I would like to thank the UVO, both current and
former, who continue to serve their country and their community (men like
Charlie Uhler and Carlos Teets who are no longer with us)…to my Dad who
survived Korea, now in the home, who used to help out…
Though I never served, I
grew up with a deep respect for men like these.
I’d also like to thank the UVO’s generosity with donating funds to pay
for the flowers the children will strew on the graves later. They continued the work of the Operation
Never Forget Club. With any luck, I hope
to get that club up and running once again.
Lehighton UVO salautes at Weissport Park
Services at Union Hill Cemetery - Steve Ebbert speaker
Honoring the Lost at Sea - Wreath into Lehigh River
Wreath Floats Away
"Faith of Our Fathers" - Lehighton Band + Lehighton Boys & Girls Band
Lehighton UVO salautes at Weissport Park
Services at Union Hill Cemetery - Steve Ebbert speaker
Honoring the Lost at Sea - Wreath into Lehigh River
Wreath Floats Away
"Faith of Our Fathers" - Lehighton Band + Lehighton Boys & Girls Band
Today is a glorious day.
We have the sun on our face, clouds to keep us cool, the wind at our backs,
dew on our feet, and joy in our hearts.
We are here to remember those who paid for our
freedom.
Your presence today is an action that shows your devotion.
They took action to secure our freedom.
This is a day to refresh and renew.
Let us take a fresh look upon a grave with renewed interest.
Let us take action to remember those who showed their
love by giving their time and devotion.
Let’s make a mental picture of what devotion looks
like:
Use your mind’s eye right now, remember what you see…
Mayor Ritter and the Poppy Queen enjoy the shade before the program began. |
When you look at the Tomb of the Unknown,
When you look out at the rolling Hills of Arlington,
When you see the low country of Luxemburg, the sandy
bluffs of Cambridge, and the beach front cemetery of Normandy,
When you cast your eye across the sea of white crosses,
each one, representing its own story of devotion to our country.
That is love.
I’d like to share a few stories about love and devotion.
I’d like to start with a few living and a few who have
died securing the freedoms we love.
Let’s start with Major Pete Semanoff who is stationed
in Texas. He’s earned two bronze stars
for tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But he took action as a young boy too. He devoted himself to get to know Clarence
Smoyer.
And because of this, a book was written about Smoyer
that is a national best-seller.
Mayor Clark Ritter greets Clarence Smoyer, Lehighton native and subject of Adam Makos book entitled Spearhead. |
And now Smoyer’s story of love and devotion to country
is known.
Pete’s Dad is Gene Willard Semanoff.
Gene is named after two uncles, both of them KIA
during WWII.
Gene’s mother’s
brother, Willard Reabold, of Hacklebernie, died in the Battle of the Bulge.
Gene’s father’s
brother, George “Gene,” was killed at Saipan while honoring his commitment to
bring someone home.
That someone was Samuel Kutalek of Nesquehoning.
Samuel Kutalek enlisted the very day Hitler invaded
Poland, September 1st, 1939.
He was sent to the Philippines.
And there he was marched at the point of a Japanese bayonet, during the infamous Bataan Death March. And unknown to his parents, he had survived.
But they did not know this.
He was reported missing for over a year.
When they learned he was alive, Sam’s brother Paul and
his best friend, Gene Semanoff, vowed to join the Marines, find Kutalek, and
bring him home.
Both men, Paul and Gene, died honoring their vow,
while Sam Kutalek was released and lived a long and happy life.
18 September 1945 - The announcement of Sam Kutalek's release and the deaths of his brother and George "Gene" Semanoff. |
Clarence Smoyer and Joseph “Yzush” Sitarchyk were friends as young boys.
These children of the Depression had it rough.
Sitarchyk’s father died when Joseph was just 11.
Joe’s father died while trying to keep his family warm.
He had a wooden cart he’d push through the scrap woods
along the river and the RR tracks near North First St. The news accounts of that week described the
early November cold snap we were having.
Wood he’d gather to keep his family warm.
And one day he was hit by a car and killed.
Joseph grew up in want.
He’d sometimes steal a can of soup from the store just
to have something to eat. (And according
to Clarence, Joseph was well acquainted with more trouble as he got older…)
Smoyer added meat to his diet by shooting bullfrogs
with his BB gun and roasting their legs over a fire along the Mahoning Creek. These tough times made tough men.
Joseph joined the Army Rangers and was dropped in at
Anzio.
In the ensuing battle at Cisterna, of the 1,200 men,
only 9 escaped unwounded and uncaptured.
Sitarchyk and five other men found refuge under a
bridge and vowed to survive.
They swore allegiance and famously signed a dollar
bill together.
Many who survive such terrible ordeals live with
memories that cannot be shaken.
Some take these memories into further actions to help
others.
By sharing his story, Smoyer has given us a look into
the heart of a humble and devoted warrior.
Not one who wanted to kill for malice.
But someone who killed to protect and defend his
family he loved so dearly, the family who drove inside his sardine can on
tracks.
Smoyer was driven to perfection out of loyalty to
them.
When Michael Wargo survived Afghanistan, he came home
with many terrible memories he couldn’t shake.
We are lucky to have men and women like these.
They took action, they served, they fought, and too
many died, securing our freedoms.
As a youth, Smoyer and his friends had a hut near Heilman's Dam on the Mahoning. They'd shoot bullfrogs with their BB guns and eat the frogs legs over a campfire. |
Nothing is free.
You have nothing that wasn’t first given to you.
We get, we give.
They gave all.
What do you have to give?
Take action.
All of you. You must.
Visit the Michael Wargo Memorial today and renew your
sense of devotion to country and to those who are gone.
Renew your love and devotion for family, for country,
for those brave men and women.
America must always have a giving heart filled with
love and devotion.
Today is a Glorious Day.
We have the sun on our face, we have clouds to keep us
cool, the wind at our backs, dew on our feet, and joy in our hearts.
We are here to remember those who paid for our
freedom.
Members of the Lehighton UVO escort Clarence to his seat at the Lehighton Meet and Greet held for him on Wednesday 5/22/19. |