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American Legion Veterans’ Breakfast Well Attended - May 26, 2003 

By Deborah Turner
  
American Legion President Bailey Moore WrinkleGuests at the annual Veterans’ Breakfast hosted by the McKenzie American Legion at Lori’s Kitchen in downtown McKenzie equaled last years’ record setting number of 62, although there were a few new faces and some old ones that were missed. The breakfast is held each year at 6:30 a.m. on the Sunday before Memorial Day.

As the restaurant began filling with veterans from World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and the first Gulf War, as well as peacetime veterans, conversations sometimes went back to days of old in wartime Germany and beyond. Kermit Holland recalled so far back as 1919 when the blare of whistles from downtown McKenzie led his mother to saddle her horse and, with six-year-old Kermit in tow, ride to town to see what the uproar was about.

“World War I was over,” Kermit said, smiling. As a young Marine, he would serve on the Pacific islands during World War II. He recalled finding the tropical vistas of Ellice and Gilbert Islands beautiful, but remembered as well the first bombing raid he experienced. “I thought, ‘Gee whiz, a fella could get hurt here,’” he said.

Charles Lindburgh spent six weeks on the islands, Kermit related, giving confidence to pilots by showing them what their airplanes were capable of. “He would go on strikes with them,” he said. Kermit was finally relieved of duty on December 7 the year he came home.

“I got off the train on Christmas Eve; my brother picked me up,” said Kermit, who stated in those days seven passenger trains a day stopped at the McKenzie depot. There were two livery stables near the dept then, one where Lori’s Café is now located. Kermit and Richard Moore, who returned to McKenzie last year after many years away, recalled Mule Days and Dog Days that were once held downtown, as well as the many different businesses that filled the downtown shops throughout the years.

State Representative Mark Maddox, whose participation in the annual breakfast has become legend, showed up bleary-eyed but happy after a two a.m. playtime session with his baby daughter. “Thank you very much for the life you created for all of us,” he stated sincerely.

Regarding Mayor Walter Winchester’s participation in the event, American Legion President Bailey Moore Wrinkle announced, “This is the first time we’ve ever had a mayor here.” In addition to Mayor Winchester’s active participation in city and county events, he is himself a veteran, having retired from the U.S. Air Force before retiring in Mayor Winchester’s hometown of McKenzie some eight years ago.

LST 325 TO TOUR TOWNS ALONG THE MISSISSIPPI/OHIO RIVERS

Mr. Wrinkle, a legend in his own right after traveling to Greece where he worked in the sweltering heat to help restore an LST to running capacity and served among the crew that sailed her back to the United States in 2001, announced the ship will be navigating the waters of the Mississippi River on a tour that begins June 3, when the ship will leave Mobile Bay for its first stop in Vicksburg, Mississippi.

The ship will be powered by tug boat, since, Mr. Wrinkle wryly states, “They’re afraid we’ll knock down all the bridges.”

Mr. Wrinkle hopes to be able to board the ship when it docks at Mud Island in Memphis on June 13. The ship will be on display there for five days during which visitors can board the craft for a first hand look at the World War II / Korean War vessel. Costs for touring the vessel are $8 for adults, $4 for students K-12 and $20 per family.

“If the Lord is willing,” says Mr. Wrinkle, he will continue with the ship for the rest of the two-and-one-half month tour which will dock at the following ports where visitors may board:
Friday - June 20 – Cape Girardeau, MO (5 days)
Thursday – June 26 – St. Louis, MO (11 days)
Thursday – July 11 – Evansville, IN (11 days)
Thursday – July 24 – Jeffersonville, IN (4 days)
Thursday – July 31 – Paducah, KY (3 days)
Friday – August 8 – Greenville, MS (3 days)
Thursday – New Orleans, LA (4 days)
Tuesday – Mobile, AL (home port)

Guests at the breakfast were given “P-38” can openers as mementos of the occasion. The can openers were used to open cans in the old “K-rations” and “C-rations” before the newer “MREs” (meals ready to eat) utilized easily opened plastic bag containers. Mr. Jack Thompson displayed on his key ring the 70-year-old P-38 he has kept since his long ago military service.

Each year following the breakfast, Legion members and other veterans disperse to area cemeteries to place American flags on the graves of deceased veterans. Mr. Wrinkle reported that around 400 flags are placed at Mount Olivet Cemetery, with a total of around 800-900 flags placed at Shiloh, Memorial Gardens and rural cemeteries.

    

Phone (731) 352-3323 or Fax (731) 352-3322
washburn@mckenziebanner.com
  

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