WTAM Salutes Vets on Veterans Day

New York's Intrepid Sea, Air And Space Museum Marks Veterans Day

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 11: People join New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio for a Veteran's Day ceremony aboard the Intrepid Museum on November 11, 2020 in New York City. The Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum partnered with the United War Veterans Council and organizers of the annual Veterans Day Parade for an annual Veterans Day ceremony. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)Photo: (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

If you see a vet, please sure to thank him or her for their service.

Thursday, November 11th is Veterans Day when we honor all United States military veterans who served our country.Veterans Day, originally known as Armistice Day, was first recognized on 11/11/1919 when President Woodrow Wilson made this address:

The White House, November 11, 1919.

A year ago today our enemies laid down their arms in accordance with an armistice which rendered them impotent to renew hostilities, and gave to the world an assured opportunity to reconstruct its shattered order and to work out in peace a new and just set of international relations. The soldiers and people of the European Allies had fought and endured for more than four years to uphold the barrier of civilization against the aggressions of armed force. We ourselves had been in the conflict something more than a year and a half.

With splendid forgetfulness of mere personal concerns, we remodeled our industries, concentrated our financial resources, increased our agricultural output, and assembled a great army, so that at the last our power was a decisive factor in the victory. We were able to bring the vast resources, material and moral, of a great and free people to the assistance of our associates in Europe who had suffered and sacrificed without limit in the cause for which we fought.

Out of this victory there arose new possibilities of political freedom and economic concert. The war showed us the strength of great nations acting together for high purposes, and the victory of arms foretells the enduring conquests which can be made in peace when nations act justly and in furtherance of the common interests of men.

To us in America the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service, and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of nations.

Armistice Day was renamed Veterans Day in 1954.

Below is a video tribute to Vietnam Vet Dave Shaarda.


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