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ABOUT THE DIRECTOR OF FLAGS4VETS
I suppose it’s normal for people to want to know something about the Director of an organization that they are interested in; the first thing you should know is that I don’t really like, or deserve, to be the person in front. Flags4Vets would be nothing without a solid corps of Volunteers who have worked hard and long hours with little or no recognition; they are the heart of Flags4Vets.
My name is Fred Moore, and I have the privilege of being the Director of Flags4Vets, the National Flags for Veterans’ Graves Program. As a Medical Corpsman with the First and Third Marine Divisions, 1968 - 1972, I know very well the sacrifices made by our troops and their families. Before I was assigned to a Marine unit overseas, I was assigned temporary duty on the Burn Ward at the Great Lakes Naval Hospital tending to Marines and Soldiers who came home from Vietnam with the worst kind of injuries that one can imagine, and they looked to me, Doc Moore, for medical care, compassion, strength and support. Just a year out of high school, nothing in my training, or my experience, prepared me for my duties on the Burn Ward.
Ultimately, my saving grace was surrendering to the courage of my brothers in arms, many with painful disfiguring injuries, who, in spite of the widespread public sentiment against them by their own fellow citizens, were for the most part happy to be home. I admit hesitantly that I was truly relieved when that temporary duty assignment was over; as I later learned, it was over in time, but not really over.
I came back to the U.S. in 1972 and I was discharged from the First Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, California. I started college in San Diego using the G.I. Bill and it wasn’t long before I was living a normal life in pursuit of an education. I didn’t try to keep in touch with any of the Marines from my old units, I didn’t join any Veterans’ organizations, and I didn’t dwell on or talk about my military experience; I thought I had pretty much put the past behind me.
By chance one day on a drive, I ended up at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego. They were placing flags on thousands of Veterans’ graves for Memorial Day and I stopped to help. That day, I realized that I hadn’t left as much behind as I thought, and that I did have a lot to say about the courage of those troops in those graves. To this day, placing a flag on Veteran’s grave is a very emotional experience for me, but an experience that I am willing to share with others if they will join me.
As a Veteran, and the Director of Flags4Vets, it is my job to remind people and companies that placing an “I support the troops” bumper sticker on their car and hanging U.S. Flags on and in your building is simply not enough. Every year when Flags4Vets struggles to raise money and to find volunteers to place flags on Veterans’ graves, I wonder why all of those people who “support the troops” don’t have a few minutes to spare to help place flags on graves; we all know that people pretty much accomplish what they set their mind to; priorities.
Over the last 235 years, 1.5 Million of our Sons and Daughters have been killed in the line of duty while protecting your way of life, your liberties, and your freedoms. You, and your family, and your company, can help Flags4Vets honor their service.
As our credentials do attest, we are a certified non-profit 501(c)(3) and we are the only organization approved by the Department of Defense, National Cemetery Administration, to raise money for flags and to place them on Veterans’ graves in the U.S. and in ten other countries. If you visit our website at www.theUSflag.com you can take a look at the kinds of things that we do.
Over the years, I have acquired a life’s bundle of credentials and accolades, but the title "Doc" is the one that I hold most dear. To live with, and be respected by, a group of Marines from every corner of the U.S. is just about all the praise that any one person can handle; I care a great deal about all of our Marines, Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Guardsmen around the world; if you have read this far down the page, I suspect that you do too.
When you are ready to get started, or just want more info, email me at moore@theUSflag.com.
Fred Moore
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