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Viral photo shows boys stopping to honor US flag at North Carolina fire station

Posted at 5:08 PM, Feb 12, 2019
and last updated 2019-02-12 17:08:48-05

ROSEBORO, N.C. — Folks on Facebook fell in love with two North Carolina boys who recited the Pledge of Allegiance.

But it wasn’t that they recited it, it’s how they did it.

Roseboro Fire Department Chief Kenneth Lee Coleman Jr. said Monday the department’s chaplain, Bobby Herring, was raising the US flag to full staff Friday when he looked over and saw two boys at an intersection “with hands on their heart saying the pledge.”

“God bless our community,” the post read.

Related: Surveillance video shows FedEx driver stopping to fold fallen American flag

Before making the post, Coleman said the chaplain checked with him. Coleman said it was OK and within five minutes, he said, the post had 100 likes.

“I thought that’s pretty good for us because we don’t usually get that many likes,” Coleman said. He described Roseboro, about 24 miles from Fayetteville, as a town with two stoplights and a population of 1,200 where everyone knows everyone.

Coleman didn’t check the post again for a few hours, after he started getting calls about it going viral.

“I would’ve never thought that it would’ve gone this far. It has definitely exploded a lot more than I thought it would,” he said.

Since it was posted Friday, the post has been liked more than 4,500 times, shared 6,700 times and has over 600 comments praising the two boys and their parents.

“That pic gives me goosebumps and tears!! Thanks parents for teaching your kids respect and manners,” one comment read.

“That picture is worth a thousand words! They know respect!” another read.

Coleman teaches public safety at a local high school, giving students an introduction to public service jobs like firefighting, policing and working as emergency medical technicians. He said he could see the two young men becoming firefighters or police officers because both jobs require workers to be respectful and professional.

“They’re being taught that now so there’s hope they can have a good future in front of them,” he said. “It shows hope for the future.”