Time has taken its toll on the 52-year-old landmark, which now has a deteriorated gas line.
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — Hard times have befallen a beloved local military landmark, but some kind souls are pitching in to help.
Standing tall since 1972 to light the way home for prisoners of war and missing in action personnel, the Flame of Hope on Oceana Boulevard has seen better days.
The monument began as a tribute specifically to MIA Naval aviators from the Vietnam War; the idea was to keep the flame burning until all of the more than 1,500 troops from that war and the 81,000 missing from all of America’s wars return.
But time and Mother Nature have taken a toll on the Flame of Hope, and now, 52 years later, the flame has gone dark. The primary problem is a deteriorated gas line
Retired Navy Commander Carroll Bains — a …