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Topic: Statue of Major Robert Rogers, father of Rangers angers vetsWhat do you all think? FORT EDWARD, N.Y. - Maj. Robert Rogers, the frontiersman whose 18th century manual on guerrilla warfare has become a blueprint for Army Ranger fighting tactics, is getting what some consider a long-overdue honor: a statue in his memory. But some veterans believe unveiling the monument on Memorial Day is insensitive because Rogers was loyal to England during the Revolutionary War. "I think it's a travesty that we would think about honoring a person, especially someone who fought against us, on that day," said Bob Bearor, who served in the Army's 101st Airborne Division in the 1960s. "It's a sacred day. ... Let's honor our dead who died for our country." The life-size bronze statue is scheduled to be unveiled during a ceremony on Rogers Island in the Hudson River, 40 miles north of Albany. The island served as the base camp for Rogers' Rangers during the late 1750s, when the British and French fought for control of North America. REAM MORE |
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I agree with Molly. It seems that another day would be more appropriate.
![]() Major Robert Rogers http://www.benning.army.mil/rtb/Hall...ert_rogers.htm |
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Quote:
He was a hero in the French & Indian War, but was on the wrong side of history in the Revolution. As a former batt boy, I was fine with it. |
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Seeing that he is the father of the Regiment, and it must be one of the oldest Military Units in America and that they are still carrying the name that he gave them, then why not a statue, if the former members find this so offensives then why carry on with the name that he gave them. Surely it would better for them to seek a new title to get away from the man that formed and named them and cosign the name to the history books
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