The American tradition of decorating the graves of fallen American soldiers began shortly after the close of the Civil War in the Spring of 1865. With the war’s end, citizens across the country began to decorate the graves of soliders who gave their lives defending the Union in the Civil War. The decoration of the graves consisted of placing flags and flowers on their graves.
With the advent of the first World War, the nascent national tradition of remembrance extended to those soliders who died in the World War I. Remembrance was later expanded to included soliders who made the ultimate sacrifice in all of our Nation’s wars and conflicts including, Word War II, the Koren War, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
This tradition encouraged other Memorial Day customs, including, local parades with military themes, the wearing of poppies (inspired by the poem “In Flanders Field” composed by Canadian Lt. Colonel John McCrae in 1918 after observing red poppies growing among the graves of soldiers) and a “moment of remembrance” every Memorial Day at 3:00 pm.
In 1968, Congress codified Memorial Day as a federal holiday (each year on the last Monday in May). Because today is a federal holiday, all Social Security offices and hearing offices are closed. Those offices will reopen on Tuesday morning.