MVVM Parade
Minnesota State Representative Doug Carlson from Sandstone invited us to participate in the Pine County Parade in Pine City in July 1991. In August, MVVM marched in the Woodbury parade.
The Minneapolis Aquatennial Torchlight Parade included two Gold Star Mothers—Muriel Pederson and Fran Larson. They rode in a shiny red convertible loaned to MVVM by Valley Olds Pontiac.
MVVM BOOTHS
Most of MVVM’s donations came from small contributions made by the people of Minnesota. Larger corporations were unwilling to become involved in the controversy of the Vietnam War. Many MVVM booths helped get the word out, shared casualty information, took donations, and sold items like t-shirts, hats, bandanas, mugs, pins, etc.
Across the state, many welcomed MVVM booths: Taste of Minnesota in St. Paul; WE Fest in Detroit Lakes; Clarissa Summer Festival, Glencoe area raised over $2,800 with numerous events and donations to honor the five hometown boys, Quarry Days in Sandstone; Club Soda Night Club in Bloomington; Detroit Lakes Jaycees Second Chance Reunion; VFWs; American Legions; Jaycee dances and jams; Anoka, Isanti, Ramsey, Washington, and Carver country fairs, Hennepin County Government Center, Apache Plaza, and many more. One of our most successful recurring booths was at the Minnesota State Fair, with volunteers raising over $11,000 in 1989 alone. An elementary and a high school collected pennies for a donation of over $500.
Other events included a Chili Bowl II Cook-Off at Rainbow Foods in Eagan sponsored by K102 radio, which raised $245. WDGY sponsored a Northtown Mall fundraising event with the Minnesota Timberwolves. The Minnesota State Band raised money during a special tribute concert to veterans at the Landmark Center. Anoka VVA Chapter #470 walked seven miles from the Federal Building in Minneapolis to the memorial site to create awareness. Rick Esmond, a Vietnam Veteran, ran the Twin Cities Marathon, raising $500 for MVVM. Southtown Theatre handed out hundreds of brochures to people attending “In Country.” Portions of the proceeds from the Minnesota Zoo Holiday in Lights were donated to MVVM.
K102 radio station became an MVVM sponsor in early 1989, airing biographies of several men whose names would appear on the memorial. Additionally, they sponsored booths at WE Fest, Listeners Appreciation Day at Aamodt’s Apple Farm in Stillwater, The Winterific Ice Fishing Contest on Normandale Lake in Bloomington, and several more. This list is only a sample of contributions to the memorial.
Naegele Outdoor Advertising donated five billboards to help promote the memorial. Designed by Concept Group, the billboard captions read, “They went to the wall for you. Now help build one for them.” Skoglund Communications provided ten out-of-state billboard locations supporting MVVM. They read, “The 60s–for them there will never be another decade like it.”
Canterbury Downs Horse Racing
The “Downs” Run for Funds at Canterbury Downs racing in August of 1991, was focused on raising funds to build MVVM. Proceeds from advance ticket sales and sponsored races assisted MVVM in keeping on schedule. We also were supported at an All-Star Wrestling Tournament in St. Paul in September of 1990.
MVVM Motorcycle Rally
Minnesota Motorcycle Riders Association (MMRA) organized a Veterans Ride in 1990. Bikers met in Rogers, MN and headed west to the VA Medical Center in St. Cloud. Participation stretched seven miles with the assistance of MN DOT, the Minnesota highway patrol, and local police. People cheered them on from every overpass on the route. They raised almost $7,000.
Special Guest Fundraising Dinner
Governor Arne Carlson and the MVVM Board of Directors held a fundraising dinner at the Thunderbird Hotel in Bloomington in June of 1991. It honored distinguished guests General William C. Westmoreland, General John Vessey, Senator Paul Wellstone, and Mr. Phan Van Yen (President, Fellowship of the Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces). Over 325 people attended, raising over $7,000. Westmoreland indicated that the fundraising dinner was the sincerest of similar events he had ever attended, and he’d been to hundreds.
Jan Scruggs and Teresa Vetter each initiated and produced a lasting monument to our veterans.
Another MVVM fundraising dinner in September of 1991, hosted and honored Vietnam Veteran Jan Scruggs. He founded the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund and was the driving force behind creating the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Scruggs hoped the memorial would honor all who served and “begin the healing process and forever stand as a symbol of our national unity.” He also focused on the physical and psychological trauma faced by U.S. veterans after the war.
Sponsor a Name
…It is important that this memorial be built so that the young will learn — and we won’t forget. Of the 1,073 names, 732 sponsors, 574 have no sponsors, if the names with no sponsors could be sponsored, we would then have enough money to build the memorial. We are so close to starting, but we need your help in getting the remaining monies to start building. Excerpt from Richard Bergling from the fundraising dinner with General Westmoreland.
Billboard Sally
On Friday, August 30, 1991, at 2 pm, 57-year-old Sally Adams of Delano, MN, a mother of a Vietnam veteran, climbed a 25-foot ladder onto a billboard near Forest Lake. Her home consisted of a lime green tent, a heater, and sleeping bags. Adams, a mother of three and grandmother of twelve, was determined to live on the billboard until raising the $73,000 needed to start the memorial’s construction process.
“My son went to Vietnam, and while I was fortunate that he came back, the person who returned was not the same one who left a year earlier. Vietnam took his spirit and his heart,” said Adams. “Minnesota needs this memorial that is long overdue. We buried our dead but never said thank you. Now it’s time!”
Sally dealt with cold, high winds, and rain. Then on September 19, with a Minnesota freeze warning issued, a pledge was called in by a Golden Valley businessman Bill Popp, President, and owner of LDB International Corporation. He arrived with a check for $50,000. Now, after 21 days, Sally could come down from the billboard. A celebration commenced. We could now move forward with construction. In addition, Adams’ stay on the billboard raised $14,000 in cash and $10,000 in pledges.
A huge crane held a large U.S. Flag that drew attention to the billboard where Billboard Sally lived for 21 days. It was located alongside the 35W interstate near Forest Lake. One Saturday, an attempt was made to raise a MIA/POW balloon to draw attention to Sally and the memorial. It was too windy for a safe launch.