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Town of North Brookfield honors fallen servicemembers at Memorial Day ceremony

May 25, 2026 | Town of North Brookfield, Worcester County, Massachusetts


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Town of North Brookfield honors fallen servicemembers at Memorial Day ceremony
The Town of North Brookfield gathered this morning for a Memorial Day ceremony to honor local service members who died in U.S. conflicts, with leaders, volunteers and students taking part in readings, music and ceremonial salutes.

The event opened with remarks and a welcome delivered on behalf of American Legion Post 41 and VFW Post 3439; the presenter said the community had "come to pause and reflect and remember the true meaning of this day" and asked attendees to "ensure their legacy of courage is never forgotten." Frank Potter, chaplain of VFW Post 3439, led a prayer for the families of the fallen and for the wounded.

Students and community volunteers provided several of the ceremony's central readings and performances. Whitney Reno, identified as president of the North Brookfield High School Junior CL, read Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, beginning "Four score and seven years ago..." Jamie Gilman, introduced as a representative of the town's board of selectmen, reflected on the origin of the poppy as a Memorial Day symbol and read John McCrae's poem "In Flanders Fields," urging listeners to "take up the torch." Pastor Haymon of the Pilgrim Baptist Church of North Brookfield delivered the guest sermon, connecting biblical passages to remembrance, describing the repatriation of remains from Chosin Reservoir as an example of bringing service members home, and closing with a prayer of thanks.

The program included a roll call of deceased veterans spanning World War I, World War II, the Korean conflict, the Vietnam era and the Persian Gulf era; readers named many local service members in each section. The ceremony's symbolic seven tolls of the bell — explained by the presenter as representing stages of a veteran's life from birth to death — were rung before several readings. A firing-squad salute was held outside, and attendees stood for the salute before returning to the church for closing remarks.

Music and community participation were woven through the program. The North Brookfield High School band performed an armed-forces melody, Richard LeBlanc led a congregation rendition of "America the Beautiful," and Carlen McQuade sang the national anthem. The presenter thanked volunteers and organizers by name, including Don Smith and commanders of local veteran posts, for coordinating the event.

The ceremony concluded with a call from the presenter for attendees to honor the fallen through acts of service in their daily lives and with a blessing for the country.

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