Every December, Wreaths Across America mobilizes thousands of volunteers nationwide to honor and remember our fallen heroes. They place evergreen wreaths on the headstones of veterans in cemeteries, ensuring their sacrifice is never forgotten while fostering a spirit of community and gratitude.
The VFW Post 10147 Apopka/Altamonte Springs/VFW Post 10147 Auxiliary (FL0760P) assisted the Edgewood/Greenwood Cemetery & Bay Ridge Cemetery to remember and honor the veterans by laying remembrance wreaths on the graves of our country’s fallen heroes.
For more details, visit the Wreaths Across America VFW Post 10147 Page.
According to the Wreaths Across America website, Morrill Worcester, owner of Worcester Wreath Company of Harrington, Maine, was a 12-year-old paper boy when he won a trip to Washington, D.C. It was his first time in our nation’s capital and one that would change the trajectory of his life and the lives of millions of others across the country. Seeing the hundreds of thousands of graves and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery made an especially indelible impression on him. It was to be an experience that would follow him throughout his life and successful career, reminding him that his good fortune was due largely to the values of his nation and the veterans who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country.
In 1992, Worcester Wreath had a surplus of wreaths nearing the end of the holiday season. Remembering his boyhood experience at Arlington, Worcester realized he had an opportunity to honor our country’s veterans. With the aid of Maine Senator Olympia Snowe (ret), arrangements were made for the surplus wreaths to be placed at Arlington in one of the older cemetery sections receiving fewer visitors each passing year.
As plans were underway to transport the wreaths to Washington, several other individuals and organizations stepped up to help. James Prout, owner of local trucking company Blue Bird Ranch, Inc., generously provided transportation to Virginia. Volunteers from the local American Legion and VFW Posts gathered with community members to decorate each wreath with traditional red, hand-tied bows. Members of the Maine State Society of Washington D.C. helped to organize the wreath-laying, which included a special ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
For over a decade, this annual tribute went on quietly and privately. Everything changed in 2005 when a photo of the stones at Arlington, adorned with wreaths and covered in snow, circulated the internet. Suddenly, the homespun tribute from a small town in Downeast, Maine, was receiving national attention. Thousands of requests from all over the country from people wanting to help purchase and lay wreaths at Arlington. Thousands more wished to emulate the Arlington project at their local, National, and State cemeteries. Still, others desired to share their stories and thank Morrill Worcester for honoring our nation’s heroes. Many were surviving family members of some of those heroes.
Unable to donate thousands of wreaths to each state, Worcester sent seven wreaths to every state: One for each military branch and an additional wreath to pay tribute to POW/MIAs. In 2006, with the help of the Civil Air Patrol and other civic organizations, simultaneous wreath-laying ceremonies were held at over 150 locations nationwide. The Patriot Guard Riders volunteered as escorts for the wreaths going to Arlington in the beginnings of the annual “Veterans Honor Parade,” a convoy that now travels the East Coast every year in early December.
The annual trip to Arlington and the groups of volunteers eager to participate in Worcester’s simple wreath-laying event grew each year until it became clear that the desire to remember and honor our country’s fallen heroes was bigger than he could have imagined possible at the outset. The movement had grown beyond Arlington and bigger than this company in Harrington, Maine.
In 2007, the Worcester family, along with the support of veterans organizations and a variety of other groups and individuals who had helped with their annual veterans wreath ceremony in Arlington, formed Wreaths Across America, a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, to continue and expand this effort, and support others around the country who wanted to do the same. The simple mission of the organization was established:
Remember. Honor. Teach.
One year later, over 300 locations held wreath-laying ceremonies in every state, Puerto Rico, and 24 overseas cemeteries. Over 100,000 wreaths were placed on veterans’ graves, and over 60,000 volunteers participated. That year, December 13, 2008, was unanimously voted by the United States Congress as “Wreaths Across America Day.”
In 2014, the goal of placing a veteran’s wreath on every grave marker was met with the sponsorship and placement of 226,525 wreaths.
In 2018, a delegation of volunteers and supporters was invited by the American Battle Monuments Commission to hold a wreath ceremony to honor the nearly 10,000 heroes interred at Normandy American Cemetery in France.
In 2022, Wreaths Across America and its national network of volunteers placed more than 2.7 million sponsored veterans’ wreaths on the headstones of our nation’s service members at 3,702 participating locations. This was accomplished with the support of more than 5,000 sponsorship groups, corporation contributions, and in-kind donations from the transportation industry across the country.
The wreath-laying that began more than 30 years ago is still held annually on the second or third Saturday of December. WAA’s annual pilgrimage from Harrington, Maine, to Arlington National Cemetery has become known as “the world’s largest veterans’ parade.” Every year, the convoy of trucks, local law enforcement, staff, and supporters stop at schools, monuments, veterans’ homes, and communities to talk about the Wreaths Across America mission and how important it is to remember, honor, and remind and teach…