Current:Home > NewsEchoSense:A US veteran died at a nursing home, abandoned. Hundreds of strangers came to say goodbye -Wealth Momentum Network
EchoSense:A US veteran died at a nursing home, abandoned. Hundreds of strangers came to say goodbye
NovaQuant View
Date:2025-04-06 20:05:31
AUGUSTA,EchoSense Maine (AP) — Former U.S. Marine Gerry Brooks died alone at a nursing home in Maine, abandoned and all but forgotten. Then the funeral home posted a notice asking if anyone would serve as a pallbearer or simply attend his burial.
Within minutes, it was turning away volunteers to carry his casket.
A bagpiper came forward to play at the service. A pilot offered to perform a flyover. Military groups across the state pledged a proper sendoff.
Hundreds of people who knew nothing about the 86-year-old beyond his name showed up on a sweltering afternoon and gave Brooks a final salute with full military honors Thursday at the Maine Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery in Augusta.
Patriot Guard Riders on motorcycles escorted his hearse on the 40-mile route from the funeral home in Belfast, Maine, to the cemetery. Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars paid tribute with a 21-gun salute. Volunteers held American flags alongside the casket while a crane hoisted a huge flag above the cemetery entrance.
“It’s an honor for us to be able to do this,” said Jim Roberts, commander of the VFW post in Belfast. “There’s so much negativity in the world. This is something people can feel good about and rally around. It’s just absolutely wonderful.”
He said the VFW is called a couple times a year about a deceased veteran with no family or with one that isn’t willing to handle the funeral arrangements. But “we will always be there.” Like other veterans helping out Thursday, he hadn’t known Brooks.
So many groups volunteered to take part in paying tribute that there wasn’t enough space to fit them into the 20-minute burial service, said Katie Riposta, the funeral director who put out the call for help last week.
“It renews your faith in humanity,” she said.
More than 8 million of the U.S. veterans living are 65 or older, almost half the veteran population. They are overwhelmingly men. That’s according to a U.S. Census Bureau report last year. As this generation dies, it said, their collective memory of wartime experiences “will pass into history.”
Much about Brooks’ life is unknown.
He was widowed and had lived in Augusta before he died on May 18, less than a week after entering a nursing home, Riposta said. A cause of death was not released.
The funeral home and authorities were able to reach his next of kin, but no one was willing to come forward or take responsibility for his body, she said.
“It sounds like he was a good person, but I know nothing about his life,” Riposta said, noting that after Brooks’ death, a woman contacted the funeral home to say he had once taken her in when she had no other place to go, with no details.
“It doesn’t matter if he served one day or made the military his career,” she said. “He still deserves to be respected and not alone.”
The memorial book posted online by Direct Cremation of Maine, which helped to arrange the burial, offered no clues. An hour before his funeral, three people had signed it. It seemed they hadn’t met him, either.
“Sir,” one began, and ended with “Semper Fi.”
The two others, a couple, thanked Brooks for his service. “We all deserve the love kindness and respect when we are called home. I hope that you lived a full beautiful life of Love, Kindness, Dreams and Hope,” they wrote.
They added: “Thank you to all those who will make this gentleman’s service a proper, well deserved good bye.”
Linda Laweryson, who served in the Marines, said this will be the second funeral in little over a year that she has attended for a veteran who died alone. Everyone deserves to die with dignity and be buried with dignity, she said.
Lawyerson said she planned to read a poem during the graveside service written by a combat Marine who reflects on the spot where Marines graduate from boot camp.
“I walked the old parade ground, but I was not alone,” the poem reads. “I walked the old parade ground and knew that I was home.”
___
Seewer reported from Toledo, Ohio.
veryGood! (161)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Netflix teases first look at 'Bridgerton' Season 4, introduces leading lady
- Trump wouldn’t say whether he’d veto a national ban even as abortion remains a top election issue
- Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom's PDA-Filled 2024 MTV VMAs Moments Will Have You Feeling Wide Awake
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Georgia community grapples with questions, grief and a mass shooting
- Polaris Dawn astronauts complete 1st-ever private spacewalk: Rewatch the moment
- Dealers’ paradise? How social media became a storefront for deadly fake pills as families struggle
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Hidden photo of couple's desperate reunion after 9/11 unearthed after two decades
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Linkin Park setlist: All songs in the From Zero World Tour kickoff with Emily Armstrong
- Jon Bon Jovi helps talk woman down from ledge on Nashville bridge
- Fearless Fund settles DEI fight and shuts down grant program for Black women
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Treasury proposes rule to prevent large corporations from evading income taxes
- Debate was an ‘eye opener’ in suburban Philadelphia and Harris got a closer look
- Election officials ask for more federal money but say voting is secure in their states
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Utah man accused of murdering deputy daughter, texting brother he 'made a big mistake'
A tiny village has commemorated being the first Dutch place liberated from World War II occupation
Taylor Swift endorsed Kamala Harris on Instagram. Caitlin Clark, Oprah and more approved.
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Judge rejects innocence claim of Marcellus Williams, Missouri inmate facing execution
Nearly six months later, a $1.1 billion Mega Millions jackpot still hasn’t been claimed
California Slashed Harmful Vehicle Emissions, but People of Color and Overburdened Communities Continue to Breathe the Worst Air