Piety Hill Chapter NSDAR Birmingham MI

Piety Hill Chapter NSDAR Birmingham MI The content contained herein does not necessarily represent the position of the NSDAR.

Hyperlinks to other sites are not the responsibility of the NSDAR, the state organizations, or individual DAR chapters. Hyperlinks to other sites are not the responsibility of the NSDAR, the state organizations or individual DAR chapters

05/26/2026

DAR National Headquarters and our historic DAR Constitution Hall are excited to welcome the 2026 Scripps National Spelling Bee May 26–29 as its new host venue. The building is already abuzz as talented spellers from across the country and around the world prepare to compete on our historic stage.

As DAR Constitution Hall hosts this nationally televised event and related Bee Week invitation-only activities, DAR National Headquarters, including the DAR Museum and DAR Library, will be closed to the public during this time.

Follow along and watch the Scripps National Spelling Bee competition from the stage of DAR Constitution Hall! Find how to watch here: https://spellingbee.com/watch

Learn more about the Scripps National Spelling Bee returning to Washington, DC: https://scripps.com/press-releases/scripps-national-spelling-bee-welcomes-247-spellers-as-it-returns-to-washington-d-c/

05/25/2026

🇺🇸Flag Etiquette🇺🇸

With Memorial Day, Flag Day and Independence Day coming up let’s make sure we’re displaying the Stars & Stripes properly. 🇺🇸

05/25/2026

As America prepares to mark our 250th anniversary of independence, we reflect on the generations of men and women who gave their lives in service to our nation. Their sacrifice helped preserve the freedoms and opportunities that have shaped our country's story for 250 years.

This Memorial Day, we honor their courage, remember their service, and express our deepest gratitude. May we never forget those who gave everything for our nation.

Piety Hill Chapter members marched in the Birmingham Hometown Parade, with the Detroit Metro Chapter SAR Chapter and Col...
05/25/2026

Piety Hill Chapter members marched in the Birmingham Hometown Parade, with the Detroit Metro Chapter SAR Chapter and Color Guard.

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

05/23/2026
05/23/2026

In recognition of Memorial Day, members of the Birmingham-based Piety Hill Chapter National Society Daughters of the American Revolution placed 310 flags on veterans’ graves in Greenwood Cemetery this week. The flags will remain through the 4th of July.

Thank you, Piety Hill Chapter NSDAR Birmingham MI, for preserving the spirit of Memorial Day with your service, both in recognizing these veterans and in cohosting Birmingham’s annual Memorial Day service on Monday, May 25 in Shain Park at 10 a.m.

Join us for the patriotic program that features speakers, wreath laying at the monuments and live music. Veterans are encouraged to participate and families are welcome!

04/10/2026
03/29/2026

Today, on National Vietnam War Veterans Day, we honor the veterans who served our nation during the Vietnam War.

We recognize the courage, sacrifice, and burdens many carried long after returning home. For the years when that service was not fully acknowledged, we offer our deepest respect and our enduring gratitude.

Welcome home.

03/29/2026

On this day in 1982, a groundbreaking ceremony is held for a new national memorial. Its design would spark debate—but it would also soon become one of the most powerful places of remembrance in America.

Indeed, over the course of the past several decades, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., has become a place of reverence and healing for many.

The Memorial might never have existed but for Jan C. Scruggs, a Vietnam War veteran. The years after the war were tough, and Scruggs became more and more convinced that a memorial would help veterans heal. “Its mere existence would be societal recognition that their sacrifices were honorable rather than dishonorable,” he explained. “Veterans needed this, and so did the nation. Our country needed something symbolic to help heal our wounds.”

Scruggs hoped veterans’ service could be recognized, even in the face of disagreement with governmental policy. In 1979, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (VVMF) was incorporated.

It wasn’t easy, and VVMF struggled at first. Finally, a site was authorized near the Lincoln Memorial, with the help of two Senators. VVMF began raising more money and businessman Ross Perot helped sponsor a national design competition. More than 1,400 designs were judged by a jury of 8 artists and designers.

The jury’s decision was unanimous: It picked a simple design with two long, black granite walls. The names of the killed and missing in action would be etched into the granite. Each name would be printed in chronological order, according to the date of death.

The jury had unknowingly selected a design submitted by a college student. She was Maya Ying Lin, an undergraduate at Yale University and the daughter of Chinese immigrants. Lin later explained the genesis for her idea: The Yale University Memorial Rotunda features the names of alumni who have died in military service. “I think it left a lasting impression on me,” Lin later wrote, “the sense of the power of a name.”

Not everyone saw it that way at first.

Perot hated the design. “The memorial did not honor all the soldiers,” he said. “It just honored the dead.” He called the proposed Memorial a “trench.” Another critic called the design a “nihilistic slab of stone.” Where were the patriotic symbols? Why did the slabs of granite sink into the earth, as if they had something to hide? One critic blasted the monument as a “black trench that scars the Mall. Black walls, the universal color of shame and sorrow and degradation.”

The controversy was finally resolved in a closed-door session. “I am sick and tired of calling black a color of shame,” Brigadier General George Price blasted to the room. He reminded those assembled that “[c]olor meant nothing on the battlefields of Korea and Vietnam. We are all equal in combat. Color should mean nothing now.”

A compromise was reached. A huge flagpole would be added, as well as a statue of three soldiers. In the end, these additions were placed a short distance from the wall itself. That angered some, who had wanted the flag and statue much closer, but the deal was done.

When the Memorial was finally dedicated, thousands of Vietnam vets marched down the streets of D.C. Finally, their service was being recognized. Many wept. “It was a homecoming parade seven years after the war,” one journalist wrote.

Now, as you know, visitors flock to the memorial, looking for the name of a loved one. They leave flowers and flags. “Name rubbing” is common. A traveling wall tours the country, and a virtual wall has been created online.

Lin had sensed “the power of a name.” Perhaps she’s been proven right.

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2026 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

03/29/2026

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Birmingham, MI

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