Light the Night for Fallen Firefighters 2026 – Community Event to Remember and Honor Our Fallen Heroes

April 15, 2026

This April and May, our grateful communities will come together to honor its fallen fire service heroes during the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Weekend, the official national tribute to firefighters who made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty last year.

The National Fallen Firefighters Foundation launched Light the Night for Fallen Firefighters in 2017 to commemorate the Foundation’s 25th anniversary. Held annually during the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Weekend, this tribute has grown to include fire departments, families, and communities across the country lighting their homes and buildings in red to honor fallen firefighters.

We invite you to join us by lighting your home, fire department, or community building in red during Memorial Weekend as a symbol of support and remembrance.

Read the 2026 Roll of Honor to learn more about the 97 firefighters who died in 2025 and 107 in previous years who were honored at the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial.

If you would like to join us in honoring these heroes, please visit https://weekend.firehero.org/events/memorial-weekend/light-night-fallen-firefighters/sign-up/  to confirm your participation and please share the attached flyer with your communities.

Thank you for considering this meaningful way to honor our nation’s fallen firefighters and show solidarity with their families.

This is an event we hold very close to heart as one of our own beloved county firefighter, Brice Trossbach, tragically lost his life while operating on a Leonardtown house fire. Brice was not only was a career firefighter with the Naval District Washington Fire Department on Patuxent River, but was also a beloved member of the Leonardtown Volunteer Fire Department family, serving since the age of 16. Brice also served with the Bay District Volunteer Fire Department for years.

If you’d like to support our local small businesses as well, Dyson Building Center in Great Mills, Ace Home Improvement in Leonardtown, St. Mary’s Lighting in Lexington Park, and Batteries Plus in California, will carry red bulbs in stock.


Each year, the NFFF carries out a responsibility entrusted to it by Congress: honoring America’s fallen firefighters and standing alongside the families they leave behind. In 2026, that mission is at risk.

Due to a lapse in funding at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, access to the U.S. Fire Administration campus in Emmitsburg, Maryland, home to the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial, is uncertain. This jeopardizes the opportunity to properly honor 204 fallen firefighters from 43 states, and to welcome the families who come to remember them.

For these families, Memorial Weekend is far more than a ceremony. It is often a once‑in‑a‑lifetime opportunity to visit the place where their loved one’s service and sacrifice are permanently honored.

If access to the Memorial is restricted, the Foundation will be forced to conduct the Fallen Firefighters Memorial Ceremony and Candlelight Service elsewhere. While meaningful, something irreplaceable will be lost. Memorial Weekend is where the nation gathers to express its gratitude for their service and sacrifice, a place where the families and national recognition come together in a way that cannot be replicated.

This federal disruption affects families who have already given everything. National recognition matters. A permanent place of honor matters. And access to that place, especially when families may have only one chance to be there, matters deeply. For our fallen firefighters’ families, this is not just an event. It is the fulfillment of a promise.

“Our call to action encourages everyone to join us in contacting their members of Congress and ask them to support re-opening the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial for the 2026 Memorial Weekend,” explains NFSA President Shane Ray. “This is an example of ‘Fire Service One Voice’ in action and we are happy to support the NFFF and stand united with our plea to everyone for support.”

“Ensuring access to this sacred space is not optional. It is essential,” adds NFFF CEO Victor Stagnaro. “We are very grateful to NFSA and all fire service organizations who are working to help us reach policy makers in time to help. We know first-hand the importance of this annual service, and we hope our pleas are heard.”

About the National Fire Sprinkler Association: NFSA was founded in 1905 and wants to create a more fire safe world and works to heighten the awareness of the importance of fire sprinkler systems from homes to high-rise and all occupancies in between. The Association is an inclusive organization made up of dedicated and committed members of a progressive life-saving industry.

This industry manufactures, designs, supplies, installs, inspects, and services the world’s most effective system in saving lives and property from uncontrolled structural fires. To access the campaign to re-open the NFA, visit www.nfsa.org/advocacy-2