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Beach Screens' Image Gallery/ Virginia/ Virginia Beach/ POW-MIA Memorial at NAS Oceana/

NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial
NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial
NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial
NAS Oceana - POW/MIA Memorial

 

"The Flame of Hope monument was conceived in 1972 as a volunteer project headed by Attack Squadron 43 at Naval Air Station Oceana. The monument provided squadron personnel with a means to express their concern for the prisoners of War and Missing in Action (POW/MIAs) of the Vietnam War.

The monument was built by Volunteers from Construction Battalion 415 and sponsored by the Virginia Beach Jaycees and Oceana Wives of the 'They're Not Forgotten" committee.

The Virginia Beach Jaycees coordinated contributions from the community which enabled VA-43 to obtain 50 cubic yards of cement, a propane gas tank, the 34,000 pound granite centerpiece, and fixtures for the plumbing for the torch. The Flame of Hope was formally dedicated on Friday May 22, 1972.

The original intent of the monument was to have a live flame light the way for the return of all POW/MIAs from South East Asia, after which the flame would be extinguished. The dream of those promoting the monument was that 'the flame would burn briefly.' However, as the war continued, the Flame of Hope became a rallying point around which the Ocean wives' 'They're Not Forgotten' committee campaigned for greater awareness of the plight of the POW/MIAs among citizens and the U.S. Congress.

In February 1973, the first 565 American prisoners released as a result of the Vietnam Peace Accords returned home and it seemed like the dream to have the flame extinguished upon gaining a full accounting of those missing was drawing near.

When 'Operation Homecoming' ended, the fate of over two thousand military men remained a mystery and the Flame of Hope continued to burn. However, the oil embargo of 1973 brought public pressure to extinguish the flame as an energy-saving measure. On November 20, 1973, the flame was extinguished over the objections of those who feared for a loss of awareness of those servicemen who were left behind." "...The flame was transferred to the NAS Oceana chapel and the monument was replaced by a bronze replica." "A decade passed before members of the 'They're Not Forgotten' committee were successful in stirring public concern when very few remains of missing Americans had been returned and over 2400 Americans remained in an unaccounted for status. Their campaign succeeded on March 25, 1984 when the Flame of Hope was reignited.

On May 01, 1994, the Flame of Hope was rededicated as a continuous reminder that those who were killed or remain missing in Vietnam must never be forgotten. The Flame of Hope will continue to light the way for POW/MIA families to gain a better understanding of the fate of their sons, husbands, fiances, and fathers."

- Flame of Hope monument, NAS Oceana, Virginia Beach, VA.

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