History of Veterans Day

  • 2022-11-11, 05:53 AM
  • Rachel Dahl
History of Veterans Day Jim Cork

In the early morning hours of November 11, 1918, representatives of France, Britain, and Germany met in a railroad car near Compiegne, France, to sign an armistice ending World War I, or the Great War as it was known at that time. The cease-fire took effect at 11:00 a.m. that day – the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. Up and down the trenches, after four long years of the most horrific fighting, the world had yet known the guns fell silent.

“The roar stopped like a motor car hitting a wall,” one U.S. soldier wrote to his family. Soldiers on both sides slowly climbed out of the earthworks. Some danced; some cheered; some cried for joy; some stood numbed. The Great War had left some 9 million soldiers dead and another 21 million wounded. No one knows how many millions of civilians died. Much of Europe lay in ruins. But finally, with the armistice, it was “all quiet on the Western Front”.

For many years November 11 was known as Armistice Day to honor those who fought in World War I. In 1954 Congress changed the name to Veterans Day to recognize all American veterans... Memorial Day is for remembering soldiers who lost their lives in the service of their county. Veterans Day is set aside to honor and thank all who have served in the U.S. armed forces.

The American Patriot’s ALMANAC; Bennett, William J. & Cribb, John T.E.; 2010 Thomas Nelson Publishing

 

Rachel Dahl

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