2023-2024 Post Officers

Legionnaires

We are committed to serving our local Veterans and active duty military personnel and their families and local Veteran Charities  through our projects and events by providing services and financial help during their time of need.

Click here for monthly calendar.

Commander
Robert Patierno

1st Vice
Skip Felecia

2nd Vice
Thomas Hodges

3rd Vice
Don "BJ" McGuire

Chaplain
Jim Mosley

Finance Officer
Don Plotner

Adjutant
Skip Felecia

Judge Advocate
Buster Furman

Sgt. at Arms
Mike Kenjorski

Service Officer
Terri Lynn Ratzel

Historian
Jackie Steinbacher

Past Commander
Jerry Faught

House Manager
Tina Brown

Member at Large
Terry Nelson

Member at Large
Gwyneth Rees

 

Member At Large
Swanee Sweeney

Member At Large
Lenny Lussier

EBoard Mtg
2nd Tuesday of Month @10am
General Membership Mtg
3rd Tues. of Month @ 7pm
suspended from July -October

DUES
$55 per year

Learn more about what we do

Construction of Gulf War Memorial Begins on the National Mall July 12, 2022 | By Amanda Miller The installation of a new monument in Washington, D.C., recognizing Gulf War veterans begins July 14 with the formal groundbreaking of the National Desert Storm and Desert Shield Memorial.

Situated on the National Mall to the north of the Lincoln Memorial, the new park-like monument will honor veterans who served on Active duty in support of the two operations.

The memorial commemorates “the service and sacrifice” of the military personnel who from 1991 to 1992 “liberated Kuwait from Iraq and defended Saudi Arabia and the Arabian Peninsula from further invasion,” according to information from the National Desert Storm Memorial Association. Kuwait is the lead donor contributing to the memorial.

Derived from Gulf War veterans’ responses to a five-question survey, the monument’s design presents the war’s historical events and significance along with the “unique environmental and battle conditions experienced” by the troops who fought in it, according to the association. Survey replies led the association to conclude that the design should reflect the war’s desert environment; should include a statue of Soldiers wearing chemical warfare protective gear; and should represent the war’s so-called “left hook” maneuver by ground troops—a trick by which the U.S. Army cut off supplies and prompted Iraqi forces’ retreat.

After consideration, the association chose not to feature the names of service members who died in the war because doing so “would omit the names of so many of our comrades who were lost outside of the parameters” of the dates bookending the two operations; and because its educational purpose is distinct from that of monuments such as the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which is meant instead as “a place of mourning, healing, and reconciliation.” Gulf War. 

An artist’s rendering of the National Desert Storm and Desert Shield Memorial. Image courtesy of the National Desert Storm Memorial Association. “This memorial represents and includes many degrees of sacrifice,” according to the association, including that of those who died in theater, those who since died as a result, “and those who are currently suffering as a result of their honorable service.”

Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. David A. Deptula, dean of AFA’s Mitchell Institute of Aerospace Studies, served as a principal architect of Desert Storm’s air campaign and said the war was historically significant because, among other reasons, it “set expectations for low casualties,” “presaged the age of precision weapons,” marked the first use of a joint force concept of operations, and was the first time “airpower was the key force” in achieving victory.

The association intends to complete the memorial’s construction by Veterans Day of 2024.

The groundbreaking will be livestreamed at www.ndswm.org/live at 10 a.m. Eastern time July 14.

History -- Dennis R. Boland NEC,
The American Legion Department of Florida
101st Airborne Division 502nd Airborne Inf 1962-65