The first step necessary to assure
success of Poppy Day is the appointment of a capable, enthusiastic chairman
and committee. In selecting a chairman, consideration should be given to
her ability to organize the work within the Unit and also her ability to
secure the greatest possible cooperation from the community as a whole.
Since the Unit's Veterans Affairs and
Rehabilitation and Children and Youth funds are derived from the annual
Poppy distribution, it is essential that it be a success. Pin the first
poppy on the Mayor and ask him to issue a proclamation setting aside a day
as Poppy Day, with an appeal to all citizens to observe the day by wearing a
poppy.
Volunteer Guide to a Successful Poppy
promotion : A special booklet giving detailed directions for the
organization and promotion of a successful Poppy Day has been prepared by
National Headquarters. The booklet outlines the steps necessary to organize
the work force, secure newspaper publicity, win community cooperation, and
handle the actual work on Poppy Day. (Copies can be purchased at a nominal
price from The American Legion National Emblem Sales.
Publicity for Poppy Day
Because our poppy is an emblem of sacrifice, those who love it must make
every effort to teach the public the true meaning of the flower. The
success of the poppy distribution depends upon the advance publicity. If, in
the season of Memorial Day, the poppy can make the indifferent public recall
the sacrifices which have been made by the men and women who gave their
lives that our country might be saved, the first and greatest mission of the
poppy has been fulfilled.
The second mission is to win the
confidence of the public through knowledge of the purposes to which the
American Legion and American legion Auxiliary expend the money derived from
the poppy distribution. By means of publicity on the expenditure of the
poppy proceeds, public confidence can be won. The public has the right to
this information. Every Post ad Unit should see that the poppy proceeds are
so spent that publicity will bring honor and reward to our organization.
The public should also be reminded that
the disabled men and women in hospitals, and their families are assisted by
our poppy funds. The public will then know that The American Legion and The
American Legion Auxiliary are continuing to keep faith with those who gave
their all for our freedom.
Each year suggested publicity stories are
prepared by National Headquarters and supplied without charge in sufficient
quantity to Departments for distribution to each Unit. The stories are
designed to be localized by the insertion of local names or to be rewritten
from a local angle. This publication is entitled " Poppy Preview."
Suggested Activities
The following is a suggested outline of activities to precede Poppy Day:
Start a campaign of newspaper publicity which will educate the public about
the significance of the poppy and the purpose for which the money is spent:
organize a Poppy Speakers Bureau through which speakers will be available
for meetings of all community organizations to acquaint them with the value
of the poppy program, both from the standpoint of therapeutic value to the
maker of the poppy and to the community itself.
Supplies for Poppy Day
Conduct a Poppy Poster Contest in the local schools and give attractive
prizes to the winners. Feature a poppy window display. Window cards,
windshield stickers, poppy stamps, poppy lapel streamers to identify
American Legion and Auxiliary workers. "Thank You for Caring" poppy
leaflets, and offset printing repro sheets ca be purchased through The
American Legion National Emblem Sales. A list of available supplies is
furnished by national Headquarters to every Department each fall.
Poppy Facts
That in the spring of 1919, amidst complete devastation, the poppies bloomed
in abundance on the battlefields of France where so many of our men had
fallen in battle, and that a replica of this poppy has become the Memorial
Flower of the American Legion Auxiliary?
That The American Legion was the first
national organization to adopt the poppy as its Memorial Flower, having
taken this action at the national Convention in Cleveland, September 27-29,
1920?
That the American Legion Auxiliary adopted
the poppy as its Memorial Flower at its organizing convention held in Kansas
City, in October 1921.
That at the time the American Legion
Auxiliary adopted the poppy, it pledged 100% of the profits from the poppy
distribution to welfare relied for servicemen and servicewomen and their
families, thus fulfilling the true meaning of the poppy, and emblem of
faith; faith which is being kept with all who died through service to the
living?
That the American Legion Auxiliary, in
order to protect the memorial poppy from the inroads of commercialism,
adopted a national poppy program at the St. Paul Convection in 1924 which
eliminated the commercial poppy?
That the memorial poppies are made of red
crepe paper, by hand, by disabled veterans in hospitals and poppy workrooms
in forty states, and that the workers receive pay for each poppy made, the
material being furnished free by the Department in the state in which the
hospital is located?
That the more than 25,000.000 poppies made
by disabled veterans are distributed on the streets under the supervision of
the American Legion Auxiliary by approximately 125.000 volunteer workers who
receive no compensation?
That through the American Legion Auxiliary
poppy program, more than $300.000 is paid annually to needy and disabled
service men and service women for making the poppies.
That proceeds from the distribution of
over 25,000,000 poppies annually under the guidance of the American Legion
Auxiliary amount to more than $2,000,000 every penny of which is devoted to
Veterans Affairs and Rehabilitation work by both The American Legion and
Auxiliary, which includes aid to needy veterans and their families? The
method of distribution varies in each Department, depending upon the nature
of the demands for help. Each of our 10,500 Units in communities scattered
all over the United States , its territorial possessions, and in foreign
countries where veterans reside, maintains a Veterans Affairs and
Rehabilitation Committee working under a chairman, and a Children and Youth
Committee with its chairman. These Unit chairmen are assisted by Department
chairmen of similar committees, who in turn, work under the guidance of a
National Veterans Affairs and Rehabilitation Chairman and a National
Children and Youth Chairman.
That the public is given an opportunity
each year to help in the significant work of The American Legion and the
American Legion Auxiliary, as well as an opportunity to pay tribute to all
who died in service, by wearing a poppy on Poppy Day?
Uses of Poppy Fund
WHEREAS, By Resolution 69 of The American legion at its National Executive
Committee meeting in April 1953, The American Legion did enact a mandate
with reference to the use of funds derived from the distribution of poppies:
and
WHEREAS, The American Legion Auxiliary has
followed such mandates in the expenditure of such funds: and
WHEREAS, The recent enlargement of
membership eligibility to include Vietnam veterans and our experience in the
Hospital Volunteer program indicate that certain changes should b considered
in this American Legion mandate; now , therefore , be it
RESOLVED : By the National Executive
Committee of The American Legion, assembled in Indianapolis, Indiana, May
3-4, 1967, that funds derived from the distribution of The American Legion
and American Legion Auxiliary poppy shall be used for the following purposes
only:
1. For the rehabilitation of veterans honorably discharged from the
United States Armed Forces after April 6. 1917.
2. For the welfare of the families of veterans of the above named
date.
3. For the rehabilitation of hospitalized servicemen returning home
and awaiting discharge who require treatment in service hospitals.
4. To defray the expenses of Children and Youth and Veterans Affairs
and Rehabilitation Chairman in attending authorized conferences at which
they are accredited representatives, and the expenses of the Director of
Hospital Volunteer Schools to National Conferences, and to defray
administrative expenses of Service Department, provided that both The
American Legion and the American legion Auxiliary Departments approve such
use of funds within the Departments.
5. For Transportation expenses of Hospital Volunteers and the
purchase of Hospital Volunteer uniforms, if ad Department f the American
Legion Auxiliary so desires, as well as expenditures on behalf of the Field
Service program, if a Department of the American Legion Auxiliary so
desires, all within the limits of the guidelines established by the National
American Legion Auxiliary.