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VETERANS HEADSTONE RESTORATION PROJECT

The Veterans Headstone Restoration Project is a mission rooted in the belief that remembrance is a responsibility, not a moment. Founded by a U.S. Marine, the project is dedicated to preserving the dignity and memory of those who served by restoring veterans’ headstones that have been worn by time and weather. With a goal of restoring 1,000 headstones in a single year, this work ensures that the names and stories of our nation’s veterans remain visible, legible, and honored.

 

Through headstone restoration, the project honors not only military service, but the full weight of sacrifice including the unseen burdens many veterans carried long after returning home. War does not end for everyone when the fighting stops, and many men and women lived with lasting physical and emotional wounds for the rest of their lives. Each restored marker is an act of recognition, acknowledging courage in service, strength in survival, and the enduring cost of war. By preserving these final memorials, we ensure these lives are not overlooked, and that their service, struggles, and legacies are remembered with dignity and respect.

This 501(c)(3) project is funded entirely through community support. Every donation helps cover the materials, travel, and time required to return these headstones to their rightful condition. Clean, legible, and honored once again, they stand as lasting tributes to those who served. Together, we can make a visible difference in how our heroes are remembered and ensure their stories remain clear for generations to come.

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BEFORE

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AFTER

Founder's Message

I founded this organization because I believe remembrance is a responsibility, not a moment.

Over time, I became aware of how easily the physical markers of service can fade. Names are worn down by weather, inscriptions growing difficult to read, sacrifices at risk of being quietly forgotten. Each headstone represents a life that once stood in service to something greater than itself. Restoring these markers is an act of respect and responsibility, ensuring these legacies are preserved.

 

As this work grew, so did my understanding of what these stones truly represent. Many of the veterans we honor survived war only to carry it home with them. Long after their service ended, the weight of combat followed them into their families, their communities, and their final years. Some lived with memories they could never set down. Some fought battles no one else could see. Their wounds were not always acknowledged, but they were real, and they mattered.

This mission is about more than preserving stone. It is about honoring the full truth of service, the courage it took to go, the strength it took to return, and the resilience it took to live with the lasting burden of war. By restoring these headstones, we ensure that these men and women are not remembered only for how they died, but for what they endured and who they were.

Every restored marker is a promise: that their sacrifices, seen and unseen, will not be erased by time. That their stories will not end in silence. That they will be remembered with the dignity and respect they earned.

A Year of Honor
Restorations Completed in Our 1,000-Veteran Initiative:

1. Philip T. Kennedy, US Army Air Forces
2. Lt. Col. Louis Gilles Monville, US Marine Corps
3. PFC John E. Courreges, BTRY E 2 Field ARTY, WWI
4. Kenneth C. Wolbert, CWT USNR, WWII
5. Sgt. Joseph Kansas, 8 Airship Co Air SVC, WWI
6. William W. Donaldson, TEC 5 US Army, WWII
7. Capt. Orville Keith McCuddin, US Army, WWII
8. Cpl. Buster Blevins, UA Army, WWII
9. Private Frederick K. Rapp, US Army, WWI
10. Major Bernard H. Dailey

11. S1 Mannie Zorro Guzman, US Navy, WWII 
12. Sgt. William Harvey McCarthy, US Army, WWII
13. SFC A35 Infantry REGT Edward Thomas Eng, US Army, Korea
14. CPL Jesse P. Marsh Jr., US Army, Vietnam
15. 1st Lt. John H. DeSantis, US Army Air Corp, WWII 
16. Thomas Dougherty, US Navy WWII
17. Pvt. William Wesley Zinn, US Army, WWII
18. A2C James A. Barndollar, US Air Force
19. TEC5 Virgil Sylvester Scheier, US Army, WWII & Korea
20. Cpl. William P. Lyons, USMC, WWII, Purple Heart
21. S1 Charles T. Webster, US Navy, WWII
22. SSGT. Earl W. Fernandez Jr., US Army, Vietnam
23. Y3 Benjamin Holly Jr., US Navy, WWII 
24. Pfc. James Leslie Barbee, US Army, WWI
25. LCDR Harvey Melvin Buol, US Navy
 

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