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The land on which Arlington National
Cemetery sits used to be the home of General Robert
E. Lee. When Lee went off to fight for the South in
the Civil War, Union forces took over the land and
used Lee's house as headquarters and temporary hospital.
Brigadier General Montgomery Meigs appropriated the
grounds to be used as a military cemetery, hoping
to render Arlington House uninhabitable should Lee
ever attempt to return. Today, Arlington is the burial
grounds for America's military personnel and their
families.
With more than 270,000 graves and
over 5,400 burials each year, the cemetery will be
full by the year 2060.
On Feb. 18, 1971, U.S. Army
Warrant Officer Gregory S. Crandall was shot down
in a helicopter over Laos during the Vietnam War.
His funeral took place at Arlington on Sept. 17, 1993.
Buried in a full-sized steel casket with full military
honors is all that remains of Officer Crandall
a
single tooth.
The Tomb of the Unknowns
used to hold the remains of unidentified soldiers
from World Wars I and II, Korea, and Vietnam. Recently,
the body of the unknown soldier who fought in Vietnam
was exhumed and identified.
Famous people buried
at Arlington include:
John and Robert Kennedy
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
William Howard Taft (our 27th President)
Joe Louis (World Heavyweight Boxing Champ)
Lee Marvin (actor)
Pierre Charles L'Enfant (designer of Washington, D.C.)
Admiral Robert E. Peary (explorer of the North Pole)
George Washington
Parke Custis and Mary Custis (builders of Arlington
House).
LINKS:
Arlington
National Cemetery Website:
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