A collection of images submitted by readers.

What do you remember most from COVID? Readers share their memories of isolation, camaraderie, loss, and hope

Five years ago last month, Governor Charlie Baker declared a state of emergency in Massachusetts.

State employees were forced to cancel travel plans, among other measures. Within days, all schools would be closed in the state and the nation would be plunged into the worst public health crisis since the 1918 Spanish flu.

Massachusetts lost more than 22,000 lives; New England lost nearly 50,000; the United States lost more than 1.2 million, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Yet the nation has never really reckoned with its loss. We have no official day of remembrance or national memorial to COVID victims. To give our community the chance to share collective memories of a dark time, the Globe asked readers to submit stories and remembrances from the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. In response, we received an outpouring of photos, videos, and stories of birth, death, unexpected moments of joy, and lasting grief.

For many of our neighbors, these moments represent some of the most difficult times of their lives. At least for some, those moments brightened as the pandemic neared its end.

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Credits
  • Reporter: Emily Spatz
  • Editors: Cristina Silva, Anna Kuchment
  • Photo editor: Leanne Burden Seidel
  • Design and development: Andrew Nguyen, John Hancock
  • Photo illustration: Omar Vega
  • Digital editor: Christina Prignano
  • Visuals editor: Tim Rasmussen
  • Director of photography: Bill Greene
  • Audience: Adria Watson
  • Audience editor: Heather Ciras
  • Copy editor: Michael J. Bailey
  • Quality assurance: Nalini Dokula