First Observance of Memorial Day - Waterloo, NY
Posted by: YoSam.
N 42° 54.265 W 076° 52.035
18T E 347565 N 4751892
In May 1966, US Congress and President Johnson declared Waterloo was the birthplace of Memorial Day
Waymark Code: WMK455
Location: New York, United States
Date Posted: 02/10/2014
Views: 2
County of first: Seneca County
Location of marker: US 20/NY 5 (Main St.), in front of Lafayette Park, Waterloo
Marker erected by: The State Education Department
Marker Text:
On May 5, 1866, the residents of Waterloo held the first complete,
community-wide obervance of Memorial Day. They dedicated the entire day to honoring the Civil War dead in a solemn and patriotic manner. Throughout the village, flags, draped in mourning, flew at half mast. Ladies prepared wreaths and bouquets for each veteran's grave. Businesses closed, and veterans, civil organizations and townspeople marched to the strains of martial music to the village cemeteries. There, with reverent prayers and patriotic ceremonies, the tradition of Memorial Day was born.
Henry C. Welles, a prominent citizen, first proposed the idea for a day completely devoted to honoring the Civil War dead. General John B. Murray, the Seneca County Clerk, who had commanded the 148th New York Infantry Regiment in the war, quicky advanced the thought and marshalled community support. Since that year, Waterloo has annually observed Memorial Day. New York, in 1873, became the first state to proclaim Memorial Day, or Decoration Day, as it was originally called, a public holiday.
In May 1966, a joint resolution by the United States Congress and a proclamation by President Lyndon B. Johnson officially recognized Waterloo as the birthplace of Memorial Day.
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