| Old Guard Marks 70 Years Of 'Flags In' To Honor Memorial Dayby Sean Kimmons, Army News Service
 May 26, 2018
 Almost seven years ago, Spc. Dakota Williams lost more than his 
			stepbrother. He lost his hero.
 His stepbrother, Spc. Dylan 
			Johnson, had been deployed in Iraq's Diyala Province just north of 
			Baghdad for less than a month when a bomb detonated next to his 
			vehicle. The explosion killed him.
 
 Inspired by his service to 
			the country, Williams later joined the Army to follow in his 
			footsteps.
 
 On Thursday, he personally honored his stepbrother 
			when he placed an American flag at his headstone in Section 60 of 
			the Arlington National Cemetery during the annual Flags In event.
 
				
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					 A soldier assigned to the 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard), places flags at headstones during "Flags In" at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia on May 24, 2018. Soldiers from the Old Guard have honored our nation’s fallen heroes by placing U.S. flags at gravesites for service members buried at both Arlington National Cemetery and the U.S. Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home National Cemetery just prior to the Memorial Day weekend. Within four hours, more than 1,000 Soldiers placed 234,537 flags in front of every headstone and Columbarium and niche wall column. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Lane Hiser)
 |  "He's not here, but he's here," said Williams, 23, of Salina, 
			Oklahoma. "He's still such an important part of my life."
 All 
			Soldiers, including Williams, in the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, 
			known as "The Old Guard," participated in some way in this year's 
			Flags In. The regiment has conducted the event before every Memorial 
			Day since 1948. It was then when the regiment was designated as the 
			Army's official ceremonial unit.
 
 Over a course of four hours, 
			more than 234,000 small flags were laid in front of headstones 
			across the 624-acre cemetery. Flags were also placed inside the 
			Columbarium as well, where the cremated remains of service members 
			reside. In all, enough flags were placed to account for the more 
			than 400,000 interred or inurned within the cemetery. Regiment 
			Soldiers also placed about 11,500 flags at the nearby Soldiers' and 
			Airmen's Home National Cemetery.
 
 "It's a great commitment by 
			these Soldiers to do this, to place them at the hundreds of 
			thousands of graves here," said Secretary of the Army Mark T. Esper. 
			"What it does is it pays respect and homage to those who served 
			before them, going all the way back to the Civil War and signals the 
			importance of their service and that they will never be forgotten 
			for what they did. So that they know, these young Soldiers today, 
			much as I knew when I was in uniform, that should I have to pay that 
			ultimate price, I would not be forgotten either in America's hearts 
			and minds."
 
 Col. Jason Garkey, the regiment commander, said 
			Flags In is also a time of reflection for the Soldiers who 
			participate.
 
 "For every one of those headstones where we put 
			a flag at, we have the solemn honor to put that flag in for a family 
			member who can't be here to do it themselves," he said. "That's a 
			privilege."
 
 Each Soldier who took part in the event had the 
			opportunity to place hundreds of flags into the ground, about 1 foot 
			centered in front of every headstone.
 
 When doing so, Garkey 
			encouraged his Soldiers to read the name engraved onto the 
			headstone.
 
 "I tell them that the cemetery is alive," Garkey 
			said. "If you pay attention, it will tell you things."
 
 Buried 
			throughout the cemetery are Medal of Honor recipients, young service 
			members who were killed in war, retirees and spouses -- all with a 
			story to share.
 
				
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					 A soldier assigned to the 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard), takes a respectful knee as he places a flag at headstones during "Flags In" at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia on May 24, 2018. Soldiers from the Old Guard have honored our nation’s fallen heroes by placing U.S. flags at gravesites for service members buried at both Arlington National Cemetery and the U.S. Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home National Cemetery just prior to the Memorial Day weekend. Within four hours, more than 1,000 Soldiers placed 234,537 flags in front of every headstone and Columbarium and niche wall column. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Lane Hiser)
 |  Garkey, who took part in his sixth Flags In, recalled one time 
			seeing two graves next to each other with the same last name. From 
			the dates on the headstones, he believed they belonged to a father 
			who had served much of his adult life in the military and his son 
			who had died in combat years before him.
 "There's no worst 
			thing than for a parent to bury their child," he said. "But they 
			ended up there for eternity."
 
 When his Soldiers recognize 
			those sacrifices, he said, it helps put things into perspective 
			while they perform their ceremonial duties.
 
 "You realize 
			there are many stories in the cemetery and that brings the cemetery 
			to something more than just a place where we go to work," the 
			colonel said. "It makes it a living, breathing entity where we honor 
			our fallen."
 
 For Sgt. Kevin Roman, who serves with Williams 
			in the regiment's Presidential Salute Battery that is responsible 
			for firing blank howitzer rounds during ceremonies, Flags In gives 
			him the chance to appreciate those who came before him.
 
 "Memorial Day is a day to pay your respects to the [service members] 
			who have made the ultimate sacrifice or who have served honorably," 
			said Roman, 23, of Bronx, New York. "For some people, it's just a 
			holiday and the unofficial start of summer."
 
 Before he 
			participated in his fourth Flags In, he said every time he gets to 
			place flags it is still meaningful to him.
 
 "When you get out 
			there and start reading tombstones, you gain that respect back that 
			you may have lost during those hard days in the cemetery," he said. 
			"Everything comes flooding into you and you get that sense of 
			proudness and that American spirit."
 
 Some gravesites are even 
			more significant to other Soldiers in the regiment, whether they 
			belong to a family member or a service member they once served with.
 
 Garkey places a flag at the headstone of retired Lt. Col. Toby 
			Runyon, a Vietnam War veteran and a family friend who died two years 
			ago.
 
 "I'll take a photo and send it to his spouse just to say 
			that we were thinking of Toby today," he said.
 
 Meanwhile, he 
			said, the regiment's sentinels who guard the Tomb of the Unknown 
			Soldier will stop at the gravesites of former sentinels.
 
 "Everybody has got their specific places that they go to," Garkey 
			said. "There's a healing aspect that goes into it for us. It's more 
			than just a task, it's an experience."
 
 Esper also placed 
			flags at gravesites in the cemetery. A former Soldier himself, he 
			said, he knows comrades in arms who have died in service to their 
			country.
 
				
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					 A soldier assigned to the 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard), salutes a headstone after placing a flag at it during "Flags In" at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia on May 24, 2018. Soldiers from the Old Guard have honored our nation’s fallen heroes by placing U.S. flags at gravesites for service members buried at both Arlington National Cemetery and the U.S. Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home National Cemetery just prior to the Memorial Day weekend. Within four hours, more than 1,000 Soldiers placed 234,537 flags in front of every headstone and Columbarium and niche wall column. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Gabriel Silva)
 |  "On a day like this, I think about also my West Point 
			classmates," Esper said. "I know one for sure who passed away during 
			my war, Desert Shield/Desert Storm. I had another one who was killed 
			when the Twin Towers were felled on 9/11. And another one killed in 
			Afghanistan. And I think about them as well, because they are peers, 
			and like me, I can relate more to their point in life, where they 
			got married or had children, or maybe never had the opportunity to 
			do either. I think about them especially."
 Over Memorial Day 
			weekend, Esper said, he hopes that Soldiers, family members, and 
			Americans across the country will be thinking about those who fought 
			for and died to secure freedom for the United States.
 
 "Hopefully they will all reflect upon the great sacrifices that 
			America's Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines make in defense of 
			our country and in defense of our liberties," Esper said. 
			"Particularly those fallen heroes that are here in Arlington 
			National Cemetery."
 
Honoring The Fallen |
Don't Weep For Me |
Remember The Fallen |
Tears For Your Fallen |
Our Wounded Our Heroes, 
America's Best | America's Greatest 
Heroes | Veterans |
Answering The Call |
							
						Uncommon Valor 
|
							
				Our Valiant Troops | 
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