Buglers honor veterans
Group rehearses for larger event
BY BOB RECOTTA THE LEADER
 | | ERIC WENSEL/THE LEADER Matthew Cote of Buffalo stands at attention as Jeremy Whiting of Bath plays Taps Saturday during a service at the Bath VA. |
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BATH - In honor of Veterans Day, the sound of buglers playing Taps echoed off the hills of Bath National Cemetery.
A group of Haverling High School students participated Saturday, November 11 in a ceremony that had two purposes. The first was to honor the men and women who served in the United States Armed Forces. The second purpose was to rehearse for a much larger celebration next year.
The participants were rehearsing for the second performance of EchoTaps, which will be held on May 19, 2007.
"It will be a world-wide event," said Col. Gerald McDonald, the vice-chairman of logistics for EchoTaps. "It will take between 10,000 and 20,000 to do it globally."
EchoTaps was held for the first time last year. McDonald and Leslie Hampton organized the event. The two served on funeral detail together and used to arrange for a bugler to play Taps at military funerals.
"At one funeral we had two buglers show up," McDonald said. "We started to ask ourselves, what would happen if we had two, three, four or five buglers show up for the same funeral. We said we would line them up down the road and see how it goes."
From those humble beginnings, the idea of EchoTaps grew. McDonald and Hampton recruited 674 buglers to play Taps on May 21, 2005. They lined up at strategic locations from the Bath National Cemetery to Woodlaw n N a t i o n a l Cemetery in Elmira, a distance of 41 miles.
The effort set a world record for the number of buglers playing Taps at one time.
"Had we known how much work it would be beforehand ...," Hampton said. "I put two years of my life into putting this together."
The efforts of McDonald, Hampton and the other organizers and participants did not go unnoticed. Word of the success of EchoTaps reached Washington, D.C. and officials said they wanted to take EchoTaps and take it worldwide to all national cemeteries.
McDonald said, in addition to paying much-deserved tribute to servicemen and women who have fallen while serving our country, EchoTaps also has a practical purpose.
"This is a logistics exercise," McDonald said. "It involved 24 buses, 866 players and eight guards per bus. It was planned like it would be for Chinook helicopters."
The event was so successful, a documentary is being made of the effort. It will premiere Jan. 14 at the Corning Museum of Glass. DVDs of the documentary will be available.