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Greensburg, Southwest Greensburg honor 43 in latest Hometown Hero banner ceremony | TribLIVE.com
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Greensburg, Southwest Greensburg honor 43 in latest Hometown Hero banner ceremony

Quincey Reese
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Rich Cholodofsky | TribLive
Greensburg Community Development Corp. will hang banners honoring more than 90 hometown heroes in downtown Greensburg and on Main Street in Southwest Greensburg.
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Courtesy of Dan Galbraith
Charles Galbraith holds a photo of himself in September 2017 from his time in the Army. He served from 1952 to 1954. He was honored with one of Greensburg and Southwest Greensburg’s Hometown Hero banners on Saturday.
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Rich Cholodofsky | TribLive
Hundreds turned out in St. Clair Park in Greensburg in 2022 to honor more than 90 hometown heroes, whose banners were installed throughout the city.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Anna McClain, events manager with the Greensburg Community Development Corporation, hangs one of 43 posters honoring military veterans and emergency responders on Saturday at St. Clair Park in Greensburg. The 43 individuals from Greensburg area range from World War II veterans to firefighters and police officers and will be honored with full-size banners hung in downtown Greensburg later this month.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Numerous posters are hung outside St. Clair Park honoring 43 military veterans and emergency responders before the start of the Hometown Heroes event on Saturday at St. Clair Park in Greensburg. Full-size banners will be hung on the street lampposts later this month around downtown Greensburg.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Jake Starek, an intern with the Greensburg Community Development Corporation, works on putting up posters honoring military veterans and emergency responders on Saturday at St. Clair Park in Greensburg. The 43 individuals from Greensburg area range from World War II veterans to firefighters and police officers and will be honored with full-size banners hung in downtown Greensburg later this month.

Although he didn’t talk about it much, Charles Galbraith was proud of the two years he served in the Army.

Galbraith is one of 43 veterans, first responders and local officials who were honored Saturday evening at St. Clair Park with Hometown Hero banners in Greensburg and Southwest Greensburg.

Galbraith grew up in Ligonier Valley and studied agriculture at Penn State while working for Bethlehem Steel. He served in the Army from 1952 to 1954 at Fort Sam Houston in Texas, receiving the medals of Good Conduct and National Defensive Service

Before his death two years ago, Galbraith went to breakfast at Denny’s with his son, Dan Galbraith, once a month. He always wore his Army veteran hat.

“He would always go out of his way to thank other veterans for (their) service,” said Dan Galbraith of Hempfield. “He always tried to downplay what he did because he never saw combat, but everyone in the service has an important role to play.”

The Hometown Hero banner project was started in 2020 by Ashley Kertes, former executive director for the Greensburg Community Development Corp.

The first round of heroes was honored the following year, said the corporation’s event manager, Anna McClain.

“The reason the Hometown Hero Banner program is important is because it shows that our hometown continues to have incredible men and women who have served not only their country, but also our community,” she said. “This program allows our hometown hero’s history to continue for years to come.”

More than 200 banners have been purchased since the project’s inception. Each banner is hung for two years.

“To see the Greensburg Community Development Corporation honor veterans and community leaders at large just shows the impact of one person who wanted to do good for the community,” said Westmoreland County Commissioner Sean Kertes on behalf of his late wife.

John Stafford, the corporation’s former executive director, put up a banner in Ashley’s memory outside the Westmoreland County Courthouse. It hangs just outside Kertes’ office window.

Ceremony features orchestra

Some of the banner heroes are still alive and have attended the ceremony, said Elsie Lampl, board president and interim executive director of the corporation.

“It’s fun that some of them come to the actual event,” she said. “We’ve had people fly in for the ceremony.”

Dan Galbraith’s brother and sister were coming to Greensburg for this weekend’s event.

“It’s a great thing to do to honor our veterans,” said Galbraith, a board member of the corporation. “I always thought that is something I’d like to do for my dad.”

Galbraith enjoys driving around Greensburg to look at the banners.

“I recognize the parents of some of my friends,” he said. “I think it’s a good reminder for everybody, the sacrifices that the people before us put in, so that we can enjoy holidays like the Fourth of July. And I think they would want that. Sacrifices don’t go unnoticed.”

The ceremony was held in St. Clair Park, located near the intersection of North Maple Avenue and Beacon Street. Speakers provided a history of the project and read the names of the new banner recipients before the Westmoreland Symphony Orchestra played a patriotic concert in honor of past and present military members.

An interest form for the 2025 Hometown Hero banner project can be found at https://thinkgreensburg.com/hometown-hero-banner-project/. A complete application will be released in February.

Quincey Reese is a TribLive reporter covering the Greensburg and Hempfield areas. She also does reporting for the Penn-Trafford Star. A Penn Township native, she joined the Trib in 2023 after working as a Jim Borden Scholarship intern at the company for two summers. She can be reached at qreese@triblive.com.

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