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U.S. FLAG DESTRUCTION
Most Veteran Service
Organizations conduct formal Flag Destruction ceremonies. Contact your
local VFW, American Legion, AmVets, or Marine Corps League for a
respectful retirement of your worn US Flag. Your telephone phone
book and/or internet search (google, yahoo, etc.) should reveal a
VSO location near you.
The Puget Sound Det. #336, in
conjunction with the All American VFW Post
2995
is proud to offer Flag Retirement to our local
community.
Please feel free to mail or hand-deliver any U.S. flag that
is no longer serviceable to the
VFW Post at the VFW
Post street address on the front page.
(Please do NOT mail flags to the MCL Detachment
PO Box address - it's not that big!).
If your local Veteran Service Organization has not
conducted, but would like to conduct, a formal Flag Destruction
ceremony, the following information should assist them.
Our general rule is that our flag is "permanently
retired" with the same honor and dignity
rendered our servicemen
and women who served under it.
National Flag
Foundation
Recommended Ceremonies For Flag Retirement and
Burning
The United States Flag Code states:
"The Flag when it is in
such condition that it is no longer a fitting emblem of display, should be
destroyed in a dignified way, preferably by burning."
Throughout America, volunteer organizations commonly carry out this
duty as an act of community service, destroying old, worn, tattered,
frayed, and/or faded Flags.
The National Flag Foundation (NFF) recommends the following as the
proper ceremonies for retiring and destroying a worn Flag. Both ceremonies
should be conducted at a private (reclusive) location.
Ceremony of Final Tribute
Only one Flag, representing all those to be destroyed, should be
used in the ceremony.
Two colorguards should be used at evening
retreat, one for the Flag currently in use and a special color guard for
the Flag to be permanently retired.
Just before sunset, the Flag which
has been flying all day is retired in the normal,
ceremonial procedure for the group or site.
The color guard
responsible for the Flag receiving the final tribute moves front and
center. The leader should present this color guard with the Flag which has
been selected for its final tribute and subsequent destruction. The
leader then should instruct the color guard to "hoist the
colors".
When the Flag has been secured at the top of the pole, the leader
comments:
"This Flag has served its nation long and well. It has worn
to a condition to which it should no longer be used to represent the
nation.
"This Flag represents all of the Flags collected and being
retired from service today. We honor them all as we salute one
Flag."
The leader then calls the group to attention, orders a salute, leads
the entire group in the "Pledge of Allegiance." and orders the Flag
retired (retire colors) by the color guard.
Slowly and
ceremoneously, the flag is lowered, then respectfully folded in the
customary triangle. The Flag is delivered to the leader and then the color
guard is dismissed. This concludes the Ceremony of Final Tribute.
Ceremonial
Burning
- Fire and Flag Preparation:
The burning of a Flag should
take place at a campfire in a ceremony separate from the Ceremony of
Final Tribute. The fire must be sizable (preferably having burnt down to
a bed of red hot coals to avoid having bits of the Flag being carried
off by a roaring fire), yet be of sufficient intensity to ensure
complete burning.
Before the ceremony begins, the color guard
assigned to the Flag opens up its tri-corner fold and then refolds it in
a coffin-shaped rectangle.
- When all is ready:
- All assemble around the fire. The leader calls the group to
attention.
- The color guard comes forward and places the Flag on the fire.
- All briskly salute.
- After the salute, but while still at attention, the leader should
conduct a respectful educational program as the Flag burns: e.g.
singing of "God BLess America"; offering an inspiring message of the
Flag's meaning followed by the "Pledge of Allegiance"; performing a
reading about the Flag; reciting the "American Creed"; etc.
- When the Flag is consumed, those assembled, with the exception of
a leader and the color guard, should be dismissed. They should be led
out in single file and in silence.
- The leader and color guard should remain to ensure that the Flag
is completely consumed, and to burn additional Flags, if any.
- The fire should then be safely extinguished.
The National Flag Foundation