A group of veterans were among those on hand at the World War II Memorial in D.C. to lay a wreath in commemoration of Veterans Day.
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Veterans honor those they served with at World War II Memorial
The Nazis couldn’t stop them back then, and so the cold air and biting, constant wind blowing across the National Mall wasn’t going to stop them Tuesday.
A group of World War II veterans were among those on hand at the World War II Memorial to lay a wreath in commemoration of Veterans Day.
Standing up at 100 years old was Col. Frank Cohn, who was born in Germany and fled the Nazis as a teenager. Years later, he returned to fight them in World War II as a member of the U.S. Army.
“It’s a remembrance of all the people who didn’t get through the war, the ones who were killed,” Cohn said. “We have to … memorialize them, because they did everything to even give their lives to the freedom that we wanted, and this is what’s important. We got the freedom, and we should keep it, and everybody got to help keeping it too.”
He said those who weren’t veterans, but were taking the time to honor one, are living up to the spirit of the day.
“I think it’s wonderful that they do this, not because of us, but because of the way we have our country,” Cohn said. “It’s ours, and we’re not gonna let it go.”
Fighting for the spirit of America was also a theme touched on by Patrick McCourt, a living history volunteer for the National Park Service.
“Memorial Day, we’re honoring the dead. But these guys, they served, and they’re not dead,” he said. “They came back. And, they’re the ones that can tell us the stories and give us a sense of what they did and what those deceased on Memorial Day, who we honor, also did.”
He said the importance of those stories carry on today.
“It’s very important that we know about what happened in our history,” McCourt said. “I think we would not be in this situation if everyone in the United States knew the history and lived by the history.”
It’s estimated there are less than 50,000 living veterans of World War II. Those who are alive are closing in on 100 years old, if they haven’t hit that mark yet, the way Cohn and other veterans of that war who were at the memorial have.
“When the world was in peril, you came home and built a better nation,” said Jane Droppa, chair of the Friends of the World War II Memorial. “Your legacy continues to inspire us to be worthy of the freedom you defended.”
Alex Kershaw, the resident historian for the Friends of the World War II Memorial, told those who gathered about how important it is to celebrate soldiers “who served a cause greater than themselves” on battlefields in Europe and the Pacific.
“Eighty years after the most impactful war ever fought came to an end, we thank them and veterans of all wars for serving this great nation, for protecting us and our freedoms,” Kershaw said.
One of the veterans in attendance for the Veterans Day event at the World War II Memorial was Col. Frank Cohn, who was born in Germany and fled the Nazis as a teenager.
(WTOP/John Domen)
WTOP/John Domen
A group of veterans gathered at the World War II Memorial on Nov. 11, 2025, to commemorate Veterans Day.
(WTOP/John Domen)
WTOP/John Domen
Patrick McCourt, a living history volunteer for the National Park Service, salutes military veterans.
(WTOP/John Domen)
WTOP/John Domen
Alex Kershaw, the resident historian for the Friends of the World War II Memorial, told those who gathered about how important it is to celebrate soldiers.
(WTOP/John Domen)
WTOP/John Domen
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Walking into Eugene Mosely’s apartment, there are so many pictures on the walls that it’s hard for a visitor not to allow them to grab their immediate attention. Pictures of his late parents, siblings, grandparents, nieces, nephews, and the people who he calls family, despite them not being a part of his bloodline.
“You are born with your blood family. You don’t have a choice. But I learned that there is another family that you can pick and choose,” Moseley said.
Mosely has pictures of his loved ones all over his one-bedroom apartment in Southwest Atlanta. Right: A picture of a teenage Mosley with his late sister Mattie. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
A self-described “talker,” Moseley makes friends everywhere he goes, and those connections have helped him throughout the many moves in his life, from his native Virginia to Colorado, California, Washington, D.C., Maryland, and finally to Georgia. Through all of these moves, which include a stint in the military, Mosely believes his steps have been ordained by God. He said the past decade-plus “has been totally spiritual”.
“My life has been so amazing,” Moseley, 68, said. “God has always had a plan for wherever I have been and where I will be next.”
Mosely spent eight years in the United States Army. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
In 2014, he found himself homeless with nothing but the clothes on his back. With the support of his caseworker, he was introduced to Atlanta Housing and applied for the Housing Choice Voucher Program.
He credits the Housing Choice Voucher Program with giving him the time, safety, and stability he needed to get back on his feet.
This year marks the 71st anniversary of Veterans Day, which takes place on Tuesday, Nov. 11. On a warm Thursday afternoon, a few days before the nation celebrated the men and women who protect this country, Mosley is wearing a new black U.S. Army Veteran cap. He hadn’t previously owned one, but proud of his eight-year career, he now routinely dons one of the two caps he has whenever he can.
“People always walk up to me and say thank you or say that they are in the military, too, whenever they see me in these hats,” Mosley said.
Yet another reason for Mosely to participate in the ancient art of conversation. Whether riding MARTA downtown or while taking walks around his apartment complex near Greenbriar Mall, Mosley says he’s kept an upbeat attitude since he was a kid.
Pictures of Mosely’s parents and siblings have gone with him from state to state. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
Born in Buckingham, Virginia, Mosely remembers growing up in the tiny community located 150 miles from Washington, D.C. His late mother, Rosa Mae Mosley, was a domestic worker who lived with the family she worked for during the week, so her children would see her on Friday afternoons and on weekends. That helped Mosely and his siblings grow closer because they were dependent on each other. The brood grew even closer when their father, Stephen Mosely, passed away in his thirties.
Today, Mosley, the youngest of 12 children that his parents had together, has just three living siblings: Lucille Morris, Dorothy Martin, and Rosa Kinny. Though he was close to all of his siblings, who included five brothers, he has vivid memories of his sister Mattie, who passed away in her mid-30s from an aneurysm.
There is a photo of Mosley and Mattie above the white leather sectional in the living room. In the photo, Mosley is 17 years old and only a few weeks from leaving home for basic training and a new life as a soldier.
Mosley joined the military in 1975 and left in 1983. That service led to him receiving Veterans Affairs (VA) benefits, which he still utilizes today. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in July 2020. What began as a routine check-up saved his life, he recalled. A doctor at the VA recommended more tests, and the cancer was found. His fits surgery to remove the prostate took place in September 2020. The cancer has not returned.
“And I’m still here,” says Mosley, a self-described spiritual person.
Mosley says we all have three things in common: Life, death, and living. “What you do with your life and how you choose to live is up to you,” Mosely (above) said. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
“On Veterans Day, we honor the courage and sacrifice of all who have served and reaffirm our commitment to support them every day,” said Kai Mentzer, Director for the Atlanta VA Health Care System. “Veterans like Mr. Mosley show us that strength grows through resilience and healing. At the Atlanta VA Health Care System, we are committed partners in our patients’ journeys – providing care, connection, and unwavering support. We take pride in Atlanta’s vibrant community that supports Veterans year-round, demonstrating our city’s compassion, unity, and strength.”
During his military career, Mosley worked with the field artillery unit and served as a dental specialist. He knows full well how much those jobs and that career helped shape his life. As a civilian, Moseley held jobs of all kinds. He smiles when recalling his career in hospitality and as a Greyhound bus driver. During his interview with The Atlanta Voice, Mosley shared a story of his bus, full of sleeping passengers, nearly careening off a cliff in Pittsburgh one night. The bus stayed the course after a bit of a slippery ride, and once again Mosely chalked the entire experience up to God watching his back and ordering his steps.
“I don’t hear voices, I hear a voice. It’s the same voice I’ve heard since I was a child,” Moseley, now retired, said of the conversations he has with God.
Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
A Bible rests on a table in the corner of the living room. A crystal angel blowing a horn stands sentry on the kitchen island.
A sports fan, Mosley attends Atlanta United matches and Atlanta Hawks games. He said he enjoys being around people and in the middle of the action. A week earlier, he attended a jazz concert at City Winery.
Music is a kind of therapy, he says. In his living room, there is a laminated collection of photos of Patti LaBelle on a tabletop, and a Nelly t-shirt draped over a chair. On another chair was a Kane Brown concert t-shirt. Mosley admitted that he didn’t attend the Brown concert, but enjoys all types of music.
“It’s my peace,” he says of music. “Music is where I go for serenity.”
Two of Mosely’s plants are now inside for the fall and winter seasons. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
Mosley also loves plants and has them inside the apartment and outside on his patio. There is life all around him, and one of his mottos is that we all have three things in common: Life, death, and living.
Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice
“What you do with your life and how you choose to live is up to you,” he said. “I used to think that I was afraid of dying, I just didn’t understand that God has a plan for wherever I will be.”
Living in his one-bedroom apartment, with his plants, which were brought inside off the balcony because of the weather conditions, Mosley says he’s happy and fulfilled.
“I have everything I could imagine I would ever have,” he said.
On Sunday, the National Veterans Parade will take place in D.C. The following streets will be posted as Emergency No Parking for the parade assembly from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m.:
4th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
6th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Constitution Avenue, NW
7th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
9th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Constitution Avenue, NW
Constitution Avenue from Pennsylvania Avenue to 23rd Street, NW
North side of Independence Avenue from 4th Street to 12th Street, SW
Madison Drive from 3rd Street to 14th Street, NW
Jefferson Drive from 3rd Street to 14th Street, SW
12th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Madison Drive, NW
14th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
15th Street from Independence Avenue, SW to Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
The following streets will be posted as “Emergency No Parking” for the parade disbanding area from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.:
Virginia Avenue from Constitution Avenue to 23rd Street, NW
18th Street from E Street to Constitution Avenue, NW
19th Street from E Street to Constitution Avenue, NW
20th Street from E Street to Virginia Avenue, NW
The following streets will be closed to vehicle traffic for public safety for the parade assembly from approximately 5 a.m. to 5 p.m.:
4th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
6th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Constitution Avenue, NW
7th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
9th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Constitution Avenue, NW
10th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Constitution Avenue, NW
Constitution Avenue from Pennsylvania Avenue to E/S of 15th Street, NW
Madison Drive from 3rd Street to 14th Street, NW
Jefferson Drive from 3rd Street to 14th Street, SW
12th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue to Madison Drive, NW
14th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
SE/SW Freeway-Access to 12th Street Tunnel from I-395 Exit ramps
12th Street Tunnel Exit from Independence Avenue, SW
The following streets will be closed for the parade from approximately 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.:
Constitution Avenue from 15th Street to 23rd Street, NW
Inbound I-395 (14th Street Bridge). All traffic will be sent eastbound on I-395 SW Freeway.
Inbound I-395 (14th Street Bridge – HOV). All traffic will be sent eastbound on I-395 SW Freeway.
17th Street from New York Avenue, NW to Independence Avenue, SW
18th Street from E Street, NW to Constitution Avenue, NW
19th Street from E Street, NW to Constitution Avenue, NW
Virginia Avenue, NW from 24th Street, NW to Constitution Avenue, NW
There will be two-way traffic on the westbound span of the bridge with one lane of traffic operating in each direction. The center lane will be closed unless there are delays, then traffic will be directed to use the center lane when needed.
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Many businesses thank veterans and active military members by offering them a free meal or other gift on Veterans Day, which is Monday, November 11, 2024. If you’re a member of the military, please check out this list, and see if there’s a deal that you might be able to take advantage of.
Read on for lots of food freebies, and much more.
If you’re not a military member, you probably know one. Why not share this information and also thank them as well?
Not all of these deals take place exactly on Veterans Day, so make sure to read all the details. But unless otherwise specified, these freebies and deals are for veterans and active duty military and take place Monday, November 11, 2024. Also, participation might vary by location.
Also, make sure to read this whole post, because it includes events like Veterans Day ceremonies, parades and festivals. Please check with the organizers regarding outdoor events, as the weather is not looking good. We will not be able to update every event with the status.
This is a growing list, so make sure to bookmark and check back. If you’re not yet an email subscriber to Charlotte on the Cheap, subscribe now so you won’t miss a thing!
You might also be interested in:
Free and discounted food and drink
Participating locations only. Most restaurants will require some proof of service. Follow the links for details on those requirements. Please keep checking back. We will be adding food and drinks for 2025 as they’re announced.
Applebee’s
All veterans and active duty military who visit an Applebee’s in the United States on Tuesday, November 11, 2025, can receive a free full-size entrée and a $5 Bounce Back Card toward their next meal at Applebee’s.
Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar is honoring all veterans with a heroic offer for their services. On Veterans Day,all veterans and active-duty service members will receive a FREE BD’s All-American Burger with cheese and a classic side. Offer valid on Tuesday, November 11, 2025, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to dine-in customers only. Must show valid military ID or proof of service. See your local Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar for more details.
City Barbeque
City Barbeque is honoring veterans and active military on Tuesday, November 11, 2025, with a complimentary meal, including one sandwich, one side and one regular drink.
Golden Corral
Golden Corral is honoring our nation’s heroes with a complimentary dinner this Veterans Day. All active-duty military personnel, retirees, reservists, guardsmen and veterans are invited to enjoy a FREE buffet meal with beverage on Tuesday, November 11, 2025, from 4 p.m. to close, in celebration of the 25th anniversary of Military Appreciation Night! The free meal offer is valid for dine-in only and does not extend to spouses, family members, or friends, but all are welcome to join this annual night full of camaraderie and fellowship.
Sullivan’s Steakhouse
Sullivan’s Steakhouse is honoring all veterans with a heroic offer for their services. On Tuesday, November 11, 2025, all veterans and active-duty service members will receive a FREE Sullivan’s Signature Angus Burger with Fries. Offer valid on Tuesday, November 11th to dine-in customers only. Must show valid military ID or proof of service. See your local Sullivan’s Steakhouse for more details.
These are restaurants that offered Veterans Day deals or freebies in 2024:
Ace No.3
Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar
Biscuit Belly
Bob Evans
BJ’s Restaurant Brewhouse
Brewers at 4001 Yancey
Carolina Ale House
Carrabba’s
Chicken Salad Chick
Chili’s
Cicis Pizza
City BBQ
Denny’s
Emmet’s Social Table
Freddy’s Frozen Custars & Steakburgers
Golden Corral
Harriet’s Hamburgers
Hickory Tavern
Hooters
IHOP
IKEA
Little Caesars
Mac’s Speed Shop
Metro Diner
O’Charley’s
Panera Bread
Piada Italian Street Food
Pilot, Flying J
Red Lobster
Red Robin
Scooter’s Coffee
Sea Level NC
Smashburger
Smelly Cat Coffee
The Smoke Pit Restaurant
Sonic Drive-In
Starbucks
Sullivan’s Steakhouse
TCBY
Triple C Brewing
Twin Peaks
VFW Mecklenburg Post 1160
VIVA Chicken
The Waterman Fish Bar
Wendy’s
Other Freebies and discounts
North Carolina Zoo
North Carolina Zoo: Military members and their spouses can get free admission to the North Carolina Zoo from November 8 to 14, 2025. In addition, they can bring up to three guests with them for free. Make sure to read all the details.
Great Clips
Thank a Veteran at Great Clips works in two ways. First, every year on November 11, veterans and active service members can come into any U.S. Great Clips salon and get a free haircut, or a free haircut card for a future visit. So if you’re a service member or veteran, be sure to stop by a salon on Veterans Day so we can say “Thank you!”
Second, if you’re a non-military customer, you can visit a salon on November 11 and receive a free haircut card to give to a service member or veteran as a way of saying thank you.
Red Roof Inn
From October 13 to November 13, 2025, active duty military and veterans save 15% on any Red Roof hotel. To book the special rate on redroof.com, select Government/Military in the rate plan menu of the booking widget. More info.
Check back soon for 2025 deals and freebies. These businesses offered deals or freebies in 2024:
Autobell Car Wash
Food Lion
Schiele Museum
Staples
True Rest Float Spa
Veterans Day Events
Veterans Salute 5K/10K/Fun Run These races take place on November 8, 2025, in Downtown Concord. There’s a cost for the 5K and 10K, but the one-mile Fun Run is free.
Veterans Day Celebration in Belmont Downtown Belmont is hosting an early Veterans Day Celebration on Sunday, November 2, 2025, in the upper field of Stowe Park, 24 S Main Street, Belmont, North Carolina. Time TBA. The event typically includes live music, a flag ceremony, a military vehicle display and a Christmas card station.
Veterans Day Parade Ceremony in Huntersville The parade and ceremony will take place on Saturday, November 8, 2025. The parade will start at First Baptist Church, 14813 N Old Statesville, Huntersville, North Carolina, at 9:30 a.m., and will end at Veterans Park, 201 Huntersville-Concord Road, Huntersville, where the ceremony will take place at 11 a.m.
Salute to Veterans Parade The annual Veterans Day Parade will take place on Saturday, November 8, 2025 at 11 a.m. The parade will start at North Tryon Street at Montford Point (between 9th and 10th Streets) and proceed down Tryon Street to Brooklyn Village Avenue.
Town of Davidson’s Veterans Day Program The Town of Davidson is holding a Veterans Day Program on Tuesday, November 11, 2024, at 11 a.m., inside Davidson Town Hall, 251 South Street, Davidson, North Carolina.
Warbirds Over Monroe Air Show Warbirds Over Monroe Air Show takes place Saturday, November 8, and Sunday, November 9, 2025, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day, at the Charlotte-Monroe Executive Airport, 3900 Paul J. Helms Drive, Monroe. Tickets are $20 for adults, $15 for youth age 12-18, $5 for current and former military service men and women, and free for children under age 12.
Town of Waxhaw Veterans Day Ceremony The annual Waxhaw Veterans Day ceremony takes place at the Waxhaw Military Wall of Honor, 100 E. North Main Street, Waxhaw, on November 11, 2025, at 11 a.m.
Museum of the Waxhaws Veterans Day Museum of the Waxhaws, at 8215 Waxhaw Hwy, Waxhaw, North Carolina, is holding a special Veterans Day event on Tuesday, November 11, 2025, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. All veterans and active military receive free admission. Kids are also admitted for free.
Veterans Day Program in Cornelius The Veterans Day program in Cornelius will take place Tuesday, November 11, 2025, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Veterans Monument at Rotary Plaza, 21445 Catawba Avenue, Cornelius, North Carolina, behind the Cornelius Town Hall.
The Town of Mooresville is hosting a whole week of Veterans Day events, including a ceremony, parade, flag processional, free meals for veterans, a blood drive and more.
Veterans Day Ceremony in Indian Trail Town of Indian Trail’s Veterans Day ceremony takes place Tuesday, November 11, 2025, at 6 p.m., at Indian Trail Town Hall, 315 Matthews-Indian Trail Road, Indian Trail.
Full Calendar for Veterans Day Weekend
If you’re looking for something to do Veterans Day Weekend, here’s Charlotte on the Cheap’s full calendar of events.
This Veterans Day (Tuesday, November 11), Houston’s restaurants are stepping up to say thanks to the heroes who’ve served our country. From free bbq and burgers to half-off promos and discounts on the tab, check out the local spots honoring veterans and active-duty military this holiday:
Axelrad, 1517 Alabama Veterans and active-duty military enjoy 20 percent off their tab on Veterans Day and all year long.
Dog Haus, multiple locations Veterans can enjoy a free Haus Dog at participating locations by showing proof of service at checkout.
In honor of Veterans Day on November 11, Feges BBQ, co-owned by Purple Heart recipient Patrick Feges, is offering free plates with two meats, two sides, a dessert, and a drink for those who’ve served, served at the Greenway location from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and the Spring Branch location from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Guests can also pay it forward by purchasing Veteran Plates ahead of time to help provide free meals for others. The goal is to have 400 plates purchased by November 10.
Golden Corral is celebrating Veterans Day with a complimentary buffet dinner for all active-duty military, retirees, reservists, guardsmen and veterans, available dine-in only from 4 p.m. to close.
While military service members and veterans always get 15 percent off year-round, Grimaldi’s is upping the deal to 25 percent off for all active, veteran and retired military with ID on November 10–11
All military veterans and active service members receive one complimentary kolache of their choice on Veterans Day with valid military ID.
Molina’s Cantina, multiple locations Service members get half off their bill (excluding alcohol) on Veterans Day with valid military ID. Dine-in only.
The Original Ninfa’s, 1700 Post, 2704 Navigation The Original Ninfa’s honors veterans all year long, offering 50 percent off their bill on Veterans Day and every other day.
Perry’s Steakhouse, multiple locations Veterans can get a free Dinner-Cut Pork Chop with a guest purchase, half-off pork chops if dining with other veterans, or access the Military Menu from 4 p.m. to close with valid military ID.
PINCHO, multiple locations Military members enjoy 25 percent off in-store orders every day with valid ID, including burgers, bowls, kebabs, and milkshakes.
Pizaro’s Pizza, 11177 Katy, 1000 West Gray Veterans enjoy 10 percent off their bill on Veterans Day and throughout the year at Pizaro’s award-winning pizza locations.
Raising Cane’s is honoring those who serve with its Hero Discount Program: active or nonactive military, fire, police, EMTs and their families receive 10 percent off their entire purchase year-round when they mention the program at the register.
Teriyaki Madness, multiple locations Veterans and active-duty military get a free bowl of their choice with valid military ID at participating locations.
On Veterans Day, November 11, all veterans and active U.S. military members can enjoy a free taco and non-alcoholic beverage with valid military ID or proof of service.
Veterans and active-duty service members can enjoy a free lunch from a select menu between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. at participating locations with valid military ID.
Via 313, multiple locations Veterans and active-duty service members can get a $5 Cheese Bread for dine-in only on November 11 with valid military ID.
Willie’s Grill & Icehouse, multiple locations Veterans and active military members get a free Bacon Willie with choice of regular side. Military ID required.
The Town of Huntersville, American Legion Post 321 and American Legion Post 321 Auxiliary will be holding their 10th Annual Veterans Day Parade & Ceremony on Saturday, November 8, 2025.
This year’s Veterans Day Parade proudly honors the 250th Anniversary of America’s Army, Navy and Marine Corps.
Dennis Robitaille will be the 2025 Grand Marshal. A Vietnam War veteran, he served in the U.S. Air Force from 1965 to 1968, including a tour in South Vietnam with the 555th Red Horse Squadron. After returning home, he completed his service at Randolph Air Force Base in Texas.
He has since remained active in the community through American Legion Post 321, where he served as Chaplain and on the Executive Committee for over 10 years.
Learn about more Veterans Day events in the Charlotte area, including parades, festivals, and ceremonies. There is also a list of special freebies for veterans and military members.
The parade will start at 9:30 a.m., and end at Veterans Park, 201 Huntersville-Concord Road, Huntersville, where the ceremony will take place.
Double-Check Before You Head Out!
We make every effort to make sure that everything on Charlotte on the Cheap is 100% accurate.
However, sometimes things change without notice, and we are not always notified. It’s also possible that we can make a mistake.
Please verify all deals and events with the venue or organizer before you go.
You might also be interested in:
More Veterans Day
Check out our list of Veterans Day events in the Charlotte area, including parades, festivals and ceremonies, as well as special deals for veterans, or look at a quick list of events here:
Many restaurants offer a free meal or a discount to veterans and active duty military on Veterans Day. Make sure to check out our growing list of Veterans Day freebies and deals for 2024. You’ll also find non-food freebies, and Veterans Day events, like parades, ceremonies and festivals, on the list.
One of the longest running Veterans Day’s freebies is the free meal that Golden Corral offers. They’ve provided 6.7 million free meals to veterans over the years.
On Tuesday, November 11, 2024, Golden Corral is offering a FREE meal to any person who has served in the U.S. Military, from 4 p.m. until close.
Active duty, National Guard, Reserves, retirees and veterans are all eligible.
Dine-in only. Guests of military members must pay regular price for their meals.
In addition, Golden Corral and guests raise money for Disabled American Veterans. In the past 24 years they’ve donated over $20.5 million.
We make every effort to make sure that everything on Charlotte on the Cheap is 100% accurate.
However, sometimes things change without notice, and we are not always notified. It’s also possible that we can make a mistake.
Please verify all deals and events with the venue or organizer before you go.
You might also be interested in:
More Veterans Day
Check out our list of Veterans Day events in the Charlotte area, including parades, festivals and ceremonies, as well as special deals for veterans, or look at a quick list of events here:
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Golden Corral: Free meal for anyone who has served in U.S. Military
When
November 11, 2025 @ 4:00 pm
What
Golden Corral: Free meal for anyone who has served in U.S. Military
The North Carolina Zoo, at 4401 Zoo Parkway, Asheboro, is thanking those who have served in the U.S. Military with Military Appreciation Week.
Learn about more Veterans Day events in the Charlotte area, including parades, festivals, and ceremonies. There is also a list of special freebies for veterans and military members.
From Saturday, November 8, to Friday, November 14, 2025, military members and their spouses get free admission. In addition, the military member or spouse can bring three guests for free. (Total of four free admissions, including the ID holder.)
This special offer is offered to all active duty, reserve, veteran and retired military personnel, and military spouses. It’s only available for admission purchased on-site.
Photo: Mace Publishing, LLC
Regular admission is:
Adults: $20
Seniors (62+): $18
Children (2-12): $16
Children under 2: Free
NC EBT (up to 4 total admission with cardholder): $5
Please bring any of the following to qualify for free admission:
US Veterans ID
Military ID
DD-214 with Photo ID
State driver’s license with veteran indicator or military identifier
ID issued by the VA, VFW or American Legion
Photo: Mace Publishing, LLC
Double-Check Before You Head Out!
We make every effort to make sure that everything on Charlotte on the Cheap is 100% accurate.
However, sometimes things change without notice, and we are not always notified. It’s also possible that we can make a mistake.
Please verify all deals and events with the venue or organizer before you go.
You might also be interested in:
More Veterans Day
Check out our list of Veterans Day events in the Charlotte area, including parades, festivals and ceremonies, as well as special deals for veterans, or look at a quick list of events here:
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Military Appreciation Week at North Carolina Zoo – free admission for military member plus a guest
President Joe Biden and Donald Trump took to social media on Saturday to mark Veterans Day with very different messages.
November 11, once known as Armistice Day, is the anniversary of the ceasefire that ended World War I in 1918.
“Today, we honor the story of our veterans—the story of our nation at its best,” Biden wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “On Veterans Day, let’s recommit to fulfilling our one sacred obligation as a nation: to prepare those we send into harm’s way and care for them and their families when they come home.”
Today, we honor the story of our veterans – the story of our nation at its best.
On Veterans Day, let’s recommit to fulfilling our one sacred obligation as a nation: to prepare those we send into harm’s way and care for them and their families when they come home. pic.twitter.com/tLDS4cbjyD
Biden also delivered a Veterans Day address at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, where he paid tribute to “those who have always, always kept the light of liberty shining bright across the world.”
“We come together today to once again honor the generations of Americans who stood on the front lines of freedom,” he said. “To once again bear witness to the great deeds of a noble few who risked everything, everything, to give us a better future.”
Biden added that as commander in chief, “I have no higher honor. As the father of a son who served, I have no greater privilege.”
Trump, on the other hand, first marked Veterans Day with a message on his Truth Social platform that said: “To our heroic veterans, I am grateful for your service to our country and honored to wish you a Happy Veterans Day!”
He added that there “is no greater act of selfless service than defending America’s God-given freedoms and liberty.”
In another post, he shared a graphic that featured a quote from Trump saying the nation’s veterans “will never stop fighting for the America we cherish,” and that the “full measure of your sacrifice and your family’s dedication in support of your service may not be fully understood and appreciated, but it will never be forgotten.”
Several hours later, Trump returned to Truth Social with a more polarizing message.
“In honor of our great veterans on Veteran’s Day, we pledge to you that we will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists, and radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country. Lie, steal, and cheat on elections, and will do anything possible, whether legally or illegally, to destroy America, and the American dream,” he wrote.
“The threat from outside forces is far less sinister, dangerous, and grave, than the threat from within. Despite the hatred and anger of the radical left lunatics who want to destroy our country, we will make America great again!”
Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Claremont, New Hampshire, on November 11, 2023. The former president targeted his ideological opponents in a Veterans Day post on social media. Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images
The message prompted some to take to social media to say that Trump’s words were reminiscent of Adolf Hitler.
The liberal outlet Meidas Touch wrote that Trump was “casually channeling Adolf Hitler on Veterans Day as news breaks that he is planning to force people in this country into camps,” referencing a report from The New York Times that said Trump, if reelected, is planning to expand his first-term immigration crackdown to include sweeping roundups of people who would be detained in large camps to await deportation.
Journalist Bill Grueskin wrote that it was a paragraph for readers who can’t handle the subtle nuances” of Hitler’s Mein Kampf.
Prem Thakker, a reporter with The Intercept, wrote that Trump “echoed Hitler, who said communists and Jews were Germany’s ‘enemies within.'”
And presidential historian Michael Beschloss wrote: “Today, ‘in honor of our great veterans,’ ex-president demands on social media to ‘root out the communists, Marxists, fascists and radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country.’ Please tell us if this reminds you of any earlier historical figure.”
The Biden campaign also brought up statements that Trump has reportedly made, disparaging veterans and soldiers killed in battle.
While U.S. flags come out on Memorial Day, poppies are more identified with Veterans Day. Originally called Armistice Day and commemorating the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice that ended the fighting in World War I, the date is linked internationally to the opening lines of the haunting war poem “In Flanders Fields”:
In Flanders fields the poppies blow/Between the crosses, row on row.
The commemoration became a U.S. national holiday in 1935 and was renamed in 1954. Unlike Memorial Day, a holiday dating from the end of the Civil War and honoring those who died while serving in the armed forces, Veterans Day honors all veterans.
Andrew Guiding Young Cloud Morales, from the Gabrieleno (Tongva) Band of Mission Indians, offers a blessing during a Veterans Day ceremony held at Plaza Park on Friday in San Gabriel.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Attendees stand among 201 flags installed for the Veterans Day ceremony at Plaza Park.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
U.S. Navy veteran Ruth Pico, left, with her 8-year-old son Nathan, pays her respects on Veterans Day at National Cemetery on Saturday in Los Angeles.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Marine Corps Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps Color Guard members from John C. Fremont High School in South Los Angeles listen to a panel of retired, Black, high-ranking military veterans discussing their military service and career challenges. The panelists also spoke about their work relating to the renaming commission, which seeks to assess the plausibility of renaming Confederate monuments. Later, the Color Guard members explored the Kinsey African American Art & History Collection exhibit at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Marine Corps Reserve Maj. Gen. Leo V. Williams III, center, takes pictures with John C. Fremont High School students, including Eenni Alay Mendez,16, on his right, while looking at the Kinsey African American Art & History Collection exhibit at SoFi Stadium. Williams took part in the panel discussion as well.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Allyson, 3, hits during the Dodgers Veterans Day batting practice event with her father, Marine Corps veteran John Lemus, on Friday.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
James Courson, 95, a WWII-Korean War veteran, left, Larry Stevens, 99, a WWII U.S. Air Force veteran, and Mike Valdivia, 97, a WWII Navy veteran, sit with others being honored at a Veterans Day ceremony at Plaza Park on Friday in San Gabriel.
After learning about Veterans Day in his transitional kindergarten class, Wilson Zeier, 4, asked his father what they could do to recognize the men and women who served.
So on Saturday morning Wilson stood with his father, Bill, and mother, Mai, on a knoll overlooking tens of thousands of white gravestones in rows on a lush green background at the Los Angeles National Cemetery in Westwood.
At the mid-morning hour, the cemetery where American service members from the Civil War onward are interred was reverentially still.
Every few minutes a figure would appear on the sloping lawn, moving slowly through the lines of gravestones.
Ruth Pico, a Navy veteran, moved sideways, stopping at each marker for a few seconds. She wore a T-shirt commemorating her godson Hunter Lopez, killed in action on Aug. 26, 2021, in a suicide bombing at the Kabul airport in Afghanistan. She said she couldn’t make the trip to Riverside to honor his grave and so came to pay respects to those she didn’t know.
“I like to go and read their names and thank them for their service and go on to the next one,” she said, keeping an eye on her son Nathan, who was cavorting on the grass.
Pico said she has brought her son to the cemetery every year since he was a baby to imbue him with an understanding of service. She also thinks those buried there appreciate his presence.
“For a little bit I let him play and laugh,” she said. “In my head, the veterans can hear the happiness and the joy of his laughing.”
Pico had come with a bag of paper poppies and distributed them one to a headstone along with a penny to show family members that someone had been there.
While U.S. flags come out on Memorial Day, the other major holiday dedicated to service members, poppies are more identified with Veterans Day. Originally called Armistice Day and commemorating the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice that ended the fighting in World War I, the date is linked internationally to the opening lines of the haunting war poem “In Flanders Fields:”
In Flanders fields the poppies blow/Between the crosses, row on row.
The commemoration became a U.S. national holiday in 1935 and was renamed in 1954.
Unlike Memorial Day, a holiday dating from the end of the Civil War and honoring those who died while serving in the armed forces, Veterans Day honors all veterans.
Formal Veterans Day events were held Saturday at Forest Lawn—Hollywood Hills and the Bob Hope Patriotic Hall near downtown, where Arnold Schwarzenegger was a special guest.
As the morning wore on, though, the National Cemetery remained a place for quiet reflection.
Kathy Collins, daughter and niece of World War II veterans, laid pennies on the headstones as she does every Veterans Day and Memorial Day.
Collins thinks it is important to sustain the memory of what her father’s generation did.
“A lot of kids grow up and don’t know veterans and what they did,” she said. “And that’s kind of sad.”
Among the more than 80,000 graves, Collins said she tries to connect with individuals.
“You look at their age, like a guy today killed in action in Iraq—thinking about the younger veterans. We don’t know that many of them because the military is so much smaller, proportionally.”
Collins said she places pennies on headstones where there are flowers because that means there’s still a family connection. When they return, they will know a stranger cared.
As he surveyed the gravestones with his son, Zeier said he hoped the experience had broadened Wilson’s understanding.
“When you come to a place like this it can be very moving, very emotional,” he said.
“He hasn’t been to cemeteries before,” Zeier said. “For us it’s just walking around a little bit today, talking about the people that are buried here and also to introduce death, so he kind of understands what it is.”
Navy veteran Ruth Pico and her son Nathan Pico, 8, left flower stems on the tombstones on Veterans Day at Los Angeles National Cemetery in Westwood.
The comment comes as all branches of the armed forces have struggled to meet their recruitment targets, suggesting a growing apathy towards a career of military service. In 2023, the Army and Air Force fell short of their respective goals by around 10,000 recruits, while the Navy was under by 6,000. Since 1987, the number of active-duty personnel has fallen by 39 percent.
Speaking on right-wing British broadcaster GB News, Robert Wilkie said, when asked how Biden had let down U.S. veterans: “Well, he’s let them down in the sense that he has wrecked the moral foundation of the armed forces of the United States with his witch hunts, with the diminution of physical and mental standards dividing the armed forces into what I would call grievance categories.
“Douglas Murray has said that the Biden administration is engaged in a non-stop grievance competition that is played out in the armed forces,” Wilkie added. Murray is a right-wing British author and political commentator. Newsweek has contacted the U.S. Department of Defense via email.
“We have a new chairman of the Joint Chiefs, who says that his goal is to reduce the number of white pilots in the Air Force to 43 per cent,” Wilkie said, referring to Gen. Charles Brown Jr, who was appointed by Biden to the role in May 2023. Wilkie is referring to a memo signed by Brown and other military top brass recommending the U.S. Air Force Academy come up with diversity and inclusion outreach plans. Racial quotas are not used in recruiting in any U.S. military faction.
During his Senate confirmation hearing in July, Brown said the Air Force’s efforts to improve diversity are important. “All they want is a fair opportunity to perform,” he added of air force personnel. “And by providing that fair opportunity, they do not want to be advantaged or disadvantaged or discounted, based on their background.”
Former U.S. Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie talks to reporters in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on November 8, 2019 in Washington, DC. He has criticized Biden’s supposed failings regarding veterans on British broadcaster GB News. GETTY
Citing his own experience, Wilkie said: “I am an Air Force Colonel in the reserves. I only want people who know how to fly aeroplanes. I don’t care what they look like, what colour they are.”
He said: “People don’t want to serve in a military where the civilian leadership says that the nation is an irredeemable country, that we are the oppressors.” Newsweek can find no evidence that Brown has made such claims about the U.S.
“You know, people join the armed forces traditionally in this country because there was an acceptance as there was in Great Britain that ‘we’re the good guys’, we are the people who stand up and fight for not only liberty and freedom and the right to be left alone, but we have saved the planet on numerous occasions,” Wilkie added.
Wilkie served as Secretary of Veterans Affairs from 2018 to 2021 under the 45th President Donald Trump. He also served George W. Bush as special assistant to the president for national security affairs and a senior director of the National Security Council.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
On Veterans Day, several restaurants are honoring those who served with free meals and special deals.
If you’re a veteran, look no further—Newsweek has compiled a comprehensive list of places that will honor your service with a free meal or discount.
Keep in mind, most deals require you to show proof that you are indeed a veteran, and typically a VA Benefits or veterans’ ID card will suffice.
If you’re looking to start the day out strong, head over to Bob Evans, where veterans and active-duty military get a free meal from a select menu all day on November 11.
Gavin Kinney, 9, at the nation’s largest Veterans Day Parade in New York City on November 11, 2015. There are many food and drink offers to mark Veterans Day this year. Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Caribou Coffee is also honoring veterans and their spouses with a small hot brewed coffee of the day or cold press, free of charge.
Restaurant chain giant Chili’s is also celebrating the holiday with a free meal for veterans from a select menu with proof of service, while Freddy’s Frozen Custard and Steakburgers offers a free Freddy’s Original Double with Cheese combo meal card to be redeemed through November 30.
Maybe a buffet is more your speed. If so, Golden Corral is hosting a Military Appreciation Night on November 13 starting at 5 p.m. This will include a complimentary “thank you” meal for diners.
Hooters also offers active-duty and veterans alike a free entree from a specific menu with the purchase of any beverage on the holiday.
Seafood-loving veterans will get free meal vouchers for the Veterans Shrimp & Chips from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. today, and it can be redeemed from November 13 through December 10.
Applebee’s diners will get a free meal while dining in stores this holiday and all military guests will get a $5 Bounce Back card to use on any purchase.
Burger chain Red Robin also has a complimentary Red’s Big Tavern Burger in store for veterans with valid ID, while Smoothie King offers a free smoothie to those who served as well.
Veterans and active-duty service members get a free order of 10 boneless wings and fries today at Buffalo Wild Wings, while Dunkin’ offers a free donut of your choice all throughout the day as well.
At the end or beginning of your night, veterans can also score a free six-pack of classic cookies at Insomnia Cookies with any in-store purchase.
Coffee giant Starbucks is also supporting veterans and active service military members and their spouses with a free tall hot brewed coffee.
Miller’s Ale House is also giving veterans 50 percent off their entree of choice with proof of service all day on Saturday, November 11.
Meanwhile, Pollo Campero will offer a free two-piece meal with valid military ID on Veterans Day in stores.
Those looking for a nice French meal are also in luck with la Madeleine offering 30 percent off the entire purchase for veterans.
Craving something while you’re at Chuck E. Cheese? Veterans will also be able to buy two specialty pizzas deals.
The Alpha, which costs $34.99, includes a large one-topping pizza with four dispenser drinks and 45 play points. You must have a valid military ID to score the deal.
Also at Chuck E Cheese, you can get The Bravo deal for veterans, which has double the fun, with two one-topping pizzas, four drinks and 100 play points.
Some deals are also available all year long, including at Peter Piper Pizza, where veterans earn 10 percent off their entire purchases daily.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
With Veterans Day falling on a Saturday this year, some banks won’t be open on Friday and others will be closed on Saturday in observance of the federal holiday that honors Americans who served in the military. Post offices will be closed for the holiday, but stock markets will operate normally.
Are banks open today or on Veterans Day?
Capital One branches are observing Veterans Day on Friday and will be open for their normal hours on Saturday, according to a spokesperson.
Bank of America, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and U.S. Bank are among the banks that are open for normal hours Friday but will be closed Saturday for the holiday, according to representatives for each institution.
Customers can check with their bank’s website to find operating hours for local branches.
Is the stock market open today?
The Nasdaq Stock Market and the New York Stock Exchange are closed on Saturdays. The markets opened for trading as usual Friday morning.
Later this month, the markets will be closed for Thanksgiving, which falls on Nov. 23 this year. The markets will also close early on Black Friday, which is on Nov. 24.
Is the post office closed today?
The U.S. Postal Service will operate normally on Friday, according to a spokesperson. On Saturday, post offices will be closed, and regular mail won’t be delivered.
Express mail will still be delivered on Saturday. Regular mail service will resume on Monday.
FedEx offices will be open on Friday and Saturday, but on Friday, its express service will have early on-call pickups in some areas and its ground economy deliveries may be delayed because of the Postal Service’s observance of the holiday. On Saturday, its ground and ground economy services will be closed.
UPS stores will also be open on both days. Some deliveries will be delayed due to the Postal Service holiday.
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Calvin Jordan’s family is filled with relatives who answered the nation’s call for military service.
Jordan himself served in the U.S. Army and fought in 1968 during the height of the Vietnam War.
“We dropped Agent Orange,” the 73-year-old recalled. The now-banned chemical was dropped during the war, killing vegetation and crops, and has since been linked to cancers among American veterans.
This past March, Jordan went to the emergency room at the Atlanta VA Medical Center to have a lump on his neck checked out. Jordan eventually got a scan of his neck while at the hospital, but said after his discharge, he never heard anything back.
In July, Jordan scheduled another appointment, but the VA doctor said the hospital did not have a copy of his original scans. The images were later found, according to Jordan, but new scans were required.
In August, Jordan received a second scan and biopsy. In September – seven months after his original visit to the VA – a doctor diagnosed him with cancer.
Jordan said he learned the VA is so backlogged the facility can’t do the surgery or perform the required radiation treatments. He will undergo surgery to remove the mass at Emory Hospital on Nov. 18 and then receive further radiation treatments through his VA coverage.
Delays in diagnosis and even longer waits for treatments are examples of the dilemmas local veterans allege against the Atlanta VA. They consider access to healthcare in Atlanta as their greatest battle.
Atlanta News First Investigates found veterans could be waiting nearly half a year for appointments. And when their lives depend on early detection, some cancer patients fear untimely care could be life-threatening.
“You [treat] cancer when its young; you don’t let it spread,” Jordan said. “This wasn’t even noticeable when I had my first CT scan. Now it’s like I’m growing a second head out the side of my neck.”
These scans show the growth of the cancerous lump in Calvin Jordan’s neck.(WANF)
Scans of the veteran’s neck show the cancerous mass is now nearly the size of a fist. The latest images were taken in August, but according to his March scans, he said the mass “was no bigger than maybe a thumbnail.”
“This is the U.S., and veterans should be taken care of. I’m not doing this for me. I’m doing it for the young guys, the young girls that served. And they don’t deserve it. Atlanta VA just cannot handle the load,” he said.
After Atlanta News First Investigates told Atlanta VA officials about Jordan’s case, the hospital reached out to him.
When asked about backlogs and delays, a VA spokesperson said the facility offers same day walk-in care for mental health and primary care treatment. “One of VA’s top priorities right now is recruiting, hiring, and retaining clinical staff,” the spokesperson said.
As of Oct. 23, according to data obtained by Atlanta News First Investigates, the average wait time to see an Atlanta VA specialist was 60 days. The longest was 162 days.
Veterans are facing potentially deadly delays at the Atlanta VA.(WANF)
The location also faced a paperwork backlog last year. The Office of the Inspector General confirmed in an April 27, 2022, report, more than 17,000 mailed documents related to veteran care and claims went unopened last year.
Veterans are facing potentially deadly delays at the Atlanta VA.(WANF)
Advocates say veterans deserve more but they end up with the least access to timely healthcare.
“For them to come back and all they hear is, ‘thank you for your service,’ they don’t want to hear that from us,” said Scott Johnson, CEO of The Warrior Alliance, an organization helping serve metro Atlanta’s nearly 250,000 vets. With more than triple that number across the state, Johnson said, “collaboration is the only way.”
Johnson advocates more private-public partnerships and funding will strengthen medical care options. Groups like his are acting as veteran liaisons, navigating healthcare, housing, education, and legal aid post-service in the army.
An American hero turned a single act of kindness from a stranger into a mission to help others. A Navy veteran is using money from a fundraiser to provide mobility scooters to dozens of other veterans in need.
Kenneth Jary, 80, would honor those who served with a daily trip on his scooter to a veteran’s park in Mahtomedi, Minnesota. That is, until his mobility scooter broke.
“That was my life,” Jary told CBS News of his visits to the park. “I was very sad, depressed.”
However, his sadness changed after meeting with Amanda Kline in a coffee shop through a mutual friend.
“Every moment you’re talking with him, you feel like he cares about you, and you want to know more about him. It’s contagious,” she said of Jary.
So, after she heard about his broken scooter, Kline started an online fundraiser. Within days, enough money was raised to get Jary a brand new scooter.
“They presented me with that scooter. I’ll never forget it ’til the day I die,” an emotional Jary said.
He didn’t just get one scooter, but a second as well. Jary was set, but donations kept pouring in.
Jary is now on a mission to take the kindness bestowed upon him and scoot forward. Over the last year, he and Kline have donated more than 50 mobility scooters to veterans in need.
The latest scooter was given to Vietnam veteran Dave Anderson as a surprise. Anderson said his disability was getting in the way of walks with his grandson, but not anymore.
Jary’s fight for veterans’ mobility carries on.
“That’s my goal, and will be until the day I die: to donate scooters to servicemen and women,” Jary told CBS News.
The Dirt Therapy Project brings veterans together to bond over mountain biking. The organization’s first annual Veterans Day event at Texas’ Spider Mountain saw double leg amputee, Travis Strong, hitting the trails on a special adaptive trike. CBS News Omar Villafranca has more.
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Partnering with mission-driven organizations helps Digitunity bridge the technology gap for military families.
Press Release –
Nov 11, 2022 08:00 EST
CONWAY, N.H., November 11, 2022 (Newswire.com)
– Frequent relocation takes a significant toll on military personnel and their families. A lack of technology can make this even more difficult. That’s why Digitunity partners with organizations including Tech for Troops, Heroes Deserve Help, The Outlook Foundation, and The Armed Services YMCA, to connect military families, regardless of location, with devices like computers for remote learning and work.
The technology gap between those who don’t have access to the internet and digital devices versus those who do is referred to as the digital divide. This disparity prevents underserved groups from gaining access to the educational and economic resources that they need.
Digitunity is a national nonprofit that bridges the digital divide by connecting technology donors with non-profit organizations serving people in need, including military families and veterans.
“On average, military-connected kids attend 6-9 schools from kindergarten through 12th grade. This illustrates how relocation can have a negative impact on military families,” said Scot Henley, executive director of Digitunity. “Our partnerships with outstanding veterans’ organizations in our Digital Opportunity Network put these life-changing devices in the hands of those who need them most.”
Military families rely on technology to manage deployment and frequent relocation. Communication with friends and family relies on email, voice, and video calls. Military spouses often work remote jobs to accommodate their frequent moves. Children often need to attend classes and complete homework online.
When only the military service member is relocated, a laptop is often the only means of communication between them and their family. One Digitunity partner, The Outlook Foundation, provides computers to deployed service personnel and their stateside families, ensuring family members can communicate with one another and access the services they need.
The Armed Services YMCA, another Digitunity partner, specializes in aiding junior enlisted military personnel and their families through social, educational, and recreational programs focused on youth development, healthy living, and social responsibility. Many of these programs occur remotely through technology.
“In this age of digital connectedness, we believe no military family member should go without the technology they need. That’s why we’re thrilled to be fostering collaboration, engaging boots-on-the-ground organizations, and putting in the work to keep these families connected,” Henley said.
Digitunity works to ensure everyone who needs a computer has one. If you are interested in more information about how Digitunity helps military members and families, you can check out their veterans’ resource guide here.
About Digitunity Since the 1980s, Digitunity has advanced digital inclusion by connecting donors of technology with organizations serving people in need. Our mission is to ensure everyone who needs a computer has one, along with robust internet connectivity and digital literacy skills. To learn more about our mission, visit www.digitunity.org.