Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 20
1,500 Mourners Honor 98-Year-Old WWII Veteran John Bernard Arnold III After Public Plea
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 20

1,500 Mourners Honor 98-Year-Old WWII Veteran John Bernard Arnold III After Public Plea

2 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 20
  • About 1,500 strangers, veterans and police turned out Monday in Hanson, Massachusetts, for the funeral of John Bernard Arnold III, a 98-year-old Navy veteran who died May 6 with no known living family.
  • Hanover-Hanson Veteran Services had asked the public on Facebook to attend so Arnold would not be buried alone, and the response packed church grounds hours early with flag-waving mourners.
  • A police motorcade then escorted Arnold’s flag-draped coffin to Cedar Knoll Cemetery in Taunton, where bagpipes played, veterans saluted and people lined the route with American flags.
  • Arnold, who served in the Navy during World War II and never married or had children, was remembered by caregivers as warm and funny — a man who loved classical music, chocolate cake and making people laugh.
  • The turnout, amplified by social media and shared military ties, turned a feared solitary burial into a public tribute that organizers said showed unusual community humanity.
Thousands honor veterans in death, but how are we failing to combat their loneliness in life?
If a Facebook plea is needed for a hero's funeral, what gaps exist in our official veteran support systems?