Sgt. York’s Memorial Day Message Still Inspires
On Memorial Day, 1941, Sgt. Alvin York spoke at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
This humble farmer from the backwoods of Tennessee began his military career as a pacifist. While he was serving with the U.S. Army during WW I, a Bible study with his commanding officer persuaded a reluctant York that it was right to help defenseless civilians even if it meant killing their attackers. In 1919 he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor after singlehandedly dispatching more than twenty enemy soldiers and capturing 132 on October 8 of the previous year. He saw first-hand the price of liberty through the smoke and carnage of a French battlefield.
Like many who lived through the horrors of the Great War, York hoped death and loss on such a scale would never happen again. “No one can possibly hate war as much as a soldier,” he said. “I don’t approve of taking human life unless it is necessary, but I considered it necessary.” As he saw it, “We had to go into it to give our boys and young ladies a chance for peace in the days to come.”
York risked his life to win that peace abroad (a canteen beside him during the firefight had eighteen bullet holes in it), expecting to secure a lasting peace at home. When Hitler’s rise to power in 1933 again threatened Germany’s neighbors, York insisted the battle was theirs alone and that America “should fight a defensive war only” this time around.
But as the new conflict in Europe entered its second year, Americans became divided over whether to join forces with Britain and her struggling allies against the Nazis. Powerful voices argued that it wasn’t America’s fight and there was no reason to get involved. One leader of the noninterventionist camp was legendary flyer Charles Lindbergh, who believed the only people interested in going to war were “the British, the Jews, and the Roosevelt Administration.”
The sergeant was one of many who had a change of heart as Nazi armies occupied one nation after another and began the systematic murder of Jewish citizens. York condemned Lindbergh and other isolationists, taking heavy criticism in the press from the aviator’s supporters, who called York a “skunk,” “ignoramus,” and worse. With Japan in the east and Germany in the west flexing their military muscle, York encouraged American leaders to answer with “millions of soldiers being armed with the very latest and best equipment.” The peace that seemed so secure in 1918 had vanished in a cloud of destruction even more horrible than before. America must be prepared to fight.
“We owe it to him to renew the lease on liberty he helped us to get.
“May God help us to be equal to the task.”
Isolationist support evaporated overnight after the attack on Pearl Harbor the following December. America and the world were at war again, determined to renew the lease on liberty won at so great a cost only a generation before.
Alvin York knew from personal experience what everyone who understands American history also knows: freedom is not a steady state. The world’s natural order is conflict and chaos. America is an exceptional country whose freedom and prosperity are not the norm. They were gained and are preserved only by sacrifice and diligent defense. Too many Americans have no idea that this is the case. They live in the freest, wealthiest, safest country in the history of the world and have no clue how it got that way or even that it is an outlier unique in history.
Ignorant of the lessons of the past and the responsibilities of the present, can we come up with the price of a new lease on liberty when the next payment comes due?
May God help us to be equal to the task.
John Perry is a ghostwriter and collaborator, as well as the author of more than a dozen books including Sgt. York: His Life, Legend, and Legacy (Fidelis, 2021). His latest book is The Detroiting of America: What Happened to the Motor City, Why Other Cities Followed, How Detroit is Coming Back (Fidelis, 2024). He would like to thank Mrs. Sue Gillespie, formerly of Spring Woods Junior High in Houston, for sparking his lifelong interest in American history.
Image: Library of Congress
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