
Lest They Be
Forgotten ...
From the May, 1893
issue of "Confederate Veteran,"
the Origin of Memorial
Day
It
is a matter of history that Mrs. Chas. J. Williams, of Columbus, Ga.,
instituted the beautiful custom of decorating soldiers' graves with
flowers, a custom which has been adopted throughout the United States.
Mrs. Williams was the daughter of Maj. John Howard, of Milledgeville, Ga.,
and was a superior woman. She married Maj. C. J. Williams on his return
from the Mexican War. As colonel of the First Georgia Regulars, of the
Army in Virginia, he contracted disease, from which he died in 1862, and
was buried in Columbus, Ga.
Mrs. Williams and her little girl visited his grave every day,
and often comforted themselves by wreathing it with flowers. While the
mother sat abstractly thinking of the loved and lost one, the little one
would pluck the weeds from the unmarked soldiers' graves near her father's
and cover them with flowers, calling them her soldiers' graves.
After a short time while the dear little girl was summoned by
the angels to join her father. The sorely bereaved mother then took charge
of these unknown graves for the child's sake, and as she cared for them
thought of the thousands of patriot graves throughout the South, far away
from home and kindred, and in this way the plan was suggested to her of
setting apart one day in each year, that love might pay tribute to valor
throughout the Southern States. In March, 1868, she addressed a
communication to the Columbus Times, an extract of which I give:
"We beg the assistance of the press and the ladies throughout
the South to aid us in the effort to set apart a certain day to be
observed from the Potomac to the Rio Grande, and to be handed down through
time as a religious custom of the South, to wreathe the graves of our
martyred dead with flowers, and we propose the 26th day of April as the
day."
She then wrote to the Soldiers' Aid Societies in every Southern
State, and they readily responded and reorganized under the name of
Memorial Associations. She lived long enough to see her plan adopted all
over the South, and in 1868 throughout the United States. Mrs. Williams
died April 15, 1874, and was buried with military honors. On each
returning Memorial Day the Columbus military march around her grave, and
each deposits a floral offering.
The Legislature of Georgia, in 1866, set apart the 26th day of
April as a legal holiday in obedience to her request. Would be that every
Southern State observed the same day.

Special thanks to Dulcimer
Dan for his beautiful rendition of Dixie
Sorry, but the download time for this song is quite long