Note: The following appears in the Wofford gameday football program.
During World II, Clemson College often conducted a memorial service to honor its alumni who had been killed during the war. The Honor Roll, which included the names of those killed, was read to pay tribute to their sacrifice in service to our country.
During one such service, alumnus Roy Pearce read the names on the Honor Roll. He wrote the following in the April 1944 edition of The Tiger.
“It made me sad to read the Honor Roll. All were great men and we’ll never let them down, never!”
This commitment made by Pearce in 1944 served as a source of motivation to The Clemson Corps, a constituent group of the Alumni Association, to develop a means by which the memory of these heroes would never be forgotten. This effort resulted in the development of the Scroll of Honor Memorial, which was dedicated in April 2010.
In 2001, The Clemson Corps began to collect names of our alumni who qualified for inclusion on the Scroll of Honor, those who were killed while performing their military duties. In 2002, a portable Scroll of Honor Memorial with over 300 names was unveiled at Military Appreciation Day (Maryland game).
For the next few years, this portable Scroll of Honor Memorial was moved from location to location around the campus to bring recognition to The Clemson Corps’ effort to identify all qualified alumni.
In 2005, efforts began to consider a permanent memorial on campus that would bring appropriate honor to these heroes. Research produced a document in Strom Thurmond Institute from 1942, the year that Memorial Stadium was built.
The memo certified that the new football stadium would be named Memorial Stadium to honor Clemson’s alumni who “have made the supreme sacrifice in the service of their country.” This drew The Clemson Corps to the area around the stadium for a site for the memorial.
In 2006, the Clemson athletic department gave wholehearted approval for The Clemson Corps to use the site across from Howard’s Rock for the Scroll of Honor Memorial. The memorial stands on an axis that extends straight from the WestZone through Howard’s Rock to Tillman Hall.
A concept was developed, and in March 2007, the University Administrative Council gave their 100-percent approval to proceed.
Groundbreaking was held in August 2008. With the support of thousands of alumni, students, organizations and friends of Clemson, the Scroll of Honor Memorial was dedicated less than two years later in April 2010.
More than 1,000 people attended the ceremony, many of whom were family members of the honorees, classmates and hometown friends. Family members of some of the alumni whose bodies were never recovered said that they consider the Scroll of Honor Memorial the final resting place of their loved one.
The Scroll of Honor Memorial has become one of the sites of “sacred soil” on Clemson’s campus, like Bowman Field. We are amazed at how the entire Clemson Family has embraced the memorial. It has garnered the respect of students, faculty, staff, alumni and families. Visitors are also drawn to the site out of reverence to its purpose. The memorial truly reflects those values that we Tigers hold so dear.
The Scroll of Honor Memorial included 470 alumni at the time of the dedication ceremony. Research has continued, and 23 honorees have been added since that time to the Scroll of Honor, which currently totals 493 honorees.
The Clemson Corps continues its research to ensure that we have identified all our military alumni who have given their lives in service to our country. The Scroll of Honor Memorial Committee receives nominations, conducts research to ensure that the nominee meets the qualifications and makes a recommendation to the board of directors that the alumnus be added.
Once a nominee is approved, a stone is engraved in the memorial with the honoree’s name and year of graduation. A ceremony is conducted to dedicate that stone in memory of the honoree.
“It is important to give the new honoree the same honor that was bestowed on the original 470 at the initial dedication ceremony in 2010,” said Lieutenant Colonel (retired) Claude Cooper, current chairman of the Scroll of Honor Memorial Committee. “All made the same sacrifice and deserve the same honor.”