What is new for Northwoods Drifter in 2026


Every late May, when the spring thaw gives way to early summer warmth, Ashland residents gather at the Memorial Bandshell to do what Northwoods communities have done for generations: remember the ones who didn’t come home.
The city’s annual Memorial Day program draws veterans, families, and neighbors together for a morning of remembrance. It’s part ceremony, part civic gathering — the kind of event that reminds you why small towns matter.
This year’s observance on May 25 brought the community to the bandshell for remarks, music, and quiet reflection. The local VFW Post 690 and American Legion Post 90 helped organize the event, as they have for decades.
The Memorial Bandshell sits right in Ashland’s civic heart, across from the waterfront park corridor. It’s the kind of public space that sees county fairs, summer concerts, and Fourth of July celebrations.
On Memorial Day, though, it becomes something more sacred.
The bandshell’s central location makes it easy for residents to attend, and its open-air design creates space for both planned ceremony and spontaneous conversation. When weather cooperates, there’s something powerful about gathering outside — under the same sky the fallen once knew.
This year, organizers listed Summit Church as the backup location in case of rain. Smart planning for a region where May weather can shift from sunshine to downpour in an hour.

The program wouldn’t happen without VFW Post 690 and American Legion Post 90. These aren’t just social clubs — they’re living connections to military service that stretches back over a century.
The American Legion formed after World War I, when returning soldiers needed support navigating civilian life again. VFW posts emerged from the same era of veterans helping veterans.
In Ashland, these organizations carry forward the work of remembrance year after year. They coordinate speakers, arrange for music, ensure flags fly properly, and make sure no fallen service member is forgotten.
Memorial Day began as a post–Civil War tradition to honor the dead, and local ceremonies like Ashland’s keep that national purpose rooted in community.
That continuity matters. When younger veterans stand alongside World War II and Vietnam-era members, you see generations of service connected through shared purpose.
The bandshell program is the centerpiece, but Memorial Day remembrance in Ashland County extends beyond one gathering. The holiday weekend includes multiple cemetery services across the county, creating a circuit of remembrance.
Veterans and community members visit grave sites, place flags, and hold brief ceremonies at smaller locations throughout the region. It’s a lot of ground to cover, but that’s the point — no cemetery too small, no veteran forgotten.
The Chequamegon Veteran’s Center helps coordinate these observances, ensuring the countywide effort stays organized. The 2026 schedule listed a 9:30 a.m. start time at the Memorial Bandshell, with other services following throughout the morning.

In larger cities, Memorial Day can feel diluted — another three-day weekend, another mattress sale. Up here, the day still carries weight.
These gatherings serve multiple purposes:
When you live in a community of a few thousand, you probably know someone who served. The ceremony becomes personal, not abstract.
That’s especially true for families who’ve lost someone. The public acknowledgment — the music, the speeches, the moment of silence — validates their private grief and turns it into shared memory.
Holding the ceremony in late May means dealing with unpredictable Northwoods weather. One year brings warm sunshine, the next brings drizzle and forty-degree temps.
But the timing also marks a seasonal shift. Memorial Day weekend opens the unofficial start of summer tourism, activates downtown foot traffic, and signals the beginning of lake season.
After the ceremony, families often head to local restaurants or walk the waterfront. That modest economic ripple helps local businesses and reinforces why downtown civic spaces matter for more than just special events.

The bandshell’s location near the park district makes it easy to transition from solemn remembrance to community connection. Veterans swap stories, kids play near the water, neighbors catch up.
It’s the kind of organic community building that can’t be manufactured — it grows from shared ritual and familiar space.
As long as VFW Post 690 and American Legion Post 90 keep organizing, and as long as Ashland residents keep showing up, this tradition will endure. That’s not guaranteed, though.
Veterans organizations face aging membership and declining enrollment. Sustaining these programs requires younger veterans to step up and community members to participate.
The good news? Ashland’s 2026 observances showed continued strong organization and community support. The event schedule was detailed, backup plans were in place, and multiple organizations coordinated smoothly.
That kind of civic infrastructure doesn’t happen by accident. It reflects years of commitment from people who believe remembrance matters — not just as history, but as ongoing responsibility.
Come next Memorial Day, the bandshell will be ready. The flags will fly. And Ashland will gather once more to remember the ones who gave everything.
Written by
Mike has been coming up or living in the Northwoods since his childhood. He is also an avid outdoorsman, writer and supper club aficionado.
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