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Project
History of
Soldiers Memorial Field
and The Memorial
The Grounds - The
Memorial - Original Committee - Development
Team
The "Charge" - Construction
Soldiers Memorial Field-
In 1927, the William T. McCoy Post #92 of the American Legion of Rochester
MN, bought property from Dr. Graham for $30,000, which then became officially
known as Soldiers Memorial Field.
The City of Rochester subsequently purchased it from Post #92 with stipulations
as to its use.
The City accepted the Legions over-all plan to develop this property as
a public park, with recreational facilities for our youth that would encourage
amateur athletics and would be dedicated to soldiers of all wars.
In 1930 additional lots were bought from William and Kathleen Fitzgerald
for $1.00. In February of 1936, the American Legion Post #92, gave the
Park Commissioners $32,500 to construct a bathhouse and swimming pool
at Solders Field.
In 1943, more lots were bought from Kathleen Fitzgerald for $1,250.
On August 12, 1951 the Eagle at the entrance was unveiled at a ceremony
dedicating the recreational area to the Youth of Olmsted County.
The Memorial-
In 1965 the Vietnam War had been going on for quite some time. Support
for our sons and daughters in that far away land was eroding rapidly.
Demonstrations at home and abroad were continuing at an alarming rate.
Many factors, including our Vietnam War strategy, put our troops in a
position where we could not win.
When our heroes who answered their country’s call arrived back
in the United States, they were treated shamelessly by many of the very
people they were serving. It was a sad time in the history of our country.

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In 1965 the Rochester Jaycees spearheaded
the adoption of the 173d Airborne Brigade. This project was designed
to show our support for our sons and daughters who were serving
their country so far away from home. This quickly became a citywide
project. Jaycees, nurses, Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, and the entire
city became involved. Items that could be used for health and cleanliness
were collected, filling two train boxcars for shipment to Vietnam
and the 173d. Rochester was the second city in the nation to show
support for our Vietnam Veterans by adopting a Vietnam fighting
unit. |
It was not until the 173d returned to Rochester for their annual reunion
in 1995 that Rochester found out how important the adoption was some 30
years earlier. Rochester gave the returning 173d the heroes welcome that
they so richly deserved. They participated in the Rochesterfest parade
and all along the parade route the entire city stood and honored those
returning heroes.
The Soldiers Field Memorial that you see today is the result of the
seed planted in 1965 that started to grow in 1995. The original idea to
have a Memorial plaque honoring the 173d grew to include every significant
conflict from our Civil War to the Gulf War.
For additional information see the
"Story of the 173d Air Borne Brigade (SEP)
on the Memorial Wall."
Original Memorial Committee
The first Soldiers Field Veterans Memorial committee was selected by former
Jaycees - Wayne Stillman and Wayne Arnold including recommendations made
by Mayor Chuck Hazama. The candidates were approved by the City Council
in October 1995.
The original members were:
Doris Amundsen – Park Board
Wayne Arnold – CPA and Jaycee member during the 173d’s adoption
Richard Brehmer – Architect and Jaycee member during the 173rd’s
adoption
Harry Kerr – Olmsted Country Deputy, VFW member, and decorated veteran
Ed Merrell – Olmsted County History Center
Floyd Riester – Chairman of the 173rd’s Rochester reunion
Wayne Stillman – Business owner/Jaycee member during the 173rd’s
adoption
Louis Vetsch – Jaycee’s 1995 President
Dave Senjem – Councilman and former Jaycee
The Memorials Development
Team-
Since 1995, thousands of unpaid volunteer hours were spent
planning, researching, fund raising, and finally the actual construction.
This effort, together with the public’s generous support, made this
Memorial possible.
General Chairman
Wayne Stillman |
Chairman Wayne Stillman exemplifies
the volunteer’s commitment, dedication, and faith in this
project. From its inception, he kept the flame burning when few
thought that this dream was possible. Although he suffered a life-threatening
fight with cancer, he remained the project's driving force.
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General Chairman
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* Wayne Stillman
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Co- Chairman, Secretary/Treasurer
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Wayne Arnold
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Co-Chairman Construction
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* Bob DeWitz
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Walk of Remembrance Paver Sales
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* Ken Zubay
Rod Lee, Eve Klampe, Bob Sheridan
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Dedication Program
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* Harry Kerr, Floyd Riester
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Major Sponsor Sales
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* Glenn Miller, Craig Q. Fisher
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Project Awareness
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* Bob Sheridan.
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Wall Graphics Research
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* Rod Lee
Harold Perry, Merle Peterson, Pauline Krieger, Bob Sheridan,
Chris Stapleton, Jeanette Hinds
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Medallion, Buttons, & Pins
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* Ken Zubay
Abbott “By Heck” Hoecker (design), Barbara Hight
Randall (procurement/sales)
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Dedication Brochure
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* Ken Zubay - Editor
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Button & Pin Sales
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* Eve Klampe
Rod Lee, Ken Zubay
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History
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* Ed Merrell
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Military Club Liaison
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* Harry Kerr
Floyd Riester
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Park Department Liaison
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* Denny Stotz
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Paver Installation
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* Lonnie Hebl, Mark Allen, Merle Peterson, Sentence to Serve
Team |
Sentence to Serve Program
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Lonnie Hebl |
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Project Design
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Leslie Rivas (designer), Bob De Witz, Jeff Anderson
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Religious Liaison
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Rev. Jerry Barnhart
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Jaycee Representative
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Steve Beilby
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City Government Liaison
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Dave Senjem
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Wall of Remembrance
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* Ray Sibley
Harry Kerr, Pat Lahey, Mike Walsh
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Web Site Coordinator
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* Ken Zubay, Wayne Herivel
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* - Coordinator
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The Soldiers Field Memorial “Charge”
In October 1995, a Committee was presented to Mayor Hazama and after
discussion, additional members were added. This committee was then presented
to and approved by the City Council. A non-profit corporation was then
formed under Section 501C3 of the IRS Code to enable tax-deductible contributions.
The committee determined that the Soldiers Field Memorial charge would
be:
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Dedicated to all veterans for their service in the Armed Forces
of the United States of America.
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Display the names of service men and women who perished as the
result of injuries sustained in the service. Names of the deceased
shall be from Southeast Minnesota within a 50-mile radius of Rochester.
Names will be added as received and approved by the screening committee.
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Include information regarding the nature of each significant conflict,
i.e. Revolutionary War, Civil War, Spanish American War, World War
I, World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, Gulf War, and other conflicts
to-date.
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Show graphic scenes from the Civil War to the Gulf War
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Include a historic perspective from the United States point of view
illustrating the significance that war has played in the development
of our country.
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Contains flags of the six service branches, the POW/MIA flag, the
Minnesota State flag, and the American flag.
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Include and maintain the existing monument structure honoring veterans
of all wars and dedicated to the youth of Olmsted County.
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Include a reflective area contain 50 trees (one per state).
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The story of Rochester's connection to the 173rd Airborne Brigade.
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Names of donors for the construction and maintenance of the memorial
will be recognized.
Construction Begins-

the work site - September 1998 (click to enlarge)
View our complete photo album
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