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Flag
Burning Service And Ceremony
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The American Legion Post 18
provides the following guide for conducting a
patriotic flag burning ceremony.
(Source:
Air Force Wives)
Ceremony of Final Tribute:
- Only one flag
should be used in the ceremony, which is
representative of all the flags to be burned in
the service. The remainder of the flags
collected should be incinerated. A corporate,
government, or military incinerator or furnace
can usually be found for this purpose.
- The ceremony
should be conducted out-of-doors, preferably in
conjunction with a campfire program, and it
should be very special.
- The ceremony
involves two color guards, one for the flag
currently in use and a special color guard for
the flag to be retired from service. Of course,
this may be adapted if conditions necessitate.
- Just before
sunset the flag which has been flying all day is
retired in the normal ceremonial procedure for
that location or group.
- The color guard
responsible for the flag receiving the final
tribute moves to 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 should
instruct the color guard to "hoist the colors."
- Leader
comments: (when the flag has been secured at the
top of the pole)
"This flag has served its nation well and
long. It has worn to a condition in 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. The honor we show here this evening for
this one flag, we are showing for all of the
flags, even those not physically here."
- The leader
should:
- Call the
group to attention;
- Order a
salute;
- Lead the
entire group in the Pledge of Allegiance to
the Flag; and
- Order the
flag retired by the color guard.
- Slowly and
ceremoniously lower and then respectfully
fold the flag in the customary triangle.
Deliver the flag to the leader and then
dismiss the group.
- This
concludes the Ceremony of Final Tribute
"Ceremonial Burning"
Fire Preparation:
It is important that the fire be sizable --
preferably having burnt down to a bed of red hot
coals to avoid bits of the flag being carried off
by a roaring fire -- yet be of sufficient
intensity to ensure complete burning of the flag.
Flag Preparation:
The color guard assigned to the flag opens up
it tri-corner fold and then refolds the flag in a
coffin-shaped rectangle.
When all is ready:
- 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 memorial service as the flag burns.
National Flag Foundation recommends singing "God
Bless America" followed by an inspiring message
of the flag's meaning followed by the "Pledge of
Allegiance" and then silence.
- When the flag is basically consumed, those
assembled, with the exception of the leader and
the color guard, should be dismissed single file
and depart in silence.
- The leader and the color guard remain until
the flag is completely consumed.
- The fire should then be safely extinguished
and the ashes buried.
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