Arlington National
Cemetery
Arlington National Cemetery is a
United States military cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, outside Washington,
D.C. The site, once the home of legendary Confederate Army commander Robert E.
Lee, is now the burial ground for more than 400,000 active duty service
members, veterans and family members. The cemetery contains several memorials
including the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, a monument dedicated to U.S. service
members whose remains were never identified.
Arlington House
Arlington National Cemetery is
built on plantation land that once belonged to George Washington Parke Custis.
Custis was the grandson of Martha Washington and the step-grandson of President
George Washington. The plantation is located on a hilltop overlooking the
Potomac River and Washington, D.C. Custis inherited the 1,100-acre plantation
from his father at the age of 21 in 1802. He built Arlington House, a Greek
Revival-style mansion on the property as a tribute to George Washington and
filled the home with many of Washington’s belongings. In 1857, Custis willed
the property to his daughter, Mary Anna Randolph Custis. Mary was the wife of
Robert E. Lee, then a military officer in the U.S. Army. Lee took command of
the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia at the onset of the Civil War in
1861. The Lee family vacated the property that spring as Union troops advanced
into the Virginia hills outside of Washington, D.C.
Civil War Burials
Beginning on May 24, 1961, the
Union Army used the land and house as a camp and headquarters. As the carnage
of the Civil War entered its third year, fatalities began to outpace the burial
capacity at Washington, D.C.-area cemeteries. To address the problem, the
federal government designated Arlington as a national military cemetery in
1864. Private William Christman of Pennsylvania was the first military service
member buried at Arlington on May 13, 1864. Christman was a farmer, newly
recruited into the Army. He fell ill with the measles and died several days
later of complications before ever going into combat. Approximately 16,000
Civil War soldiers are buried at Arlington National Cemetery. In 1914, a
Confederate Memorial was added to section 16 where 482 Confederate Army troops
are buried.
Freedman’s Village
In June 1863, the U.S. government
established a Freedman’s Village for African Americans on a portion of the
Arlington estate. The village consisted of slaves who were freed by advancing
Union forces (referred to as “Contrabands”) or those who had escaped from
nearby Virginia and Maryland plantations. At its height, roughly 1,100 former
slaves lived in the village. Some were employed in government jobs on the
estate or on nearby farms growing food for the Union Army. Freedman’s Village
was a bustling town with homes, churches, stores, a hospital and a school for
nearly 30 years. The federal government closed down Freedman’s Village in 1900
to make room for more burial plots. Arlington National Cemetery’s Section 27
contains the graves of nearly 3,800 former slaves, though no residents from
Freedman’s Village are buried there. The word “Contraband” was originally
inscribed on these gravestones, though the headstone inscriptions have now been
changed to read “Civilian” or “Citizen.”
Tomb Of The Unknown Soldier
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier,
or Tomb of the Unknowns, is a monument at Arlington National Cemetery dedicated
to unidentified U.S. service members who died in the line of duty. It is
considered the most hallowed grave at Arlington National Cemetery. The Tomb of
the Unknown Soldier was dedicated on November 11, 1921 during an Armistice Day
ceremony commemorating World War I veterans. President Warren G. Harding
presided over the ceremony. (In the United States, Armistice Day later became
Veteran’s Day to honor veterans of all wars.) The Unknown Soldier of World War
I was exhumed from a military cemetery in France and buried with highest honors
beside the Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington. A two-inch layer of soil brought
from France was placed below the coffin. The ornate marble sarcophagus,
completed in 1932, reads, “Here Rests in Honored Glory an American Soldier
Known But to God.” The World War I unknown was later joined by the unidentified
remains of soldiers from World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. In
1998, the remains of the Vietnam Unknown were exhumed and identified by
scientists as those of Air Force 1st Lt. Michael Joseph Blassie, who was shot
down near An Loc, Vietnam, in 1972. Blassie’s remains were returned to his
hometown of St. Louis, Missouri. The crypt that contained the Vietnam unknown
remains vacant.
Future Of Arlington National Cemetery
More than 400,000 people have
been buried at Arlington National Cemetery, including two U.S.
Presidents—William Howard Taft and John F. Kennedy. Currently, as many as 30
U.S. service members or relatives are buried at Arlington each day. The
cemetery, which has gone through several expansions through the years, now
spans 624 acres, roughly one square mile. The Millennium Expansion Project,
started in 2014, adds 27 acres and roughly 30,000 additional burial plots to
the cemetery. Even with the expansion, Arlington National Cemetery is expected
to reach capacity by the 2040s.
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