
Jim McDevitt on playing "Taps" at thousands of funerals at Washington Crossing National Cemetery: "It's to honor the veteran, but it's really the last thing we can do for the family." (Photo: USA Today Network)
The first veteran to be buried on a cloudless day at Washington Crossing National Cemetery was Alan Clark.
Jim McDevitt, 84, in uniform, readied his bugle, a polished silver-toned instrument, a replica of the type used for military funerals in World War I. He’d head to the columbarium, where Alan Clark would be interred. Clark’s was the first of seven burials that Wednesday at which McDevitt would sound “Taps.”
The cemetery was quiet. The sun warmed 15,000 identical white headstones, arrayed in precise rows on lush green lawn. Then, in the distance, came three muffled rifle volleys, followed by the melancholy tune.
McDevitt played it flawlessly, which shouldn’t surprise: The Southampton man has played “Taps” more than 4,000 times at the National Cemetery, part of an honor guard that assures each veteran is given a dignified military sendoff.
“It’s the final goodbye,” he said, quietly, returning.
That was in 2023. Two years later, on May 14, he reached a new milestone.
“Five thousand funerals,” he said.
“I have a full week ahead of me for Memorial Day, that’s for sure.”
He was to play “Taps” four times along the route of the Hulmeville/Langhorne Memorial Day parade on Saturday, May 24, and at the Falls parade on Sunday, May 25. He was also to play at the National Cemetery in Washington Crossing at the 11 a.m. flag ceremony.
He looked back over the rows of white headstones. Then at his horn.
“By the end of the month I’ll hit 4,300,” he said. He’s kept calendar logs of every funeral he has played since his first, which was on George Washington’s birthday, Feb. 22, 2013.
“I’m in my 11th year. When I started, I thought, well, if I can do 500 funerals, I’m a happy man. I can sleep good at night knowing that I did that.”
He reached 500 fast, in a little over a year.
“They were burying them pretty quick when the cemetery opened,” he said.
He’s only missed bugler duty twice in that time, and only because he was with his daughter, who was having a procedure in a hospital.
“I don’t ever miss. I’m here, for the veterans, and for the families,” he said.
He started playing bugle, by accident, at age 12. A friend who played drums invited him to a practice session at the Rising Sun Drum and Bugle Corps in Philadelphia, where he grew up.
“I walked in the door and, of course, they’re looking for people to play, and I was handed a horn and they said, ‘Here, kid, make some noise with this.’ So I did,” he said.
McDevitt found he had a natural talent.
“I picked it up pretty quick,” he said.
Within two years he was in a state championship drum and bugle corps for the Liberty Bell Cadets. When they broke up in 1957, he went to the Reilly Raiders, now in Willow Grove, where he still plays. He also plays horn for the Bracken Cavaliers in Bristol.
In 1959 he joined the Coast Guard, spent nearly eight years on reserve duty. He went on to work for a decade as a Philadelphia police officer, then had a second career working in the steel industry, from which he retired. All the time, he played his horn, landing his volunteer gig at the National Cemetery.
“I figure that, being a veteran, if I have the time and the talent, why would I not do this?” he said.
At first, he played only on Wednesdays, part of 60 active honor guard members divided into five teams at the cemetery. They fire the guns, fold the flag and present it to the family, and play “Taps,” once a lullaby tune that began to be played to signal the end of the day during the Civil War. It began to be sounded at military funerals in World War I.
As members left, or were ill, McDevitt substituted for other buglers and soon was playing throughout the week, occasionally at 10 funerals a day.
“So my numbers keep mounting,” he said. “By the end of the year, I’ll be at 5,000, if not before that.
“And, you know, it’s an honor. Every single time I play. It’s to honor the veteran, and it’s really the last thing we can do for the family.”
He excused himself. He was headed to another burial, one of seven he’d play that day.
Reporting by JD Mullane, Bucks County Courier Times / Bucks County Courier Times

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