Today’s generation of Aggies might find it difficult to connect with the Bonfire collapse. Being 25 years removed from the tragedy can make it hard for students to understand the visceral emotions and poignant loss of that night. The Bonfire Remembrance ceremony serves as a reminder to students to always remember the 12 lives lost and to perpetuate the enduring Aggie spirit.
But to those who were students at the time, the ceremony was a personal reminder of a day they will never forget.
Bill Davis, class of 2002, and one of the 27 survivors pulled out of the stack, attended the ceremony with his wife Amber, Class of 2003.
“Seeing [students] span all the way around — to me, it’s touching,” Bill said. “Being a former student, I’ve been through it. But I expect them out here also, and I love that they are.”
25 years later, the Rememberence Ceremony is still meaningful to Aggies who never experienced the event firsthand.
Regardless of the relationship between older and newer generations, Bonfire’s significance will always remain the same.
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