFW for help, the organization readily agreed to take over from the American Legion. In May 1922, the VFW conducted the first nationwide distribution of poppies in the United States. Then, at its National Encampment in Seattle in August 1922, the organization adopted the poppy as the official memorial flower of the VFW.
A plan culminated to pay disabled and needy American veterans to make the poppies. This plan was presented to the 1923 National Encampment for approval. Immediately following the plan’s adoption, a VFW poppy factory was set up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was from these early disabled poppy makers that the name which would be the flower’s trademark came. The name grew out of the poppy makers’ remembrances of their buddies who never came back from war. Undoubtedly, because it expressed so simply the deepest significance of the Poppy Plan, the name stuck. All over the country, the little red flower became known as the “Buddy Poppy.”
In February 1924, the VFW registered the name “Buddy Poppy” with the U.S. Patent Office. On May 20, 1924, a certificate was issued granting the VFW, under the classification of artificial flowers, all trademark rights to the name of “Buddy.” No other organization, firm, or individual can use the name “Buddy Poppy.” The VFW has made this trademark a guarantee that all poppies bearing that name and the VFW label are the work of bona fide disabled and needy veterans.
Posts receive their profits from donations received in exchange for poppies to the public. National by-laws require that the profits from these sales be placed in the post’s Relief Fund to be used only for the following purposes:
No matter what the cost of maintaining and supplying the Poppy Shops, the memorial poppy is never sold, but given in exchange for a contribution.
Today, VFW Buddy Poppies are assembled by disabled, needy, and aging veterans in VA Hospitals and domiciliaries across the country. The majority of proceeds derived from each donation conducted by VFW Posts and their Ladies Auxiliaries is retained locally to provide for veteran services and welfare. The minimal assessment (cost of Buddy Poppies) to VFW units provides compensation to the veterans who assembled the poppies, provides financial assistance in maintaining state and national veterans’ rehabilitation and service programs, and partially supports the VFW National Home for orphans and widows of our nation’s veterans.
We will follow the model we successfully implemented during our last several Adopt-A-Highway sessions to safely and confidently conduct our clean-up. As a quick review, we will meet in the parking lot of TGI Fridays which is next to our section of the Franconia-Springfield Parkway (6751-B Frontier Drive, Springfield, VA) at 8:00 AM. We coordinated with TGI Fridays’ manager to ensure that our vehicles will be welcome in the parking lot and we can also use the area for drop offs/pick-ups if desired. We will then walk to our section of the road, so no one has to ride in anyone else’s car. All necessary equipment – reflective vests, gloves, grabbers, and orange garbage bags – snacks and bottled water will be provided. Pants, long-sleeve shirts, and boots are encouraged.
This remains an important and highly visible community service project along a busy stretch of road that includes official signs recognizing VFW Post 7327’s “adoption” of this part of the Parkway. This is also a good opportunity for all members of the Post and Auxiliary to participate and to make sure that our stretch of the Franconia-Springfield Parkway, to include theVeterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Bridge, will be “standing tall and looking good” for Veterans Day (11 November 2022). If you haven’t been to a VFW or Auxiliary meeting lately, this is a great chance to re-connect with Post 7327, your Comrades in the VFW, and Auxiliary members too. All are invited and friends, family, and community members are welcome.
After the cleanup is complete, some of us may choose to enjoy carry-out or lunch at TGI Fridays.
If you have questions or want more information, please contact Marty Holland, 703-232-5611 or martyholland@verizon.net.