HomeNewsLocal newsOfficials, Families Gather for Memorial Day Ceremony on St. Thomas

Officials, Families Gather for Memorial Day Ceremony on St. Thomas

Government officials and family members of veterans release white birds at the end of a Memorial Day ceremony Monday. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

The Virgin Islands Office of Veterans Affairs, in collaboration with the American Legion, held a Memorial Day ceremony Monday on St. Thomas honoring service members from the U.S. Virgin Islands who died in military service.

Gov. Albert Bryan Jr., Senate President Milton Potter, other officials, veterans, families and community members attended the event. The program included remarks, a roll call of deceased veterans from St. Thomas and St. John, wreath-laying and the release of 100 birds by relatives of the fallen and government officials.

Speakers throughout the ceremony focused on military sacrifice, civic participation and remembrance. Potter said Memorial Day served as a reminder that the freedoms Americans exercise today were secured through military service and sacrifice.

Senate President Milton E. Potter delivers remarks during a Memorial Day ceremony on Monday in front of waving flags. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

โ€œThereโ€™s a silence that settles over a cemetery on Memorial Day that you really cannot find anywhere else. Itโ€™s not the silence of emptiness, itโ€™s the silence of weight,โ€ he said. โ€œThe accumulated weight of every life laid down, and every family that watched their loved one go and waited for a return that never came.โ€

He said those freedoms carry a cost that should shape how they are used.

โ€œEvery freedom we exercise โ€” to speak, to worship, to vote, to assemble right here in this public space โ€” was bought at a price that we did not pay,โ€ Potter said. He added that the cost of that sacrifice is carried by families. โ€œTo those families here today, we do not only honor those whose names are carved in stone, we honor you,โ€ he said.

He said gratitude for the fallen must translate into action. โ€œThe least we owe to those freedoms is to use them with intention: to build something, to lift someone, to refuse the easy cynicism that says none of this matters,โ€ Potter said. โ€œIt matters. They matter.โ€

Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. delivers remarks during a Memorial Day ceremony on Monday. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

Bryan framed the Memorial Day ceremony as a reminder that the countryโ€™s current stability and systems were shaped through generations of service and sacrifice. He said many of the conditions Americans live with today, including peace at home and access to public services, should not be taken for granted.

โ€œEvery single thing that we enjoy in this country today โ€” this peace, this calm โ€” is not to be taken for granted,โ€ Bryan said. โ€œItโ€™s not something that everybody has.โ€

He connected that idea to civic responsibility, particularly voting. โ€œThe most powerful right that we should be grateful for is the right to exercise our vote that decides who leads us, who represents us,โ€ Bryan said. โ€œThey died for that.โ€

โ€œThe greatest way we recognize and honor them is not only today, but every single day we wake up in a country where we are free to determine our destiny because of them,โ€ Bryan said.

โ€œWe are here today to pay tribute to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice,โ€ said American Legion Cmdr. Hillis Benjamin. โ€œThey left behind families, friends, dreams and futures so that we could continue to enjoy the liberties we often take for granted.โ€

After the speeches, organizers read a roll call of veterans from St. Thomas and St. John who died between May 2025 and May 2026. Wreaths were placed in the cemetery, and family members and government officials were invited to participate in the ceremonial release of birds.

โ€œMay we always remember those who answered the call and never returned home,โ€ Benjamin said. โ€œTheir watch has ended. Ours continues.โ€

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