Garrett McKay dipped his brush in a bucket of water and began scrubbing the dirt from another bright white headstone, this one from a second lieutenant who served in World War I, dying in 1963.
"I know in the winter the headstones do get very weathered," he said, as the bristles removed grime caked into the engraved letters. "The ones under the trees are really pretty dirty."
Despite the Saturday morning drizzle, McKay and 20 friends and family members spent the morning at Fort Snelling National Cemetery cleaning the limestone graves of hundreds of soldiers, their wives and the occasional child.
For McKay, who's from Lakeville but will be a junior at Eastview High School in Apple Valley, organizing and completing a community service project is a requirement to earn his Eagle Scout rank, the highest honor a Boy Scout can achieve.
But it was also personal, he said.
"I just wanted to be able to show my respect for the soldiers," he said. "I know that they fought for our country and I thought I would return the favor by making their gravestones look nice."
McKay, who loves history and is especially interested in wars, scheduled the cleaning day to be close to the 70th anniversary of D-Day, the June 6 date when Allied troops began their invasion of German-occupied Western Europe.
For McKay, a member of Troop 205 in Apple Valley, the project was a logical choice, said his mother, Jackie McKay.