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Poppy

A red poppy with a label on it, displayed in the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.

In 1918, Moina Michael, a staff member of the American Overseas YMCA, wore a red poppy as a symbol of remembrance. She was inspired by John McCrae’s poem, “In Flanders Fields”. Michael petitioned the American Legion to recognize the poppy as the symbol of remembrance in 1920.

Anna Guérin, of France, was also moved by the poppy and the poem. Guérin travelled to Britain and Canada in 1921 and convinced the recently formed British Legion and Canadian Great War Veterans Association (a precursor of the Canadian Legion) to adopt the poppy as the symbol of remembrance.

The tag on this poppy reads “Decoration Day 1921” (the original name of Memorial Day in the United States) and “Poppy Lady from France” (a reference to Anna Guérin).