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Cortez observes Veterans Day with services, parade

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Monday, Nov. 12, 2018 6:07 PM
Members of the Veterans Day parade, including Cortez firefighters, school marching band members and local military veterans, walk and drive down Montezuma Avenue Monday afternoon in celebration of the national holiday honoring former members of the U.S. military.
From left to right: Marine Corps veteran Charlie Rosenbaugh and Navy veteran Tom Brenner observe “The Honoring,” a painting by local artist Michelle Martin (not pictured) that depicts the Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Virginia.
Volunteers of the Veterans Day luncheon at the Elks Lodge No. 1789 serve Mexican cuisine to local veterans Monday morning. The event’s attendees and volunteers were largely former U.S. military members and their spouses, some serving as early as the Korean War.
Local veterans partake in a lunch served by volunteer members of the Elks Lodge No. 1789 in Cortez on Monday. The lodge’s Veterans Committee, which offers volunteer and donation services to local military veterans, organizes the event annually.
Don Tripp, an Air Force veteran from the Koran War, and his son George Tripp, a Navy veteran, speak with local artist Michelle Martin about her painting, which depicts the Iwo Jima Memorial in Arlington, Virginia.
An attendee at the Veterans Day parade on Monday takes a photo of a U.S. Army Jeep in the procession. Traffic was blocked off on Montezuma Avenue for about an hour for parade setup and celebration.
Students from local elementary schools attended Monday’s Veterans Day parade down Montezuma Avenue in celebration of the holiday, which this year marks the 100th anniversary of the end of World War 1.

One day after the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, Americans observed Veterans Day on Monday with parades and celebrations in honor of those who served in the U.S. military.

In Cortez, residents held a parade down Montezuma Avenue, served complimentary lunch to military veterans and dedicated a painting in their honor.

Montezuma Avenue paradeCortez residents marched down Montezuma Avenue beginning at 1 p.m. for the annual Veterans Day parade, sponsored by Ute Mountain American Legion Post 75, to celebrate and show support for local veterans and military personnel.

Many of the attendees at the parade were students from Kemper Elementary, Children’s House, Cortez Middle School, Montezuma-Cortez High School and other local schools, some of whom participated in the procession.

The high school and middle school bands performed songs as processions of cars, motorcycles and fire engines rolled down the road, honking and sounding their sirens.

Firefighters, police and other groups marched down Montezuma Avenue, handing out candy and shaking the hands of residents along the road who donned veteran hats and jackets.

Elks Lodge veterans serve lunchThe Elks Lodge No. 1789 in Cortez celebrated Veterans Day Monday with a complimentary brunch for U.S. veterans who served in wars from Korea to Afghanistan.

The event was organized by the Elks Lodge Veterans Committee, which serves local veterans year-round with donations including food, clothing and services such as car rides to Veterans Affairs doctor appointments.

The Elks Lodge hosts the veterans luncheon annually in conjunction with the Montezuma County Veterans Day Parade.

Dennis Wojciechowski is the chairperson of the veterans committee. He organizes many of the committee’s volunteer activities, and he is a veteran of the Cold War.

“For me, it’s an emotional thing,” Wojciechowski said about observing Veteran’s Day as veteran himself.

Wojciechowski and other Elks Lodge members, many of whom are also veterans, volunteered by making and serving Mexican cuisine for lunch and cupcakes for desert.

Painting dedicationDuring the luncheon at Elks Lodge, local artist Michelle Martin dedicated a painting of the United States Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Virginia, titled “The Honoring”.

Martin said she created the painting after a chance encounter at the Iwo Jima Memorial with a veteran who was present on day in Japan depicted by the sculpture.

“I was blessed that night so many years ago,” Martin said during her dedication. “I often think of the hero who shared his painful memories on that cold rainy night.”

Martin’s son, Joshua James Everin, a former Army enlistee, died in 2013, three days shy of his 22nd birthday. The painting is dedicated to Everin and “all of the men and women who have served and given all.”

“Thank you for your service and sacrifice,” Martin told the crowd of veterans at the luncheon Monday.

The Elks Lodge will display the painting on the premises and sell print copies of it, proceeds of which will fund veterans committee activities, beginning in February.

cpape@the-journal.com

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