WHEATFIELD —
Kickstands were up early Friday as the American Legion Riders began their 500 mile journey of goodwill to Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.
About 19 members of the motorcycle club departed Legion Post at 1451 on Ward Road at 9 a.m. Their mission, many months in the making, is to escort a 24-foot truck loaded with a bounty of clothing and other necessities intended for wounded veterans awaiting transport from the base to permanent hospitals.
“We’ve got everything from personal hygiene items and soap to T-shirts, sweatshirts, undergarments, pants, coats ... even some snacks,” said Riders president Sam Reeder. “It sounds like we have somewhere in the vicinity of three more palettes to pick up at the five (other Legion) posts.”
The much-needed goods represent months of collection drives and appeals by Jammies for GIs, the regional charity run by Cheryl Lepsch for roughly four years. The organization collects clothing and personal care items for America’s wounded soldiers, many of whom are evacuated from foreign battlefields with only the tattered clothes on their backs.
Seven palettes worth of clothing and other items are now en rote to the same veterans and more will be picked up as the convoy is welcomed at American Legion posts along the way, Reeder said. Other legion riders will also join the procession and lend whatever material support they can.
West Herr Ford, just one sponsor, contributed a box of coats. Cave of the Winds chipped in a huge amount of slippers. Boxes of unused surplus Canal Fest T-shirts were also among the donations.
Lepsch started Jammies for GIs after hearing from her son Jeremy while he was stationed overseas several years ago. She was told about the overcrowding in military hospitals in Germany and stateside that triage patients for extended periods of time before they reach their destination or are redeployed. She heard of and saw images of wounded soldiers awaiting treatment at bases in Germany and wearing T-shirts while snow is visible in the background, or walking without coats to therapy session on open medical campuses.
“We are going to be their escort,” Reeder said. “We raised money and some of the items and we’ll give them transportation all the way to Andrews.”
The club had to take a special motorcycle safety training course last week just to get on base. There are other hurdles in addition to a summer’s worth of fundraisers the club orchestrated in order to raise $2,800 to cover gas, meals and lodging.
Reeder said Jammies for GIs is this year donating enough items to take care of between 200 and 300 veterans.
“It’s a lot. There’s still a long way to go,” he stressed. “There are thousands of guys needing help.”
Communities
Kickstands up for local effort to help wounded veterans
Jammies for GIs, Legion Riders embark on journey to help wounded warriors
- Communities
-
-
It's ni hao Lew-Port for Chinese teacher
“Knee how.”
While the spelling is incorrect, the pronunciation is exactly how the Chinese say hello. The sentiment is precisely how Wang Ying, the newest — though temporary — member of the Lewiston-Porter faculty greeted her students for the first time when she arrived in late January. -
Memorial Day parade participants being sought
The Niagara Falls Veterans Memorial Commission is organizing the Niagara Falls Memorial Day parade this year.
-
Shining a light on the issue of teen dating violence
Kim Davidson didn’t fully grasp what her daughter had gotten herself into.
Although she had seen “changes” in Kari’s behavior — sudden distance from old girl friends, quitting the cheerleading squad, downsizing her college and career plans to accommodate a boy she’d only dated a few months — Davidson confessed she had no idea those changes were warning signs of a looming tragedy. -
Joseph Davis State Park gets some green
Officials in the Town of Lewiston received approval Thursday to spend a significant portion of the community’s incoming greenway funds on the redevelopment of Joseph Davis State Park.
-
Lewiston's welcome center honored as project of the year for historic restoration
A piece of Lewiston’s history is about to be honored as a preservation project of the year.
-
SLIDESHOW: Volunteers Search for Judith
Volunteers gathered on 102nd Street in Niagara Falls to search for the missing Judith Burr, 67. Shortly after the search began, the body of Judith was found in the dense brush just east of 102nd Street.
-
Niagara woman is fooled by ‘phisher’
Beverley Porter was taking a nap one day last week when her phone rang.
The scammer at the other end of the line had gotten lucky. After most likely making random calls to numbers in the 716 area code, he was able to catch the Town of Niagara woman when she was groggy, and slightly medicated from a minor surgical procedure earlier in the day. -
On the hunt for blue jeans at Niagara Falls High School
Students at Niagara Falls High School are ready for one final push in its campaign to win a national contest.
-
Lewiston Relay holding kickoff party
The kickoff to the 15th annual Relay For Life Lewiston will be from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, at the Hard Rock Cafe, 333 Prospect St.
-
Teacher likes this Apple at Lew-Port
Keeping up with technology is a problem almost everywhere. But in the classroom, a deficiency can cripple children as they move through their formative years into post-high school.
- More Communities Headlines
-






