Seasonal & Holidays
Parade, Ceremony Is Highlight Of Memorial Day In Pleasantville
Waterloo, New York, is considered the birthplace of Memorial Day.

PLEASANTVILLE, NY — The upcoming Memorial Day parade and wreath-laying ceremony is part of a nearly 160-year tradition that pays tribute to military personnel who lost their lives in service to their country.
Pleasantville will hold its Memorial Day parade and ceremony on Monday. Line up begins on Academy Street at 9:30 a.m. with a short ceremony at 10am. The parade then proceeds down Bedford Road with an observance ceremony in Memorial Plaza.
Parking will be restricted in the Memorial Plaza lot north of the gazebo on May 29 from 8am to noon.
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One of the region's most moving — and visible — events takes place in Rockland County.
Memorial Day watch fires sponsored by the Vietnam Veterans of America are held annually throughout the county to remember soldiers who are in service abroad and the troops who didn't return from war. The watch fires will be lit at 11:30 p.m. May 29 and burn for 24 hours at four locations:
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- Bowline Point Park in Haverstraw
- Eugene Levy Memorial Park on Route 45 in Pomona
- The top of Clausland Mountain in Orangeburg
- The east end of the Piermont Pier
Anyone wishing to retire flags can do so at any of the locations. A ceremony will be held at each of the four locations.
Memorial Day Weekend is also the unofficial kickoff to summer in the Hudson Valley. Here's something else to do on the weekend: May 28 is Hudson Valley Resident Free Day at DIA:Beacon
The history of Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day, dates back to 1868, when Gen. John A. Logan called for a day of remembrance to honor the Northern lives lost amid battle during the Civil War that had ended just a few years earlier, according to History.com. As time passed, more and more people called it Memorial Day, and it became a federal holiday in 1971.
Waterloo, New York, is considered the birthplace of Memorial Day. The town’s observance on May 5, 1866, predated Logan’s call for a day of remembrance. Local businesses closed and residents decorated the graves of fallen soldiers with flowers and flags.
Until World War I, the holiday honored only those soldiers who died while fighting for the Union in the War, as Southern states honored their war dead on a separate day. After the 116,000-plus American deaths in World War I, the tradition changed to remember all who have died while serving in the military.
Every year, a national moment of remembrance is held at 3 p.m. local time on Memorial Day. No matter where they are or what they’re doing, Americans are asked to pause for one minute in silence to remember military personnel who have given their lives in service to their country. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, the midday time was chosen because it’s a time when many Americans will be enjoying their freedoms on a national holiday.
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