Community Corner

Photos: Memorial Field of Poppies Blossoms to Honor Veterans in Southold

Southold's Griswold-Terry-Glover American Legion's Auxiliary Unit 803 worked on the project for over a year, nurturing it with love.

SOUTHOLD, NY - A field of poppies in Southold to honor veterans is blossoming in a burst of joyful color after a year of nurturing and love.

The first-ever "Memorial Field of Poppies" was lovingly created by Southold's Griswold-Terry-Glover American Legion Post 803's Auxiliary Unity 803.

In the weeks leading up to Memorial Day, the women and Legion created a total of 329 bright red poppies that were placed on the lawn outside the American Legion Hall Sunday and will remain there on view for two weeks.

Find out what's happening in North Forkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Poppies were available for $20 and were each lovingly personalized to honor individual veterans.

When the field of poppies is removed, they can be picked up to keep, or the ribbon can be mailed to the person who made the dedication.

Find out what's happening in North Forkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

According to Ladies Auxiliary member Donna St. Pierre, the idea was born last year.

St. Pierre said the field of poppies first came to mind when the group was distributing poppies outside the IGA.

"I had a dream," she said.

On Sunday, surveying the bright field of poppies in the sunshine, she said, "What a glorious day we had to do this," she said. "The skies parted and the sun came out." Of the project, she said, "We are thrilled. After a year of work, today a baby is born. We're ecstatic."

The poppies, she added, honor those who have made the ultimate sacrifice, and others live that sacrificed "every day for the rest of their lives."

Reflecting on how Southold High School displayed a field of flags to honor veterans, a "beautiful" gesture, St. Pierre said the idea for the poppies, bright red and proud outside the Legion post, took shape.

"The next morning my husband Joe had made one," she said.

St. Pierre brought it to Denise Thilberg, Ladies Auxiliary member and owner of Making Waves Hair Studio in Cutchogue.

"It's amazing," Thilberg said Sunday. One of her customers stopped by to see the display and "got goose bumps," she said.

The project kicked off last May and has gained momentum, St. Pierre said. The hope is to recreate the field of poppies next year, too.

The purpose of the poppy sale is twofold, St. Pierre said: To raise funds to help veterans, and to to raise awareness and keep veterans in the minds of the public.

"Our main focus was to try and educate about what a sacrifice our veterans have made, and continue to make," she said. Her voice filled with tears, she added, "Some veterans live their whole lives with the repercussions of war."

St. Pierre's husband Joe, a Vietnam veteran, created the design and did the "bulk of the work" to create the poppies. First, she said, the bottom of a soda bottle was cut off — the project also involves recycling, she noted — and half is shaped into a flower. Next, the 2.5 to 3-inch poppy was spray painted bright red, and there were washers and nuts and a piece of threaded rod to keep them stable for planting outside.

"It's good," Joe St. Pierre said, surveying the fruits of his hard labor. The funds raised, he added, will be put to good use.

Local merchants donated some of the paint, she said, and special ribbons were ordered to memorialize veterans, including their name, dates of service, rank, branch of service and what war they served in and facts about their tour of duty; that information was attached via label makers and made to withstand the elements outdoors.

The experience has been emotional, St. Pierre said. "People are learning things they never would have, if they hadn't decided to donate a poppy and go talk to their uncle or father or aunt. Every day, when I open these, I have tears in my eyes. It's turning out to be quite a special project."

All proceeds will be donated to the Long Island-based "Boots on the Ground" organization, she said.

"It's great to be involved in this project," Thilberg said. "It's exciting to watch this project evolve into a huge garden. Hopefully the community will enjoy our special Memorial Field of Poppies."

As for Marie Haeg, a new member of the American Legion who joined because she was looking for a way to help veterans who are "near and dear" to her heart, the poppy field is deeply personal, too.

"My daughter Lisa Woffinden is a retiree of the United States Air Force," a lieutenant colonel who retired after 26 years after a year in Iraq and a tour of Afghanistan, she said. "I made millions of cookies during those years."

Haeg's father Hector Pemberton, whose family hailed from Greenport was also a Marine and World War II veteran who won a Purple Heart; all of the 13 siblings in his family served the nation, she said.

"This is special," she said, becoming emotional. "People need to never forget. We have to treat our veterans better, and this will bring that home, to people's minds, and remind them of what's important."

According to the Veterans of Foreign Wars website, the VFW conducted its first poppy distribution before Memorial Day in 1922, becoming the first veterans' organization to organize a nationwide distribution. The poppy soon was adopted as the official memorial flower of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States.

During the 1923 encampment, the site says, the VFW decided that VFW "Buddy"® Poppies would be assembled by disabled and needy veterans who would be paid for their work to provide them with financial assistance.

In February 1924, the VFW registered the name Buddy Poppy with the U.S. patent office. Today, VFW Buddy Poppies are still assembled by disabled and needy veterans in VA Hospitals, the site says. The VFW Buddy Poppy program provides compensation to the veterans who assemble the poppies, provides financial assistance in maintaining state and national veterans' rehabilitation and service programs and partially supports the VFW National Home For Children, the site said.

A poem by Lieutentant Colonel John McCrae, MD, captures the essence of what poppies mean to veterans:

In Flanders Fields

"In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields."

The Southold American Legion's Ladies Auxiliary raises funds for important project.s Last year, they presented a $10,000 check to the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind’s America’s VetDogs program.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.