• Skip to Content

New York National Guard

  • Sign in to your Merit page
« Back to Recent News

New York National Guard marks birthday of 8th President, Martin Van Buren, as nation mourns President George H.W. Bush, the 41st

Kinderhook, NY (12/05/2018) — As the United States mourned the death of President George H.W. Bush, the 41st president on Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2018; the New York National Guard commemorated the country's eighth president, Martin Van Buren.

New York Army National Guard Brig. General John Andonie, the Chief of Staff of the New York Army National Guard, marked Van Buren's birthday in Kinderhook, the village where he was born in 1782 and where he died in 1862, by laying a wreath from President Donald Trump at his gravesite.

The United States military pays tribute to past presidents by placing a wreath from the current occupant of the White House on the graves of past presidents on their birthdays.

The New York Army and Air National Guard headquarters in Latham. N.Y. conducts the wreath laying at the grave of Van Buren in Kinderhook Reformed Church Cemetery and at the grave of President Chester Arthur in Albany Rural Cemetery in Menands, N.Y.

The ceremonies feature a color guard and honor cordon as well as the playing of Taps.

The ceremony held Wednesday to commemorate Van Buren was different because it was held at the same time the nation was commemorating the recent death of a president, Andonie noted.

"It is a really special day in that regard,' Andonie said.

The military wreath laying was the climax of a ceremony which included wreath tributes from the Town of Kinderhook, the Village of Kinderhook, the National Park Service, which manages the Martin Van Buren National Historic Site, and the Friends of Lindenwald, a volunteer group which supports the park service.

Fourth grade students from Ichabod Crane Middle School took turns highlighting key points in Van Buren's life.

In his remarks Andonie noted that Van Buren lived during "an incredible period in American history." Van Buren was born at the end of the Revolutionary War, saw the country expand to the Pacific Coast, and dried during the Civil War, Andonie said.

The placing of the Presidential Wreath was the climax of the ceremony. Taps sounded as Andonie, and New York Army National Guard Command Sgt. Major David Piwowarski presented arms, joined by the Color Guard and Soldiers in the Honor Cordon.

Van Buren, who served in the White House from 1837 to 1841 was born on Dec. 5, 1782 and was the first president who was not originally a subject of the British Crown because he was born after the Declaration of Independence was signed.

He is the only president not to have spoken English as his first language, having grown up speaking Dutch, and was the first president from New York.

A historical marker on Kinderhook's Hudson Street indicates the site of the Van Buren family tavern, where the president-to-be was born in 1782.

Van Buren ran for re-election in 1840 but was defeated by William Henry Harrison. He sought the Democratic nomination for president in 1844, but lost to James K. Polk.

Van Buren, a lawyer, made his original mark in politics in in New York state government. After being elected to the New York State Senate in 1812 he became the leader of a faction in the Democrat-Republican Party called the Bucktails. He eventually established a political machine known as the Albany Regency which dominated New York politics in the 1820s.

Van Buren is credited with establishing the two-party system in the United States in which parties unit around an ideology instead of a leader or a geographical faction.

Along with serving as a New York State Senator, Van Buren also served as New York Attorney General, briefly as Governor of New York, a United States Senator, and as Secretary of State, Ambassador to Great Britain, and Vice President for President Andrew Jackson.

Van Buren was a key advisor to Jackson throughout Jackson's eight years as president.

In 1848 Van Buren, who had always opposed slavery, ran as the candidate of the Free-Soil Party, a group opposing an extension of slavery. He was defeated and ended his political career and retired to his farm outside Kinderhook.

Van Buren, known as Old Kinderhook because of his home town, gave the English language the term OK.

During his run for office OK clubs were organized to support him. He also initialed papers with the letters OK to indicate he approved. The two letters became another way to say something was good if it was OK.

His home, Lindenwald, is a national historic site

Media Attachments

New York Army National Guard Command Sgt. Major David Piwowarski and Brig. Gen. John Adonie, render honors to President Martin Van Buren, the 8th president of the United States, during a Dec. 5, 2018 ceremony at his gravesite at Kinderhook Reformed Church Cemetery in Kinderhook, N.Y. The U.S. military presents wreaths from the current occupant of the White House at the gravesites of former presidents on the anniversary of their birth. Van Buren was born in Kinderhook in 1782. (New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs photo by William Albrecht)

New York Army National Guard Command Sgt. Major David Piwowarski and Brig. Gen. John Adonie, render honors to President Martin Van Buren, the 8th president of the United States, during a Dec. 5, 2018 ceremony at his gravesite at Kinderhook Reformed Church Cemetery in Kinderhook, N.Y. The U.S. military presents wreaths from the current occupant of the White House at the gravesites of former presidents on the anniversary of their birth. Van Buren was born in Kinderhook in 1782. (New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs photo by William Albrecht)

New York Army National Guard Command Sgt. Major David Piwowarski and Brig. Gen. John Adonie, render honors to President Martin Van Buren, the 8th president of the United States, during a Dec. 5, 2018 ceremony at his gravesite at Kinderhook Reformed Church Cemetery in Kinderhook, N.Y. The U.S. military presents wreaths from the current occupant of the White House at the gravesites of former presidents on the anniversary of their birth. Van Buren was born in Kinderhook in 1782. (New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs photo by William Albrecht)


DP
David
P.
JA
John
A.
AJ
Andrew
J.

New York National Guard

Eric Durr 518-786-4581

Share this Story

  • Print
  • Email

Recent News

  • Division of Military and Naval Affairs honors two Department of Correctional and Community Services leaders with military medals
  • NY Air Guard's 105th Airlift Wing names five Outstanding Airmen of the Year for 2025
  • Painting of Benedict Arnold as hero of Battle of Saratoga will be conserved for display in NY Military Museum by 2027.
  • NY Air Guard's 174th Attack Wing Seeks Input for Hancock Field Air National Guard Base Community Involvement Plan
  • NY Army National Guard Col. Jason Lefton, a Niskayuna resident, takes command of 5,100 Soldiers of the 53rd Troop Command
  • New York Air National Guard gets new commander during January 9 ceremony at New York Air National Guard headquarters
  • Col. Jason Lefton, an Iraq War veteran, assumes command of NY Army Guard's 53rd Troop Command on Sunday, Jan. 11
  • New York Air National Guard gets a new commander during January 9 ceremony at New York National Guard headquarters
  • NY Air Guard's 107th Attack Wing honors Millard Filmore during wreath laying ceremony in Forest Lawn Cemetery
  • New York National Guard Honor Guard teams conducted 6,166 military funeral honors in 2025
… View all recent news
Copyright © 2026 Merit Pages, Inc. • All Rights Reserved. • Terms of Service • Privacy Policy • Opt Out