Cover Photo by Mark R. Day

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Poem: Columbia Mourns Her Lost Sons and Daughters



Columbia, like a mother, mourns for all her fallen sons and daughters; heart broken by the sorrowful knowledge, that their voices have been forever silenced by bitter fate.

All those bold young hearts now devoid of life; no longer pulsing with song nor laughter.

All their spirit, kindness, joy, and love; encased within the earth never again to brighten a weary world.

They are forever as they were and can never be anything more.

So, forgive them of their perceived ills in life and let them sleep undisturbed.

They are as the dust, their journey of life complete.

No other dawn nor sunset shall they see

They march now in the great host of host amid the starry night.

They are far removed and from this world of human contempt, hate, and spite.

So, Columbia mourn their passing, morn their loss, and hold their memory close.

It is their due and our obligation, to remember them with a raised glass and never-ending toast.



Written and Presented by Mark R. Day on 5/26/2019, all rights reserved by the author.

Oration for Decoration Day at Old City Cemetery in Lynchburg, VA Sunday 26 may 2019




     Memorial Day has always held a place in my heart, that reflects both great pride and great pain.  When, I was a child it was called Decoration Day and, in the days, immediately preceding Decoration Day my mother, and I would walk around my hometown house to house asking for donations and passing out paper poppies for the Veterans of Foreign Wars.  There was a parade, which brought out all the people in town, and in which my Uncles and others marched resplendent in the uniforms they had worn in WW II and Korea.  There was a program, following the parade, at the towns war monument to honor the men who had gone off from our small town to America’s Wars, replete with pomp and ceremony, the reading of names, the placement of flags, and ending in a crescendo of rifle fire followed by the sound of Taps.  The whole experience was thrilling and to a younger me, it was a celebration that was the prelude to summer and the end of the school year.  It was just beyond my grasp to truly understand its meaning and importance to the men who stood so solemnly at attention and sometimes shed a tear in remembrance.

     As the years passed and I became more aware of the world, what was now called Memorial Day became a different experience.  I saw boys, I knew go off to war in Vietnam; and some of them were lost in that distant land.  Memorial Day took on a deeper and more painful meaning as, I heard their names called out in the service of remembrance at the war monument and the thunder of the guns followed by Taps became more poignant.  I came to really understand the sacrifice of each American soldier, now I could feel both pride and sadness in the sound of Taps, and I understood the need to remember and honor them all.

     Around us lie the mortal remain of more than 2200 American soldiers.  Yes, American soldiers.  I will not refer to them by the color of their uniform or the side they fought for.  To do so is irrelevant and does not do justice to the fact that most fought not for causes or issues, but rather as all soldiers do; they fought, in the end, for the man on their left and they fought for the man on their right, their brothers in arms, tent mates, and friends.  In the aftermath of war and the death, pain, and destruction that it causes those who have lost their lives are mourned first by their loved ones and friends, and later by those many descendants, whose lives are inherently and invariably connected to them.  As time has passed and memory faded, we are left with only the words, which are inscribed on the headstones that surround us as a reminder that they ever existed in this mortal realm.  Such is the reality of time, memory, and the human condition, we can become disconnected from the past unless we make a conscious effort to inculcate the act of remembrance through ritual and ceremony.  In one of my favorite movies the leading character is given a watch by the men he has led for many years.  Inside the watch are the words “Lest we Forget” The character is overcome by the gift and clutches it close as he fights to hold back a tear.  So, it must be for us in today’s ceremony and in the all the ceremonies that will come in the future to pledge ourselves to live by the motto “Lest we Forget” and dedicate ourselves to the cause of remembrance,  make the emotional connection with the past, and feel our hearts stirred or shed a tear

     I have often walked in this section of the cemetery at all sorts of hours and sought to glean some insight to the common thread, which exists between the soldiers from both sides of that terrible conflict who are buried in this sacred plot of earth[1].  I have contemplated the conversations that might occur between former enemies as they seek solace in this bivouac of the dead in the eerie stillness of the darkest hours of the night.  I have stood here in early morning light, noon day sun, and in the darkness of the evening wondering what the spirits of these men might be thinking about this country and its people.   Do they worry that we will not honor the commitment made to them years ago to never forget them?  Do they wonder why so few come to pay respects?  Do they often feel forgotten?  In the musings of my mind, I suspect that if they could their speak to us the  answer to all these questions would be YES and that is why we must do everything possible to make things right.

     In our country today, we find our commitment to remember some American soldiers of the past called into question and our motives for honoring them subjected to scrutiny.  There are those who would say we should forget these men and move on, but I would say to them a resounding NO!  If my sixty-seven years of life have taught me nothing else, they have taught me that shared experiences, such as this one we are involved in today, are the glue which holds a culture, a people, a nation together.  Many of our citizens today see Memorial Day as, I did in my youth; a celebration of summer with no emphasis on the true meaning of the moment.  They have no ties to the past; they have no connection to the fallen, they have lost the sense of respect that the joined experience of remembrance and honoring the war dead in our society provided.   As a result, a destructive discord has arisen, which threatens the vary foundations of our National Unity. 

     To disavow any American Soldier whose actions or service, i.e. Vietnam, Civil War, Indian Wars or Mexican War, does not fit into our modern world viewpoint is a disservice to all veterans.  Instead of honor will there be hate and retribution masked as moral correctness?  I hope not, but there is an insensitivity and an unwillingness to stop the use of presentism when looking at our history in America today.

     In my mind no American soldier should ever be discounted and discarded, every life which was lost was a wound to our country, our communities, and families.  We should not accept or give countenance to actions which disrespect the life of any American Soldier, for if we do, we are disavowing the very essence of who we are and where we came from.   I can only pray that the citizens of my country will perhaps grow as, I did with age and experience, and realize the importance of honoring the men and women of the past who gave everything so that we might have the life we do today, regardless of the historical context in which they lived and died.

     In conclusion please listen to the 3rd and 7th verses of Francis Miles Finch’s poem “The Blue and the Grey”

From the silence of sorrowful hours

The desolate mourners go,

Lovingly laden with flowers

Alike for the friend and the foe:

Under the sod and the dew

Waiting for judgement-day;

Under the roses the Blue,

Under the lilies, the Grey



No more shall the war cry sever,

Or the winding rivers be red;

They banish our anger forever

When they laurel the graves of our dead!

Under the sod and the dew

Waiting for judgment-day,

Love and tears for the Blue,

Tears and love for the Gray.

It is my hope that we can find it in our hearts to practice love for all and to shed tears for all of America’s lost sons and daughters.  It is also my hope that we, Americans will follow the maxim “Lest we Forget” and restore the true meaning of Memorial Day / Decoration Day in the hearts of all our Citizens.

     I wish to thank the ladies of the UDC for granting me this opportunity to speak on this most special of days,   and I pray that as a people we never forget any American soldier who shed his blood and may we as a nation find a pathway to reconciliation and unity. 





[1] If necessary, point out the graves of Union Pvt. Bobbitt and Pvt. Ferguson in the Confederate section. also point out that there are several USCT buried in the Old City Cemetery.

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Speech: Given at Lincoln Tomb Ceremony 4/14/18 in Springfield, Illinois


Remarks Lincoln Tomb 4/14/18

President Agosto, President Cleveland, President Greenwalt, Commander-in-Chief Rojo, Special Guest, Brothers and Sisters of the Allied Orders, and Friends.

Regardless of the Weather and our personal comfort it is our sacred obligation to be here honoring the Life and remembering the Death of Abraham Lincoln the 16th and, to my mind, most significant President of the United States.

Recently the Brothers of the Garfield Camp, SUVCW, in Baltimore, gifted me with a small book titled Lincoln’s Daily Devotional.  The book contains the original text of “The Believer’s Daily Treasure or Texts of Scriptures arranged for everyday use.”  In life President Lincoln was known to possess a copy of this work, which his pastor and presented to him.  This morning, I want to read the passage which is designated for April 14th.

“Search the Scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they are they which testify of me” John v.39”  Lord, thy teaching grace impart, that we may not read in vain; Write thy precepts on our heart, Make thy truths and doctrine plain; Let the message of thy love guide us to thy rest above.”

I suppose at this point you are wondering were, I am going with this.   Well, I would like you to envision Abraham Lincoln sitting in his study on the morning of April 14th, 1865 reading, contemplating, and reflecting upon the devotional.  Would his mind like mine begin to associate the events which had transpired those four long years of heartache and bloodshed, which only five days earlier seemed to have come to an end in Appomattox, VA, and wonder if his efforts in word and deed; would be a testimony to future generations.  Would he ask himself if he been able to impart the value of granting grace to those who had fought against us?   Had he been able to share his precepts of justice and etch them upon the hearts of his countrymen?  Did he make clear the truth of his intent? 

For me the answer is a resounding YES!  Abraham Lincoln’s legacy resounds clearly in our national memory and his words were not uttered in vain but enhanced and expanded the very foundations of our beliefs about the character of America.   Listen to his message of grace and hope for all Americans  “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”  Listen to his instructions on precepts “Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.  It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.  Lastly listen to these Lincoln Quotes “It is not my nature, when I see a people borne down by the weight of their shackles - the oppression of tyranny - to make their life more bitter by heaping upon them greater burdens; but rather would I do all in my power to raise the yoke than to add anything that would tend to crush them” and “Our defense is in the preservation of the spirit which prizes liberty as a heritage of all men, in all lands, everywhere. Destroy this spirit and you have planted the seeds of despotism around your own doors.”

May Lincoln’s words be the eternal light which shines in the darkest of times, may they teach us humility, instill a love of peace, and promote a sense of Grace for all mankind now and forever.

May the words of Lincoln be written on your hearts and may those words guide us to live lives which testify to the power of his legacy.

May God bless the soul of Abraham Lincoln and grant his Grace upon the United States of America

Thank you for your attention.

Written and given by Mark R. Day 4/14/18, Copyright by Mark R. Day 4/14/18, all rights reserved

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Comments for Lexington park Medal of Honor Ceremony 9/30/2017


Comments for Lexington park Medal of Honor Ceremony 9/30/2017

Only a few short years ago, I was privileged to be part of the ceremonial guard for the unveiling of this magnificent statuary tribute to the three medal of honor awardees; Sgt. Harris, Pvt. Barnes, and Quartermaster Hayden, who’s service we are here to remember today and all the men of St. Mary’s County who placed their lives on the line to preserve the Union and free a people from bondage.

In our current era of history, when symbols have become front page news, this monument takes on even more importance.  A primary goal of the Sons of Union Veterans is the remembrance of men like those named on this monument.  We seek to, as we say, keep green the memory of the sacrifices made by both the soldier and his family to ensure that President Lincoln’s bold vision of emancipation and his pledge that “Government of the People, for the people, and by the people should not perish from the Earth” would prevail.

It was the men, whose names appear in such bold relief upon this monument, and many thousands of others who joined the United States Colored Troops, that took up the great work of fulfilling Lincoln’s call to complete the rebirth of our nation under the principles originally stated in Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence.   They were willing to commit their lives to a greater cause.  For they not only fought to preserve the Union and establish freedom in the United States; they fought to achieve respect and equality for an entire race of human being who had for too long lived under the shadow of oppression and servitude.

Insert Adlib – A previous speaker had noticed that the park was full of young men playing organized football as their parents watched from bleachers overlooking the fields.   I addressed those attending the Medal of Honor ceremony thusly “I would ask each of you, why aren’t those young men and their parents here with us?   Don’t they know how important remembering those who gave so much to ensure that they have the freedom they are enjoying?”   Let me say this.  I find no fault in the young men or their parents.  The fault lies in the lack of knowledge they have about the men named on this monument and that has led to their perceived indifference.  My mother once told me that if you are remembered you never die but if your name becomes lost to history and meaningless you truly die forever.   Will that be the fate of the names on this monument?  Only time will tell, but I pray it will not be so.

So, here we are.   We have come here to reaffirm these men and remember their names in a society that is less and less aware of them.  To us falls the obligation to ensure that these men do not die forever, that they are remembered by future generations for their dedication to the cause of freedom, and honored for their valor.   We, the living descendants and recipients of the freedoms and privileges they struggled to obtain; must fulfill our obligation to all the men who Lincoln said, “Gave the last full measure of devotion.”   We must hold ourselves accountable for preserving their memory and commit our every energy to educate our youth and perpetuate a sense of duty within society to never forget those of the past and their efforts to bequeath us the great nation we live in today.



Speech written and presented by Mark R. Day, September 30th 2017 at the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Ceremony held by the Sgt. James H. Harris Camp #38 Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War in Lexington Park, Maryland.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 9/30/2017, all rights reserved

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Welcoming remarks as MC of the Lincoln Death Day Luncheon

Brothers and Sisters,

I wish to welcome you to the Lincoln Death Day Luncheon.  It is my privilege and pleasure to be the Master of Ceremonies for this event as well as the earlier ceremonies at the Tomb.  I hope that each of you are enjoying the beautiful day that God has granted us and it is my heartfelt wish, that each of you have been able to connect with old friends or discover new friends with whom you will now share this meal.  Let this be a special time filled with the conversations and fond remembrances, which will strengthen the bonds of Fraternity, Charity, and Loyalty that keep us steadfast in fulfilling our purposes as the Allied Orders and entreat us to act in harmony and with respect for each other.   For only in that manner can we ever hope to inculcate all citizens with a love for those who gave the last full measure of devotion to preserve this country, and more especially honor the memory of our beloved President Lincoln, whom we are gathered to honor.

Written and presented by Mark R. Day 4/15/17.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 4/15/17, all rights reserved.

Welcoming Remarks as MC for the Lincoln Death Day Ceremonies in Springfied, Ill. 4/15/17

Good morning!   Welcome to the annual Lincoln Death Day Ceremony.   I am Mark Day, SVCinC of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, and today's Master of Ceremonies.  It is very fitting, that we gather here this morning for it was one hundred and fifty two years ago, this very day, that our 16th President, Abraham Lincoln, succumbed to his assassins bullet and Secretary of War Edwin Stanton uttered that now famous statement "Now he belongs to the ages."  We now stand here, in front of Lincoln's final resting place as witnesses to the power and permanence of Stanton's words.    It is our duty and responsibility to inculcate our fellow citizens with the same sense of duty we carry within our hearts and to ensure the continuity of this tradition which honors the memory of Abraham Lincoln.  Let us never loose sight of that mission. 


Remarks Written by and presented by Mark R. Day 4/15/17.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 4/15/17, all rights reserved.

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Speech: Short Remarks given at Mount Hope Cemetery in Dahlonega, GA

Short Remarks given at Mount Hope Cemetery in Dahlonega, GA on the occasion of a joint SUVCW and SCV grave marker rededication ceremony 9/10/16


The ceremony was organized and conducted by the Kennesaw Mountain Camp Sons of Union Veterans and Camp #1860 Blue Ridge Rifles Sons Confederate Veterans


Brothers of the Department of Georgia and South Carolina, members of Camp 1860 the Blue Ridge Rifles, Sisters of the Allied Orders, Families and Friends

Good Morning!  Isn’t this a gorgeous day, that God has blessed us with for our ceremonies.

We have gathered here to celebrate the lives of two American soldiers; Cpl. Isaac G. Rucker (USCT) and Capt. Augustus F. Boyd (CSA).

While these two men wore different uniforms, they are both American soldiers and both were held in great respect  by their birthplace for they are both listed among the noble dead of Dahlonega.  A fact, which we and all Americans should never lose sight of.

It is most fitting that we have assembled members from both the Allied Orders and the SCV to conduct a joint ceremony of rededication and remembrance.  This joint event acts as a reminder, that all the men who fought the Civil War were American soldiers who, after the great and terrible struggle of war, were reconciled and reunited as one nation

Through this ceremony we are demonstrating, that though enemies in battle these two soldiers offer us a chance to contemplate the values of duty and devotion they held in common. 

It is for us to rededicate ourselves to the task of finding ways to honor all our soldiers without malice. We must be dedicated to the act of honoring the dead from both sides; for no American soldier should ever be forgotten.   


Written and presented by Mark R. Day 9/10/16.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 9/10/16 all rights reserved