Community Corner
'Remember Our Fallen' Tribute To Military Coming To Arlington Heights
The national, traveling, photographic memorial will be at North School Park Thursday through Sunday.

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, IL — A national, traveling, photographic memorial U.S. military personnel who died in service is coming to Arlington Heights. “Remembering Our Fallen” is scheduled to arrive at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, May 12, and will remain on duty until Sunday, May 15, at North School Park in Arlington Heights.
The display features both military and family-centered images of thousands of U.S. military personnel who perished in service to the nation between Sept. 11, 2001, and Aug. 30, 2021, during the Global War on Terror, according to Greg Padovani, chairman of the Veterans Memorial Committee of Arlington Heights
“Remembering Our Fallen” will arrive via escort by members of Rolling Thunder Illinois Chapter 2 and Knights on Bikes May 12. An opening ceremony takes place at noon that day. Opening remarks will come from Arlington Heights Mayor Tom Hayes, retired U.S. Army Col. Wayne Kirkpatrick of Rolling Thunder, and Jean Harris, support coordinator with Northern Illinois Survivor Outreach Service.
Find out what's happening in Arlington Heightsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Those coordinating the exhibit’s stop in Arlington Heights — chiefly the Northern Illinois District Knights of Columbus and the village’s Veterans Memorial Committee — hope that its presence will stir, educate and comfort, according to Padovani.
“Memorials like this are so profoundly moving,” said Padovani, a retired U.S. Army major. “These are the people who make our freedoms possible — anybody who serves, of course — but those who made the ultimate sacrifice, especially.”
Find out what's happening in Arlington Heightsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Both Padovani and Juan Huerta, chairman of the Knights of Columbus Northern Illinois District Organizing Committee, said the exhibit’s inclusion of both formal military and more casual, personal photos makes it particularly moving. It’s a point on which Gold Star father Bob Stack also agrees. Stack is the father of James B. Stack, who died in November 2010 after his unit took hostile arms fire while deployed in Afghanistan.
The Arlington Heights husband and father was only 20, and only a month into his first deployment, when he died.
RELATED: Family of Deceased Soldier Sends Care Packages to Afghanistan
“This gives people an opportunity to realize that those who serve in the military are not from somewhere else. They are the kid from down your street,” Bob Stack said. “They’re the kid who mowed lawns in your neighborhood. I think sometimes that gets lost. Displays like this remind us of that.”
Stack and his daughter-in-law, Katie Stack, said they and other Gold Star families welcome any community event that keeps their loved ones’ memories vibrant, according to Padovani. Both Stacks are scheduled to be among the speakers who will address crowds during 5 p.m. evening ceremonies May 13 and 14 — with Katie Stack on May 13 and Robert Stack on May 14.
“Realizing that people still care allows me to keep healing,” said Katie Stack, whose daughter Mikayla, now 12, had just turned 1 a week before her father died. “It allows me to keep moving forward, realizing that my husband’s sacrifice was not for nothing.”
“Remembering Our Fallen” will include a daily opening prayer and pledge of allegiance at 7 a.m. May 13, 14 and 15 at the park, located at the corner of North Evergreen Avenue and East Eastman Street, Arlington Heights. Evening ceremonies take place at 5 p.m. Friday, May 13, and Saturday, May 14. A closing ceremony will be at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, May 15.
The exhibit, produced by Nebraska-based Patriotic Productions Inc., will be open to the public until 7 p.m. Thursday May 12, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, May 13-14, and from 7 a.m. until crews begin disassembling it about 4 p.m. Sunday.
A detailed map of the area around North School Park as well as a complete daily schedule — including a list of participating speakers, Color Guards, Scout troops and more — is available at www.kofcnd1.com/project. Information is also available on the Illinois Knights Remembering Our Fallen Facebook page.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.