IN A FLASH: Remembering the Fallen

Daffodil Hill

 

On Memorial Day, and every day, Kent State remembers and honors fallen servicemen and women with several memorials on campus. 

Dedication Plaque, Daffodil Hill

 

Perhaps the best known, and most colorful of these memorials, is Daffodil Hill, on the May 4 National Historic Landmark site, which was created in 1990 with 58,175 daffodils, representing the number U.S. soldiers who died in the Vietnam War. Each year on Veterans Day, members of the community are invited to assist in the annual fall bulb planting.

Daffodil Hill at sunset

 

In 1956, Kent State Memorial Gymnasium (now the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center) was dedicated to Kent State students who lost their lives in WWI and WWII. Kent State’s Lt. Jack Rittichier Trophy, named for the Golden Flashes football star who perished on a rescue mission while serving as a Coast Guard airman in Vietnam, is awarded annually to a player who displays characteristics of the hero for which the award is named. The Student Memorial Garden on Manchester Field is set aside as a place to remember all Kent State students who have died. 

Want to see one of YOUR photos in “IN A FLASH?” Submit your Kent State-related photos to InAFlash@kent.edu and you may see them in a future Kent State Today post. Photos should be framed -horizontally- and include a brief description of what’s happening in the photo along with when and where it was taken.

POSTED: Sunday, May 26, 2024 06:03 PM
Updated: Tuesday, May 28, 2024 11:40 AM
WRITTEN BY:
Phil B. Soencksen
PHOTO CREDIT:
Bob Christy, senior photography coordinator and Rami Daud, senior photographer, University Communications and Marketing