The Memorial Drive leads from the Lincoln Memorial, across the Potomac River, to the entrance to Arlington National Cemetery, and
the portico of Arlington House is visible at top.
Plan and roadways of Arlington National Cemetery.
Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia, is an American
military cemetery established during the American Civil War on the grounds of Arlington House, formerly the estate of the family of Robert E. Lee's wife Mary Anna Custis Lee, a descendant of
Martha Washington. The cemetery is situated directly across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C., near to the location of
The Pentagon, and is served by the Arlington Cemetery station on the Blue Line of the Washington Metro system.
More than 300,000 persons are buried here on 624 acres. Veterans from every one of the nation's wars are interred in the
cemetery, from the American Revolution through the military actions in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Pre-Civil War dead were reinterred after 1900.
With Mill Springs National Cemetery, the only other open cemetery in
the system, it shares the distinction of being the oldest burial ground.
Arlington National Cemetery and United States
Soldiers' and Airmen's Home National Cemetery are administered by the Department of the Army. The other National Cemeteries are administered by the
Department of Veterans Affairs or by the National Park Service.
Arlington House (Custis-Lee Mansion) and its grounds are administered by the National Park Service as a memorial to Lee.
History
Traditionally, American military cemeteries developed from the duty of commanders on the frontier and in battle to care for
their casualties. When Civil War casualties overflowed hospitals and burial grounds near Washington, D.C., Quartermaster General
Montgomery C. Meigs proposed in 1864 that 200 acres of the Robert E. Lee family
property at Arlington be taken for a cemetery. "The grounds about the mansion", Meigs wrote, "are admirably adapted to such a
use." Burials had in fact begun at Arlington before the ink was even blotted on Meigs's proposal. By war's end, 16,000 graves
filled the spaces close to the house. Heir to the property Custis Lee sued the government claiming that he owned the land. After
the Supreme Court ruled in Lee's favor, Congress paid him $150,000 for title to the land. Arlington is not the largest national
cemetery, but it is probably the best-known.[citations needed]
Before the Civil War, Robert E. Lee had been a West Point graduate and
a United States Army officer. When the war broke out, President Abraham Lincoln offered Lee the command of the Army of the
Potomac (the Union Army). Lee demurred, because he wanted to see how Virginia would
decide. When Virginia announced its seccession, Lee was offered command of the
Army of Northern Virginia: he took this offer, because he couldn't bear to
take up arms against his native state. He quickly established himself as an able commander, defeating a series of Union generals,
until his final defeat and surrender at Appomattox Court House. Because of this
decision and subsequent performance, Lee was regarded as disloyal by most Union officers: hence the appropriation of his farm as
a graveyard for mostly Union dead.[1]
Burial criteria
Historical
Today
The persons specified below are eligible for ground burial in Arlington National Cemetery.[2] The last period of active duty of former members of the Armed Forces must have
ended honorably. Interment may be casketed or cremated remains.
- Any active-duty member of the Armed Forces (except those members serving on active duty for training only).
- Any veteran who is retired from active military service with the Armed Forces.
- Any veteran who is retired from the Reserves is eligible upon reaching age 60 and drawing retired pay; and who served a
period of active duty (other than for training).
- Any former member of the Armed Forces separated honorably prior to October 1,
1949 for medical reasons and who was rated at 30% or greater disabled effective on the day of
discharge.
- Any former member of the Armed Forces who has been awarded one of the following decorations:
- The President of the United States or any former President of the United States.
- Any former member of the Armed Forces who served on active duty (other than for training) and who held any of the following
positions:
- An elective office of the U.S. Government
- Office of the Chief Justice of the United States or of an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.
- An office listed, at the time the person held the position, in 5 USC 5312 or 5313 (Levels I and II of the Executive
Schedule).
- The chief of a mission who was at any time during his/her tenure classified in Class I under the provisions of Section 411,
Act of 13 August, 1946, 60 Stat. 1002, as amended (22 USC 866)
or as listed in State Department memorandum dated March 21, 1988.
- Any former prisoner of war who, while a prisoner of war, served honorably in the active military, naval, or air service,
whose last period of military, naval or air service terminated honorably and who died on or after November 30, 1993.
- The spouse, widow or widower, minor child, or permanently dependent child, and certain unmarried adult children of any of the
above eligible veterans.
- The widow or widower of:
- a member of the Armed Forces who was lost or buried at sea or officially determined to be missing in action.
- a member of the Armed Forces who is interred in a US military cemetery overseas that is maintained by the American Battle
Monuments Commission.
- a member of the Armed Forces who is interred in Arlington National Cemetery as part of a group burial.
- The surviving spouse, minor child, or permanently dependent child of any person already buried in Arlington National
Cemetery.
- The parents of a minor child, or permanently dependent child whose remains, based on the eligibility of a parent, are already
buried in ANC. A spouse divorced from the primary eligible, or widowed and remarried, is not eligible for interment.
- Provided certain conditions are met, a former member of the Armed Forces may be buried in the same grave with a close
relative who is already buried and is the primary eligible.
Panorama of a small section of Arlington National Cemetery.
Tomb of the Unknowns
-
The Tomb of the Unknowns. The World War I unknown is below the marble sarcophagus. Other unknowns are beneath the white slabs on
the ground. They are the World War II unknown (left) and the Korean War unknown (right). The remains of the former Vietnam War
unknown were under the middle slab until 1998, when it was identified by
DNA
analysis as being Michael Blassie's.
The Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery is also known as the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. It stands on top of a hill overlooking Washington, D.C.
One of the more popular sites at the Cemetery, the tomb is made from Yule marble quarried in Colorado. It consists of seven
pieces, with a total weight of 79 short tons (72 metric tons).
The tomb was completed and opened to the public April 9, 1932, at
a cost of $48,000.
It was initially named the "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier." Other unknown servicemen were later buried there, and it became
known as the "Tomb of the Unknowns", though it has never been officially named. The soldiers buried there are:
- Unknown Soldier of World War I, interred November
11, 1921. President Warren G. Harding
presided.
- Unknown Soldier of World War II, interred May 30,
1958. President Dwight D. Eisenhower presided.
- Unknown Soldier of the Korean War, also interred May 30,
1958. President Dwight Eisenhower presided again, Vice President Richard Nixon acted as next of kin.
- Unknown Soldier of the Vietnam War, interred May 28,
1984. President Ronald Reagan presided. The remains of the
Vietnam Unknown were disinterred, under the authority of President Bill Clinton, on
May 14, 1998, and were identified as those of Air Force 1st Lt.
Michael J. Blassie, whose family had him reinterred near their home in St. Louis, Missouri. It has been determined that the crypt at the Tomb of the Unknowns that
contained the remains of the Vietnam Unknown will remain empty.
The Tomb of the Unknowns is perpetually guarded by the U.S. Army. The 3rd U.S. Infantry
Regiment ("The Old Guard") began guarding the Tomb April 6, 1948.
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater
Exterior facade of the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater is modeled on Roman amphitheatres. It is built of Vermont Imperial Danby
marble in the
Ionic order.
Interior of the amphitheater showing the rostrum.
The Tomb of the Unknowns is part of the Arlington Memorial
Amphitheater. The Memorial Amphitheater has hosted state funerals and Memorial Day
and Veterans Day ceremonies. Ceremonies are also held for Easter. About 5,000 people attend these holiday ceremonies each year. The structure is mostly built of Imperial
Danby marble from Vermont. The Memorial Display room, between the amphitheater and the Tomb of
the Unknowns, uses Botticino stone, imported from Italy. The
amphitheater was the result of a campaign by Ivory Kimball to construct a place to honor
America's soldiers. Congress authorized the structure March 4, 1913. Woodrow Wilson laid the cornerstone for the building on
October 15, 1915. The cornerstone contained 15 items including
a Bible and a copy of the Constitution. [2]
Before the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater was completed in 1921, important ceremonies were held at what is now known as the
"Old Amphitheater." This structure sits where Robert E. Lee once had his gardens. The amphitheater was built in 1868 under the
direction of General John A. Logan. Gen. James
Garfield was the featured speaker at the Decoration Day dedication ceremony,
May 30, 1868. The amphitheater has an encircling colonnade with a
latticed roof that once supported a web of vines. The amphitheater has a marble dais, known as "the
rostrum", which is inscribed with the U.S. national motto found on the
Great Seal of the United States, E
pluribus unum ("Out of many, one"). The amphitheater seats 1,500 people and hosted speakers such as William Jennings Bryan. [3]
Other notable sites
Eternal flame and marker at the grave of John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United
States.
Remembering the Maine: The memorial to the
USS Maine.
Other frequently visited sites in the cemetery are the USMC War Memorial (commonly
known as the "Iwo Jima Memorial") and the Netherlands Carillon (these sites are
actually located adjacent to the cemetery), and the grave of President John F. Kennedy.
Kennedy is buried with his wife and two of their children. He was placed here
March 14, 1967. His grave is marked with an eternal flame. His brother, Senator Robert F.
Kennedy, is also buried nearby. His grave is marked by a simple wooden cross.
The federal government dedicated a model community for freed slaves, Freedman's Village, near the current Memorial
Amphitheater, December 4, 1863. More than 1,100 freed slaves
were given land by the government, where they farmed and lived during and after the Civil War. They were turned out in 1890 when
the estate was repurchased by the government and dedicated as a military installation.
In Section 27, there are buried more than 3,800 former slaves, called "Contrabands" during the Civil War. Their
headstones are designated with the word "Civilian" or "Citizen".
Near the Tomb of the Unknowns stands a memorial to the 266 men who lost their lives aboard the USS Maine. The memorial is adorned by a mast salvaged
from the wreckage. (The Maine's other mast is erected at the United States
Naval Academy, making the Maine the "longest ship in the Navy" in Naval Academy tradition.) The Maine Memorial has
served as the temporary resting place for foreign heads of state allied with the United States who died in exile in the United
States during the Second World War, pending the return of their remains to their homeland.
These were Manuel L. Quezon of the Philippines and
Ignacy Jan Paderewski of Poland.
The Space Shuttle Challenger
Memorial was dedicated on May 20, 1986 in memory of the crew of
flight STS-51-L, who died during
launch on 28 January 1986. Transcribed on the back of
the stone is the text of the John Gillespie Magee, Jr. poem entitled
High Flight. Although many remains were identified and returned to the
families for private burial, some were not, and were laid to rest under the marker. Two of the crew members, Scobee and Smith, are buried in Arlington, as well.
There is also a similar memorial to those who died when the Shuttle Columbia broke apart during reentry
on February 1, 2003, dedicated on the first anniversary of the
disaster. Astronauts Laurel Clark, David Brown and Michael Anderson are also buried in
Arlington.
On a knoll just south of Arlington House, with views of the Washington Monument and Capitol, is a memorial to Pierre-Charles L'Enfant, the architect who laid out the city of Washington. His remains lie
below a marble memorial incised with his plan for the city. L'Enfant envisioned a grand neoclassical capital city for the young
republic that would rival the capitals of European monarchies.
There are memorials to those killed in two acts of terrorist violence:
- The Pentagon memorial, which takes the shape of the Pentagon, is the memorial to the 184 victims of the terrorist attack on
the Pentagon on September 11, 2001. The memorial lists the
names of all the victims that were killed.
- The cairn, the Lockerbie
memorial, which is the memorial to the 270 killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight
103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. The memorial is made up
of 270 stones, one for each person killed in the disaster (259 on the plane, 11 on the ground). The fact that 189 of the victims
were Americans made the bombing the worst act of terrorist violence against Americans prior to 9/11.
The noted composer, arranger, trombonist and Big Band leader Maj. Alton Glenn Miller of
the U.S. Army Air Forces has been missing in action since December 15, 1944. Miller was eligible for a memorial headstone in Arlington
National Cemetery as a service member who died on active duty whose remains were not recoverable. At his daughter's request, a
stone was placed in Memorial Section H, Number 464-A on Wilson Drive in Arlington National Cemetery in April 1992.
There are only two mausoleums located within the confines of the Cemetery. One is for the
family of General Nelson Appleton Miles located in Section 3 and the other one belongs
to the family of General Thomas Crook Sullivan and it is located in Section 1.
There is a Canadian Cross of Sacrifice with the names of all the citizens of the
USA who lost their lives fighting in the Canadian forces during the Korean War and the two World Wars.
The Women in Military Service for America
Memorial can be found at the Ceremonial Entrance to Arlington National Cemetery.
Also, in the cemetery, there is a Confederate section with graves of soldiers of the Confederate States of America and a Confederate Memorial. [4]
Burial procedures
Respectful silence is requested at Arlington.
Arlington House flag flying at half-staff. The flag is lowered during interments.
[3]
The flags in Arlington National Cemetery are flown at half-staff from a half hour before the first funeral until a half hour after the last funeral each day. Funerals are normally conducted five days a week,
excluding weekends.
Funerals, including interments and inurnments, average well over 20 a day. The Cemetery conducts approximately 5,400 burials
each year. [5]
With more than 290,000 people interred there, Arlington National Cemetery has the second-largest number of people buried of
any national cemetery in the United States. The largest of the 130 national cemeteries is the Calverton National Cemetery, on Long Island,
near Riverhead, New York, which conducts more than 7,000 burials each year.
In addition to in-ground burial, Arlington National Cemetery also has one of the larger columbariums for cremated remains in the country. Four courts are currently in use, each with 5,000 niches.
When construction is complete, there will be nine courts with a total of 50,000 niches; capacity for 100,000 remains. Any
honorably discharged veteran is eligible for inurnment in the columbarium.
Notable burials
Notable military figures
- Creighton Abrams (1914-1974), United States
Army General who commanded U.S. military
operations in the Vietnam War from 1968-1972
- "Hap" Arnold (1886-1950), first General
of the Air Force
- Gordon Beecher (1904-1973), United States
Navy Vice Admiral and composer
- Jeremy Michael Boorda (1939-1996), US
Navy Admiral and Chief of Naval
Operations
- Omar N. Bradley (1893-1981), commanded the 12th Army
Group in Europe during World War II, first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Ruby G. Bradley (1907-2002), Colonel and, with 34 medals, one of the most decorated
women in U.S. military history
- Miles Browning (1897-1954), World War I and
World War II Navy officer and hero of the Battle of
Midway
- Roger Chaffee (1935-1967) and Gus Grissom
(1926-1967), astronauts killed in the Apollo 1 fire
(Edward White was buried at West
Point)
- William Henry Christman (1843-May 13, 1864), Union
Civil War soldier, the first soldier buried in Arlington National Cemetery. He died in a Washington area hospital and was
sequently buried there. The "Official" order establishing the cemetery was actually signed by the Secretary of War on
June 15, 1864. Christman lies in Section 27, which was originally
The Lee Rose Garden.[4][5]
- Bertram Tracy Clayton (1862-1918), Congressman from New York, killed in action
in 1918
- Louis Cukela (1888-1956), Marine Corps Major, awarded two Medals of Honor for same act
in World War I
- Gerald F. DeConto (1957-2001), United States
Navy captain, killed at the Pentagon during the September 11 attacks
- Jane Delano (1862-1919), Director, Army Nursing Corps
- Sir John Dill (1881-1944)
United Kingdom, British Diplomat and Field
Marshal
- William J. Donovan (1883-1959), Major General and Chief of the
OSS during World War II
- Abner Doubleday (1819-1893), Civil War general erroneously credited with inventing
baseball
- Rene Gagnon, Ira Hayes and Michael Strank: three of the six Marines immortalized in Joe
Rosenthal's iconic photo Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima (Strank
was killed in action just days after the photo was taken)
- David Haskell Hackworth (1930–2005), Colonel and most decorated American
soldier
- William "Bull" Halsey (1882-1959), World War
II Navy five-star Fleet Admiral
- Kara Spears Hultgreen (1965–1994), the first female naval carrier-based fighter
pilot
- Daniel "Chappie" James, Jr. (1920-1978), USAF, first
African American four-star General in the U.S. Armed Forces
- Philip Kearny (1815-1862), "fearless" one-armed cavalry general killed at
Chantilly during the Civil War
- Włodzimierz B. Krzyżanowski (1824-1887), Polish military leader and
Civil War Union general
- Mark Matthews (1894-2005), last surviving Buffalo
Soldier
- Francis Lupo (1895-1918), Private killed in France during World War I; holds the distinction of possibly being the longest U.S. service member missing in action to be found (1918-2003)
- David McCampbell (1910-1996), Captain, the US Navy's top World War II Ace with 34 kills
- Montgomery Cunningham Meigs (1816-1892), Brigadier General. Arlington National Cemetery was established by Brig. Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs, who
commanded the garrison at Arlington House and appropriated the grounds on June 15,
1864 for use as a military cemetery. His intention was to render the house uninhabitable should the
Lee family ever attempt to return. A stone and masonry burial vault in the rose
garden, 20 feet wide and 10 feet deep, and containing the remains of 1,800 Bull Run casualties, was among the first monuments to
Union dead erected under Meigs' orders. Meigs himself was later buried within 100 yards of Arlington House with his wife, father
and son.
- Glenn Miller (1904-1944), Major and well known band leader who disappeared over the
English Channel while flying to Paris.
- Audie Murphy (1924-1971), U.S. Army, America's most decorated combat soldier of World
War II and popular movie actor
- John J. Pershing (1860-1948), America's first General of the Armies, commanded American forces in World War
I
- Francis Gary Powers (1929-1977), American U-2 pilot shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960
- John Aaron Rawlins (1831-1869), Civil War general, chief of staff and later
Secretary of War to Ulysses S.
Grant
- Alfred C. Richmond (1902-1984), Commandant of
the United States Coast Guard
- Hyman G. Rickover (1900-1986), father of the Nuclear Navy
- Philip Sheridan (1831-1888), commanding general, Union Army, Civil War
- Larry Thorne (1919-1965)
Finland, Finnish soldier who served in the US special forces and was a World War II veteran; called "soldier who
fought under three flags (Finland, Germany and USA)"
- Matt Urban (1919-1995), Colonel, U.S Army, most highly decorated soldier for valor in the
history of the US Military
- Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright IV (1883-1953), Major General, hero of
Bataan and Corregidor; highest ranking POW in World War
II
- Robert Webb (1922-2002), B-17 Flying
Fortress pilot
- Joseph Wheeler (1836–1906), served as a Major General for two opposing forces: the
Confederate Army during the Civil War, and the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American
War and Philippine-American War
- Orde Charles Wingate (1903–1944)
United Kingdom, British major general, creator
and commander of the Chindits
- Clark H. Woodward (1877-1968), Vice Admiral, served in five wars: the
Spanish-American War, Philippine-American
War, Boxer Rebellion and both World Wars
- Charles Young (1864-1922), first African-American Lieutenant colonel in the US Army
As of May 2006, there were 367 Medal of Honor
recipients buried in Arlington National Cemetery,[6] nine
of whom are Canadians.
Wartime service members with other distinguished careers
Rows of tombstones at Arlington National Cemetery.
Closer look at tombstones at Arlington National Cemetery.
- Hugo Black, Justice U.S. Supreme
Court.
- William Brennan, Justice U.S. Supreme Court.
- Ron Brown, Secretary of Commerce.
- William Jennings Bryan, Secretary of State, three time Presidential Candidate
and popular orator.
- Bill Buckley, CIA Station Chief murdered in Beirut.
- Clark Clifford, Secretary of Defense and advisor to four Presidents.
- Dwight F. Davis, Secretary of War, established the Davis
Cup.
- John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State.
- Medgar Evers, Civil Rights activist.
- Dashiell Hammett, author.
- Grace Hopper, Rear Admiral and pioneer computer scientist.
- Robert G. Ingersoll, political leader and popular orator, noted for his
agnosticism.
- Frank Kowalski, United
States Representative from Connecticut and World War II Army veteran.
- Pierre Charles L'Enfant
France, military engineer, architect and urban planner who designed the city of Washington, D.C.
- Robert Todd Lincoln, Secretary of War.
- Joe Louis, world heavyweight boxing champion.
- Allard Lowenstein, U.S. Congressman from New York. [6]
- John Roy Lynch, former Slave, Major US Army and Member of Congress.
- Mike Mansfield, longest serving Senate Majority Leader and Ambassador to
Japan.
- Lee Marvin, former US Marine and actor.
- Bill Mauldin, political cartoonist.
- John C. Metzler, Sergeant in World War II and former superintendent of
Arlington National Cemetery from 1951-1972. His son, John C. Metzler, Jr. is the
current superintendent (1991-present).
- Daniel Patrick Moynihan, U.S. Senator from New
York.
- Spottswood Poles, perhaps the greatest outfielder of the Negro Leagues.
- William H. Rehnquist, Chief
Justice of the United States.
- Earl W. Renfroe, orthodontist who helped originate the concept of preventive and
interceptive orthodontics.
- Frank Reynolds, television news anchorman.
- Johnny Micheal Spann, CIA officer killed in Afghanistan.
- Samuel S. Stratton, fifteen-term U.S. Representative from New York.
- William Howard Taft, Secretary
of War, President and Chief Justice of the United States.
- George Westinghouse, Civil War
veteran and founder of Westinghouse Electric.
- Harvey W. Wiley, first Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration and "Father" of the Pure Food and Drug Act.
- Charles Willeford, World War II veteran and author.
Notable civilian citizens
- Julian Bartley, Sr. (54) and his son Jay Bartley (20), killed together in the U.S. Embassy at Nairobi terrorist attack.
- Harry Blackmun, Thurgood Marshall,
William O. Douglas and Potter Stewart, four
U.S. Supreme Court Justices.
- Leslie Coffelt, secret service member killed fighting off would-be-assassins of
President Harry S. Truman.
- Dana Falkenberg (3), who
was killed in the terrorist attack on the Pentagon. Buried in a mass grave with her mother, father, and older sister.
- Michael P. Hammer, Foreign Service officer captured and murdered by guerrillas in
El Salvador.
- Phyllis Kirk, famous TV and film actress.
- James Parks, the only person buried at Arlington Cemetery who was born on the
grounds.
- Marie Teresa Rios
Puerto Rico, author of Fifteenth Pelican, basis for The Flying
Nun television show.
- United States Capitol Police Officers John Gibson and Jacob Chestnut were killed in the line of duty and granted burials
at the cemetery.
Whether or not they were wartime service members, U.S. Presidents are
eligible to be buried at Arlington since they oversaw the armed forces.
Three state funerals have been held at Arlington: those of Presidents William Howard
Taft and John F. Kennedy, and that of General John J. Pershing.
See also
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References
External links
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