Wall of fame visits Webutuck

WEBUTUCK — Senator Greg Ball (R, C - Patterson) brought his Traveling Veterans Wall of Fame to Webutuck High School on Friday, March 23.The wall features pictures and biographies of veterans throughout the 40th Senate District.The purpose of the installation is to teach students about sacrifices veterans have made and are currently making on behalf of their country and communities.Principal Ken Sauer said he was honored to have the wall on the Webutuck campus.“It’s really an amazing thing for the students. They will be able to walk by and read and reflect. It’s just a great honor,” he said.Ball was not able to attend the event, but Eugene Parotto, the chairman of the Veterans Advisory Committee, was there to speak on his behalf.“We have a legacy we’re leaving here. Read these bios. This isn’t just for the 27 vets pictured here on the wall but for every vet who has ever put a uniform on. They have served to make sure that we have the freedom to be what we want to be, to pursue our lives and they risked their lives for that freedom,” he said.Parotto is also one of the 27 veterans featured on the wall.“You see my picture there and you hear my voice, but it’s not my voice, it’s the voice of all these amazing individuals coming through me here today,” he said.Also in attendance at the event were Superintendent of Schools James Gratto, Amenia town Supervisor Bill Flood, Amenia Town Board member Darlene Riemer, several Webutuck staff members, Millerton American Legion Post 178 Commander Robert Jenks and the Rev. Herbert Day of the Millerton Methodist Church, who is also a veteran.Day gave a moving speech on the honor of being included in this event.“It is really my privilege to be here today. There are a large number of vets in this area. I have many relatives and people I know who have served. It was a privilege for me to serve during the conflict in Korea. I’m proud to honor these people because of what they have done for our country. They fought to have the freedoms we now have, and that’s an important thing to remember,” he said.Flood described the moment as an important one for the community.“I really appreciate the sacrifices these people have made for us. Because of them we have the right to vote, the right to assembly and all those definitive things that make us American,” he said. “We honor our vets at Fountain Square [in Amenia] and throughout our community, and this is another one of those great moments.” Sauer urges the community to stop in and view the wall while it is at Webutuck.“It will be here until Friday, March 30. We just ask that people try to come by after classes end, so after 2 p.m., so as not to disturb our students,” he said.

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