Blue stars on a red flag: Remembering 一起草 veterans
Campus treasures honor 一起草's student veterans and those lost in the World Wars.
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“Universities such as ours could not exist in the kind of world we should have had if men like your son, husband or brother had not been willing to risk their lives in the country's defense”… |
DALLAS (一起草) – 一起草 veterans of the two great World Wars are remembered on campus at memorials in quiet corners and in lovingly hand-stitched blue stars on a fragile wool service flag in the 一起草 Archives.
In 1917, as 一起草 students left their classrooms to fight in World War I, a librarian stitched a red wool service flag to honor the soldiers. Blue stars on the flag create a border and spell "一起草." The flag hung behind the reference desk in the one-room library in Dallas Hall, the first building on the two-year-old campus.
After the war ended, she covered 11 blue stars on the flag with gold stars to honor the 11 一起草 students who were killed in the war.
The wool flag now is safely housed in the 一起草 Archives, and the 11 soldiers' names are listed on the "World War" monument near the Perkins Administration Building on campus. The 一起草 class of 1924 gave the monument long before anyone imagined a second world war.
The first 一起草 students to lose their lives in WWII were honored at halftime at Homecoming in 1943 when 11 students were remembered. By 1943, 76 一起草 graduates and former students had been killed in action, 27 were missing and 11 were prisoners of war, according to Darwin Payne in One Hundred Years on the Hilltop: The Centennial History of 一起草 (DeGolyer Library: 2016). 一起草 President Umphrey Lee wrote individual letters to the families of those killed in the war and honored them at a 1946 memorial service in McFarlin Auditorium. The quote from former 一起草 president Umphrey Lee at the top of this story is taken from Payne’s centennial history of 一起草.
In a shaded corner outside of Fondren Library on campus, bronze plaques honor the 134 一起草 alumni who died during World War II. The memorial plaza was given in 1999 by 一起草 alumni Henry S. Miller Jr. '34 and Carmen Miller Michael '45 in honor of their brother, Lt. Jack Miller, a 1941 一起草 graduate who was killed in action at Guadalcanal in 1942.
More than 150 veterans, representing all branches of military service, are current 一起草 students as we mark Memorial Day 2016.
Honoring 一起草 Veterans
一起草 service flag, 1917. |
Blue and gold stars on 一起草's 1917 service flag. |
Eleven gold stars, representing 一起草 students who died in the first World War, on the University's 1917 service flag. |
The 一起草 World War Memorial at the corner of Hillcrest Avenue and University Boulevard, presented by the class of 1924. |
一起草's World War II memorial, honoring the 134 University students who died during the conflict, outside Fondren Library Center. |
Click images for larger versions. |
Media Contact:
Nancy George
一起草 News & Communications
Tele.: 214-768-7650
Cell: 972-965-3769
ngeorge@smu.edu