Fort Rosecrans readied for a
day of mourning
By Jeanette
Steele, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Monday, May 31, 2010 at
12:04 a.m.
Nelvin C. Cepeda /
UNION-TRIBUNE
Charlie Kahler,
foreman at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in Point Loma, places
American flags at headstones while working early Saturday morning in
preparation for Memorial Day.
DETAILS
What: Memorial Day Service and Day of Remembrance
ceremony
When: 8:45 a.m. today
Where: Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery, Point Loma
Guest speaker: Brig. Gen. Ron Bailey, commanding
general of the Marine
Corps Recruit Depot’s Western Recruiting Region
U-T Multimedia: For more photos of Fort Rosecrans
National Cemetery, go to uniontrib.com/rosecrans2010.
At a place where the Stars
and Stripes almost always flies at half staff, the
groundskeepers of Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery are girding for their
biggest day of the year.
For foreman Charlie Kahler, Memorial Day is similar to Mother’s Day
for florists and Tax Day for mail carriers — busy. Kahler has 70,000
miniature American flags and 2,000 folding chairs ready to go today.
Kahler just hopes the loudspeakers don’t break. They did once and the
Marine general speaking wasn’t pleased. The general’s staff made sure
the equipment worked properly the next time around. The 57-year-old
foreman grins a little at that memory.
Working at the cemetery for 16 years, surrounded daily by the fresh
grief of mourning families, Kahler, a retired Navy chief gunner’s mate,
has developed a sense of stoicism and humor because Fort Rosecrans
groundskeepers see unusual things.
On Father’s Day, people often leave a brewski instead of begonias on a
father’s grave.
Once, a family deposited cremated remains in front of a headstone.
Apparently, they wanted the person buried in the cemetery, but the rules
didn’t allow it.
Another time, Kahler hid behind trees to catch a woman who liked to
use the headstones for her step aerobics routine.
But cemetery workers also witness moments that melt the heart, such
as the woman who came out every day with a folding chair to sit with her
deceased loved one.
One of the first American casualties from the war in Iraq,
a Marine helicopter pilot, was buried at the Point Loma cemetery.
Kahler remembers that ceremony. The Marine’s young children kept asking
where Daddy was.
“That’s when you just have to walk away because you’re crying,” said
Kahler, a father of four grown children who once waited at home during
his deployments.
Officially, the cemetery has been closed to new grave burials since
1966. These days, they dig about five or 10 graves a month, mostly for
spouses or children of those already at rest in a plot.
But the foreman will go to great lengths, literally moving the earth,
to find a grave site for someone killed in action in today’s wars.
“We’ll rip out a tree for a KIA,” Kahler said.
He’ll also fudge suggested “buffer zones” between the street and
existing headstones to squeeze in a high-priority grave. He calls it
“getting creative.”
Fort Rosecrans is one of 131 national cemeteries and among the oldest
with its first burial in 1879.
Now 47,000 nearly identical white marble markers stand in rows
overlooking the Pacific on one side of Point Loma and San Diego
Bay on the other. An additional 41,000 columbarium niches house
cremated remains.
To address the demand, the Department of Veterans Affairs plans to
open a federal cemetery at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station. Called
Miramar National Cemetery, the site on the western end of the base is
slated to have its first burials in September.
While Rosecrans’ foreman has seen plenty, its newest employee is
learning the special demands of the job.
Nick Horn started working there last month, just in time to
experience Memorial Day.
Horn, 27, a former Marine who saw action in Fallujah, Iraq, said he
is honored to have the job. His duties include placing the ashes in the
correct niche after a memorial service. He waits in a cemetery van for
the ceremony to finish, then quickly shuttles the remains to their
resting place.
“I try to honor the vet. I don’t want him waiting on a shelf for too
long,” said Horn, who ran a bulldozer in Iraq and now runs a backhoe in
Point Loma whenever a grave needs digging.
The work sometimes touches his heart, especially when taps and the
“Marines’ Hymn” are played at services.
But he is learning stoicism, too. Horn, who speaks with the soft
drawl of his native Tennessee,
said he enjoys telling people at parties that he’s a gravedigger.
His wife, on the other hand, wants him to say he’s an equipment
operator.
In the Kahler household, the foreman’s wife sometimes reminds her
husband that once he said he enjoyed his job so much, he’d work for
free.
“I must have been having one of those moments,” Kahler said,
chuckling. Then, he melts a little. “Oh, I love it out here. There’s
nothing like it in the world.”
MEMORIAL DAY EVENTS
Here is a list of today’s Memorial Day events that are open to the
public and pay tribute to our fallen troops.
Balboa Park: A remembrance ceremony at 7:30 a.m.
features guest speakers, the national anthem, the Pledge of Allegiance,
retiring the colors and taps. The Veterans Museum and Memorial Center,
2115 Park Blvd. The museum is open from noon to 6 p.m.; admission fees
required. (619) 239-5977.
Bonita: A flyover by vintage planes precedes a
memorial at 11 a.m. at the Chapel of Roses. Glen Abbey Memorial Park
& Mortuary, 3838 Bonita Road, Bonita. (619) 498-4600.
Chula Vista: A Veterans Memorial will be dedicated
at 11 a.m. at Mater Dei Catholic High School. 1615 Mater Dei Drive. The
dedication honors those Marian/Mater Dei Catholic Alumni who have served
their community and country and in memory of two alumni who where
killed in action in Vietnam.
(619) 423-2121, ext. 117.
Del Mar: The Del Mar Community Memorial Day Service
will be held at 11 a.m.; Marine Capt. Brian C. Schexnayder will be the
guest speaker. At the end of the service, deceased military members will
be remembered during the Memorial Roll Call, which concludes with the
playing of taps. St. Peter’s Episcopal
Church, 334 14th St., Del Mar. (858) 279-5458.
Coronado: A 10 a.m. service hosted by the Coronado
VFW will be staged at Star Park, one block off Orange Avenue at Star
Park Circle and Loma Avenue. (619) 865-4809.
Coronado: A concert from 1 to 3 p.m. features the
Coronado Big Band at the Coronado Ferry Landing, 1201 First St. (619)
435-8895.
Escondido: American Legion Post 149 will host a
ceremony at 10 a.m. at Oak Hill Memorial Park, 2640 Glenridge Road.
(760) 745-1159.
Julian: An observance from 11 a.m. to noon will be
at the Julian Pioneer Cemetery, A Street at Farmer Road. A potluck
follows at American Legion Post 468, 2503 Washington St. (760) 765-0126.
La Jolla: The will be a program from 2 to 3:15 p.m.
at Mount Soledad Veterans Memorial, 6905 La Jolla Scenic Drive S. Plaque
presentation will honor Col. Bob Howard, a recipient of the Medal of
Honor. (858) 459-2314 or soledadmemorial.com.
Lakeside : An 11 a.m. ceremony will be at the Veterans
of Foreign Wars, Carter-Smith Post 5867, 12650 Lindo
Lane. Special guests include Rep. Duncan
Hunter , R-Lakeside; county Supervisor Dianne Jacob;
Assemblyman Joel
Anderson; Maj. Gen. T.L. Conant; and Nick Popaditch. A
Navy helicopter display, a Marine band performance and refreshments are
included. (619) 443-0556.
Oceanside: An indoor Mass at 8 a.m. will be
celebrated at Mission San Luis Rey Parish, 4070 Mission Ave. An
all-you-can-eat, $1.99 pancake breakfast follows from 9 to 11 a.m. in
the dining room, and the Mission San Luis Rey Cemetery, 4050 Mission
Ave., will be open from 8 to 11 a.m. for visitation and tours. (760)
757-3651.
Point Loma: The annual Memorial Day Service and Day
of Remembrance ceremony will start at 8:45 a.m. at Fort Rosecrans
National Cemetery, 1800 Cabrillo Memorial Drive. Guest speaker will be
Brig. Gen. Ron Bailey, commanding general of the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot’s Western Recruiting Region. (619) 553-2084, ext. 4000.
Ramona: The VFW will host a ceremony and a service
with speaker Bob Dobson at 10 a.m. Nuevo Memory Gardens, 532 Ash St.
(760) 789-7888.
Rancho
Bernardo: A 10:45 a.m. presentation hosted by
Rancho Bernardo Veterans Memorial Association includes a flag ceremony,
the Camp
Pendleton honor guard and the Rancho Bernardo High
School choir. The guest speaker will be Marine Maj. Gen. Anthony L.
Jackson. Webb Park, on Avena Place off Bernardo Center Drive. (858)
674-1711.
San Marcos: The VFW Post 3795 will host a service at
11 a.m. at San Marcos Cemetery, 1021 Mulberry Drive. Hot dogs and
hamburgers will be served afterward at the VFW post, 212 W. Mission
Road. (760) 744-3795.
Solana Beach: The city and VFW Post 5431 will host a
ceremony from 11 a.m. to noon at the Veterans Memorial in La Colonia
Community Park, 715 Valley Ave. Highlights include a performance by the
Santa Fe Christian School Band, Camp Pendleton Young Marines, the Col.
Frank Brezina Venture Scout Crew No. 42 Color Guard and a special guest
speaker, retired Air Force Col. Susan
Thompson. Light refreshments will be served. (858)
720-2400.
San Diego: An annual Memorial Day observance will
begin at 1 p.m. at El Camino Memorial Park, 5600 Carroll Canyon Road.
(800) 352-2646.
San Diego: A Memorial Day service at 11 a.m. will be
at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery, 4470 Hilltop Drive. (619) 264-3127.
San Diego : San Diego Veterans For Peace, Hugh
Thompson Memorial Chapter, will host an Arlington West Memorial at the
USS Midway Museum Lawn at Broadway and Harbor Drive. Veterans of a
services will participate from 8 a.m. to dusk. The public is invited to
assist with the placement of religious symbols and candles. Names of the
fallen in the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars will be read. (858) 342-1964.
San Diego: An introduction by Rod Melendez will
begin a ceremony that includes an invocation by Chaplain Darcy Povich,
numerous speakers and the playing of taps from 7:30 to 10 a.m. at
Veterans Memorial, 2115 Park Blvd. (619) 239-2300.