Here is everything you need to know on the 34th annual Memorial Day weekend observance at the War Memorial Natatorium in Waikiki: WHAT: A Memorial Day weekend commemoration of America’s war dead at Hawaii’s official World War I monument. A somber ceremony featuring a military color guard and rifle unit; veterans groups (including a Rolling Thunder veterans motorcycle group ride-in); hula performances; two distinguished speakers; a rifle volley; bag pipes; and the solemn bugle call Taps. WHEN: The 2022 commemoration begins at 10 a.m. on Sunday, May 29. [Please note: This event is on Sunday, not on the official Monday
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Archives for Waikiki Natatorium
A Memorial Day Message from the Friends of the Natatorium
This is the first year since 1989 that the Friends of the Natatorium have been unable to gather with veterans, active-duty service members, elected officials, and families to observe Memorial Day and honor fallen American warriors. Though the pandemic prevents us this year from joining hands and singing in their memory on the lawn outside the Natatorium, it can never stop us from honoring the men and women who, throughout American history, have made the most extraordinary sacrifice on our behalf. Mo Radke, president of the Friends of the Natatorium, shares our thoughts with you on this Memorial Day weekend.
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Yes, we will observe Memorial Day and honor America’s war dead in 2020 — just differently
We are unshakable in our commitment always to honor those who died defending America. This Memorial Day weekend, however, our observance at the War Memorial Natatorium in Waikiki must be a little different. Out of concern for everyone’s safety – and especially for the health of our senior veterans – the Friends of the Natatorium will not hold its traditional ceremony outside the Natatorium this year. Instead, we welcome our friends from Celtic Kula Pipe Band of Hawaii, who will play an appropriate tribute to the fallen at the Natatorium at 10 a.m. on Sunday, May 24, the day before
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Support the work of the Friends of the Natatorium. Mahalo!
Happy Thanksgiving! The Friends are truly grateful for your ongoing support of our work for the War Memorial Natatorium in Waikiki. We come to you now asking for your continued help. Earlier this month, the 23rd annual Veterans Day observance at the Natatorium celebrated Hawaii’s ex-service members living and dead, including, as you see in the photo, many members of Oahu veteran biking clubs. Just days before, the City and County of Honolulu released its environmental impact statement on the Natatorium, opting for preservation of Hawaii’s official state World War I memorial. The study began several years ago with the
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Attend the 2019 Memorial Day Observance, Sunday, May 26, at the Natatorium
Show up to honor American men and women who showed up and died for you. Join us for the 31st annual Memorial Day Weekend observance at the War Memorial Natatorium in Waikiki. We will gather on the lawn in front of the Natatorium at 10 a.m. on Sunday, May 26, the day before Memorial Day. As always, we will honor all our nation’s war dead, an estimated 1.35 million men and women since the Revolutionary War. We have special affection for those from Hawaii, including more than 100 from the then-territory who died in service during World War I. This
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Action Alert: Send a Letter Now to Support Honolulu’s New Plan for the Natatorium
You’ve heard the good news: The City and County of Honolulu is now proposing a plan to preserve, repair and reopen the War Memorial Natatorium in Waikiki! The city’s recently released draft environmental impact statement chooses the so-called perimeter deck option for resolving the long, long, far-too-long stalemate on the Natatorium’s future. Thank you for making this happen! You Natatorium supporters have made your voices heard at every step in this process. Thanks to you, we’ve taken a fabulous leap forward. But we still need your help. We need you to write again. Please submit your comments to the city
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Join us! 100th anniversary of the end of World War I; observances at the Natatorium
Six merchant mariners killed in a submarine attack on the S.S. Aztec. The Hawaii Naval Militia deployed on the U.S.S. St. Louis for convoy duty in the Atlantic. More than 5,500 soldiers readied for war in what is still the largest mobilization in Hawaii National Guard history. Red Cross ambulance drivers in France. Sweater-knitting schoolkids and firefighters. Bandage rollers in the Iolani Palace throne room. Liberty Bond buyers. In all, more than 10,000 men and women from Hawaii volunteered for service in World War I. At least 101 of them died. And many, many more served in one way or
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Attend the Natatorium Memorial Day Ceremony, Sunday, May 27
One hundred years ago this month, the cataclysmic battles of World War I still raged on the oceans, in the air, and certainly on No Man’s Land between the Allied and German trenches on the Western Front of Europe. One hundred years ago this November, the Great War, thankfully, ended. More than 9 million combatants and 7 million civilians had died in four years. More than 100 of those dead were volunteers from Hawaii, a territory – not yet even a state – that had produced more than 10,000 volunteers, far more than anyone had expected from such a tiny
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Honor Our Veterans, and Observe the WWI Centennial, with Us This Saturday
One hundred years ago this Saturday, the German high command met, hoping to find a way to defeat the Allies before the U.S. Army could flood the Western Front with fresh American troops. Let’s just say that didn’t work out too well for the German high command. Exactly a year later, on Nov. 11, 1918 – 99 years ago this Saturday – the Germans and Allies signed an Armistice. The guns finally fell silent on the Western Front. After more than four years, the horrors of World War I – in which an estimated 15 million to 18 million people
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Natatorium named official WWI Centennial Memorial
The Waikiki War Memorial Natatorium has been named one of America’s official World War I Centennial Memorials, in advance of next year’s observance of the 100th anniversary of the end of the first global conflict. The Natatorium is the only monument in Hawaii on the list of the first 50 World War I memorials nationwide announced this week by the federal World War One Centennial Commission and the Pritzker Military Museum & Library. Another 50 will be selected next year. “We’re very pleased to be among the first sites selected for by the U.S. World War One Centennial Commission as
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