We honor our Veterans
On Veterans Day we honor men and women who have served and sacrificed in one
of America’s armed services. The holiday is also meant to highlight America’s
quest for world peace and our nation’s desire for justice and freedom throughout
the world – our nations’ higher goals.
Veterans Day is actually rooted in Armistice Day. On November 11, 1918, America
and her allies met with German leaders to sign a truce ending World War I. In
1919, President Woodrow Wilson decided that our nation should remember with
gratitude the end of that war and honor those who served in the military. He
called the holiday, Armistice Day. Armistice means “truce.”
In his proclamation the president wrote that Armistice Day was an
“opportunity…given to America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the
councils of the nations.”
The name Armistice Day was kept until 1954 when Congress changed the name to
Veterans Day honoring veterans of every era. President Eisenhower called on all
citizens to observe the day remembering the sacrifices of veterans and “the task
of promoting an enduring peace.”