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Daughters of American Revolution mark graves

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Sunday, May 25, 2014 5:07 AM
Pam Thompson places a flag on a grave at Sunnyside Cemetery. In back is Velma Kingery, looking for more soldiers graves.
Peggy Scates takes a flag to place on the gravesite of Confederate soldier George May at the old Dolores Cemetery.
Halene West carries the flags to put on veterans’ graves for Memorial Day.
Daisy Mahaffey places a flag on a soldier’s grave at Sunnyside Cemetery in Lewis.



"Find the cost of freedom, buried in the ground." Stephen Stills



A squadron of patriotic women marched into ten rural cemeteries the past two weeks to pay their respects to veterans of American wars.

For the last five years, local members of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) have a tradition of placing flags at each grave of a veteran, and removing the old one.

"We chose to cover rural cemeteries because people tend to forget them," said June Head, a DAR member and event organizer. "We pull up the old flags and replace them. And we're always researching to find graves we've missed."

DAR members have a blood lineage to Revolutionary War veterans, but there are none buried in the American Southwest because it was still part of Spain in the late 18th century.

However, when settlers arrived here in the 1880s, many of them were veterans of the Civil War. Local veteran groups have documented 168 Civil War veterans buried in the area.

George May was one of them. Born in 1838, he went on to serve in the Civil War in the early 1860s in the infantry. He survived, and later arrived at Big Bend near present-day Dolores to work for the cattle industry, passing away in 1918, Head explained.

Where he was buried was a mystery for decades. Then, during a visit to a remote corner of the Old Dolores cemetery, an astute observer noticed "G. May" prominently carved into a sandstone outcropping. Now aged with decorative lichen, the original memorial is still clearly visible today.

"It was arranged for a military headstone to also mark the grave," Head said. "The Mays were a prominent family."

Nearby May Canyon is likely a tribute to the family.

Veterans from the Civil War, both World Wars, Korea, Vietnam, The Persian Gulf, Iraq, and Afghanistan are all buried in area cemeteries.

A soldier from the Spanish-American War is also not forgotten, and receives a flag every Memorial day at his final resting place near Arriola.

"We've got four different groups totaling 15 volunteers going every direction," says Daisy Mahaffey while checking her list at the Sunnyside Cemetery in Lewis. "We don't feel the veterans get enough recognition, so we are doing our part."

Some of the other cemeteries decorated with flags include Cedar Grove, Old Weber, Mormon, Lebanon, Pleasant View, Yellow Jacket, Goodman Point, Battle Rock, Lamb, and Lavender in Disappointment Valley.

"At Lebanon, 50 percent of the graves are of veterans, and Lamb is reached by a quarter-mile walk through the cactus," Head said.

Since they began tracking down forgotten veteran graves in 2009, the local DAR has rediscovered 36 graves and marked them with veteran flags or plaques.

"Every time we see that a veteran passed on in the newspaper, we write it down and add it to the list," Mahaffey said. "We think there are more out there."

About 300 flags were placed this year at the rural cemeteries.

"It's the least we can do to honor the memory and commitment of veterans to protect our freedoms," said DAR member Pam Thompson as she placed flags in the Sunnyside cemetery.

The old flags, no matter their condition, are collected and then destroyed by the Cortez American Legion based on proper protocols, explained John Shriner, a member of the Legion Honor Guard and former commander.

"We hold a ceremony where we cut each flag and render them unserviceable," he said. "Then we play Taps and burn the flags one at a time in a safe location. It is a powerful ceremony and a respectful retirement for the flags."

jmimiaga@cortezjournal.com

Schedule

Montezuma County VFW Post No. 5231
MAY 24: Poppy distribution at City Market and Wal-mart, 1 p.m.-3 p.m.
May 25: The Ladies Auxiliary will meet at 5 p.m. to put out the Auxiliary flags on their deceased members' graves.
May 26: Annual Memorial Day Ceremony at Cedar Grove Cemetery in Mancos at 11 a.m.
Members of the Post & Auxiliary will put out the Avenue of Flags at the cemetery earlier that morning along with American flags on the grave sites of fallen Veterans.
The Ladies Auxiliary will put out the American flags on the streets in Mancos early Monday morning. After the ceremony at Cedar Grove, the Post and Auxiliary members will return to the Post at 136 W. Grand in Mancos for a flag-burning ceremony.
Daughters of the American Revolution
The group plans to place flags as follows: group will place flags May 19-21.
May 18: Battle Rock, Baskett, Lamb, Majors and other cemeteries in McElmo Canyon.
May 24: Cemeteries in the Mancos area.
May 21-23: Old Dolores (Peoples), Lebanon and other rural cemeteries not listed.
Info: Call June Head 565-3880, Peggy Scates 564-1924 or Pam Thompson 565-3900.

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