The Georgia World War I Centennial Commission has been busy preparing for today - the day that marks a century since the war's end.
Dr. Billy Wells, senior vice president for leadership and global engagement at the University of North Georgia, serves as the commission chairman.
Retired Lt. Col. Keith Antonia, UNG's associate vice president for military programs, is a commission associate.
Wells, a retired Army colonel, will be the keynote speaker on the war's impact at an 11 a.m. event today at the Atlanta History Center to mark Armistice Day. He plans to talk about the cost of the war, the dramatic changes it brought to American society, its impact on future military affairs, the changes it led to in America's foreign relations and policy, and the hard lessons the U.S. and Europe learned on how to end a conflict.
The Georgia group is joining the national World War I Centennial Commission to encourage Americans to ring bells 21 times at five-second intervals at that hour to mark 100 years since the war's end. UNG's Price Memorial Hall bell on the Dahlonega Campus will ring 21 times before reverting back to its normal hourly tolling schedule.
Dr. Virginia Dilkes has served on the advisory board for the state World War I Centennial Commission and as a volunteer for the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission. Today, she will lay a wreath at Arlington National Cemetery on the grave of four-star Gen. Courtney Hodges, a UNG alumnus who earned the Distinguished Service Cross during the war.
A major commission effort involved updating the record of soldiers killed in the war to include African-Americans who were previously not listed in the Georgia State Memorial Book. Now, 1,228 blacks are listed.
Wells said former state librarian Dr. Lamar Veatch's "tireless work researching Georgia WWI memorials as well as poorly documented African-American casualties corrected a major gap in Georgia history, leaving a significant archival legacy for the state."
With support from the UNG Foundation, the group has raised money for a statue honoring Eugene Bullard, the first African-American fighter pilot, who flew for the French in World War I. The statue will be placed at the Museum of Aviation next to Robins Air Force Base in Warner Robins.
The commission has also planted red poppies along U.S. 78 in Walton County to honor Moina Michael, who developed the idea of using red poppies to support veterans of World War I, and ultimately of all wars.
For more information, visit the Georgia World War I Commission website.
As AccessWDUN reported a few days ago, the Northeast Georgia History Center in Gainesville has a number of events planned this month to mark the end of the war.