‘It gives you goose bumps’: 2,000 flags fly in Wheaton to welcome the Fourth of July

Jill Palkoner of Chicago and her niece, Collette Palkoner, 1, of Wheaton sit among the 2,000 American flags during the opening night of the Field of Honor at Seven Gables Park in Wheaton on Saturday, June 29, 2024.

Of all the ways to celebrate a bang-up Fourth of July, there’s not a lot of time for quiet reflection.

But a hush falls over the Wheaton Field of Honor, a sea of American flags waving in Seven Gables Park.

“It gives you goose bumps,” said Rudy Keller, a retired high school educator who enlists an army of volunteers to assemble and plant 2,000 flagpoles in a park soccer field.

Manhard Consulting, an engineering and surveying firm, used lasers to plot the 25 neat rows with 80 flagpoles posted in each one. The solemn display stays up through July 4 in tribute to veterans, the fallen, active-duty military and hometown heroes. The laminated tags attached to the 8-foot-tall flagpoles bear their names and often a personal, handwritten note left by their loved ones.

“The message on that tag makes each flag special and humbling,” Keller said.

On each evening leading up to Independence Day, there are Honor Guard ceremonies, plane flyovers and patriotic performances, starting with bagpipers at 6:30 p.m. in the field full of flags off Naperville Road.

The Christ Presbyterian Church choir belted out the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” on June 30. The Chorus of DuPage sang the melodies of George M. Cohan on July 2.

The nightly ritual concludes with a rendition of taps.

Some people visit the Field of Honor simply to walk among the flags and read the dedication tags.

“It’s something you’ll remember forever,” Keller said.

Keller has been organizing large-scale flag projects throughout DuPage County for some 15 years. He feels compelled to do it. His father, also named Rudy, was a World War II U.S. Navy veteran and tended to keep his service to himself.

“I believe in what the flag stands for, and it’s a beautiful event for the community,” Keller said.

It’s a beautiful scene around sunrise. Keller comes to the field early in the morning to turn off the floodlights illuminating the stars and stripes through the night.

“Usually, it’s very, very calm and very, very quiet. The field has a totally different kind of feeling to it,” he said.

The display, hosted by the Wheaton Park District and the Wheaton United Soccer Club, raises funds for Warrenville VFW Post 8081. People can buy a flag for $30 and take it home July 4.

“It does energize me,” Keller said, “and I enjoy doing it and it’s an honor to serve our community in this fashion.”