Arlingtonkyrkogården

Arlingtonkyrkogården
PlatsArlington County, Virginia, USA
Invigd13 maj 1864
ÄgareUSA:s armédepartement

Arlingtonkyrkogården (engelska: Arlington National Cemetery), som ligger i Arlington, Virginia vid Potomacfloden mittemot staden Washington, är USA:s mest betydande krigskyrkogård. På krigsminister Edwin M. Stantons beslut grundades griftegården 1864 (under amerikanska inbördeskriget) på plantageägor som konfiskerats från sydstatsgeneralen Robert E. Lee.

Det är Armédepartementet (Department of the Army) som ombesörjer driften av griftegården. De flesta andra federala krigsgriftegårdarna drivs av Veterandepartementet (Department of Veteran Affairs).

De som har rätt att begravas på Arlingtonkyrkogården

De som har rätt att begravas på Arlingtonkyrkogården:

  • Krigsmän som stupat i strid.
  • Krigsveteraner som pensionerats.
  • Krigsveteraner som blivit krigsinvalider.
  • Krigsmän och CIA-tjänstemän som erhållit vissa utmärkelser.
  • Tidigare krigsfångar.
  • Änka eller änkling till person som redan är begraven på kyrkogården.
  • Minderåriga barn till person som redan är begraven på kyrkogården.
  • Personer med höga befattningar inom den federala statsmakten, exempelvis: presidenter, domare i USA:s högsta domstol, försvarsministrar samt senatorer och kongressledamöter (med militär bakgrund).

Dispens har getts i särskilda fall för civila, till exempel har civila som dött i terrorattacker fått begravas här. Annat exempel är astronauter som dött i tjänsten, till exempel Challengerolyckan.

Begravningar

Arlington House är huvudbyggnaden för den godsegendom som fanns på platsen innan griftegården inrättades.

Stoftet efter 300 000 människor vilar på Arlingtongriftegården, och i genomsnitt genomförs 28 begravningar om dagen, fem dagar i veckan (måndag–fredag). Flaggorna på kyrkogården halas till halv stång en halvtimme före den första begravningen och hissas en halvtimme efter att den sista begravningen är genomförd.[2]

Här vilar soldater som miste livet under amerikanska inbördeskriget, andra världskriget och Koreakriget, men också från det tidiga 2000-talets konflikter i Afghanistan och Irak. Här finns även den okände soldatens grav.

Kända personers gravar

President John F. Kennedy ligger begravd här, liksom hans änka Jacqueline Kennedy och hans bröder, senatorerna Robert Kennedy och Ted Kennedy.

Andra kända personer som ligger begravda på Arlingtonkyrkogården:

Bildgalleri

Se även

Referenser

  1. ^ Dutch War Memorial Database, läst: 4 februari 2023.[källa från Wikidata]
  2. ^ Information på griftegårdens webbplats Arkiverad 19 augusti 2010 hämtat från the Wayback Machine.

Externa länkar

Media som används på denna webbplats

Pan Am Flight 103 Memorial - looking S - Arlington National Cemetery - 2011.JPG
Författare/Upphovsman: Tim1965, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Looking south at the Pan Am Flight 103 Memorial at Section 1 of Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. Also known as the "Lockerbie Cairn," the memorial is located in a portion of Section 1 just in front of the cemetery's Old Administration Building.

Pan Am Flight 103 was destroyed in flight by a bomb on December 21, 1988, over Lockerbie, Scotland. Libya later admitted that officials of its state security agency planted the bomb in retaliation for various U.S. air strikes against Libya (primarily the 1983 attacks on Tripoli). Eleven of the 270 lives lost were people on the ground. Of the 189 Americans who lost their lives in the attack, 15 were active duty military personnel and 10 were retired military personnel. Also lost were 35 students of Syracuse University who had been studying through the University's Division of International Programs Abroad.

President Bill Clinton signed legislation in November 1993 permitting the placement of a memorial to the dead at Arlington National Cemetery. The memorial was financed with private donations, and is a gift of the people of Scotland to the people of the United States. The monument is made of 270 blocks of red sandstone quarried from Corsehill Quarry in Annan, Scotland, about eight miles southeast of Lockerbie. The stones from a cairn, a traditional Scottish monument. Carins take many forms. In this case, the stones are mortared together into a tower that slopes slightly inward as it rises. The cairn rests on six dark grey granite stones shaped like wedges of pie. At its base, the cairn is 7 feet across. It is 10 feet, 6 inches high. Around the base of the cairn, attached to the granite base, are six bronze plaques listing the names of the dead. On the north face of the cairn midway up the face is a bronze dedicatory plaque. The monument was dedicated by President Clinton on November 3, 1995.
Pershing's Tombstone.jpg
Författare/Upphovsman: photo taken by flickr user dbking, Licens: CC BY 2.0
The tombstone of w:John Pershing at w:Arlington National Cemetary.
Arlington National Cemetery Seal.png
U.S. Military's Arlington National Cemetery Seal
Honor Guard at ANC 2.jpg
Författare/Upphovsman: Hu Totya, Licens: CC BY-SA 4.0
Honor Guard at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery.
Shuttle Columbia - Arlington National Cemetery - 2011.JPG
Författare/Upphovsman: Tim1965, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Looking north at the Space Shuttle Columbia Memorial in Section 46 of Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. The Canadian Cross of Sacrifice is in the background. The Space Shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after liftoff on January 28, 1986. The remains of Captain Michael Smith and Commander Francis "Dick" Scobee were identified and interred at Arlington. The remains of the five other individuals aboard the shuttle could not (at that time) be identified, and were cremated. A group burial occurred near Scobee's grave in Section 46. On June 12, 1986, Congress passed legislation establishing a Space Shuttle Challenger memorial. The families agreed to erect the memorial on top of the grave holding the cremated remains. Artist Robert Harding designed the bronze plaque which is affixed to the front of the monument. The poem "High Flight" by John Gillespie Magee, Jr., is inscribed on the memorial's rear. The memorial was dedicated on March 21, 1987, by Vice President George H.W. Bush.
Wreaths at Arlington National Cemetery.jpg
Thousands of Christmas wreaths are nestled against headstones in Section 27 at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., on Dec. 15, 2005. Hundreds of volunteers gathered at Arlington to place more than five thousand donated Christmas wreaths on head stones in the cemetery. The 14th annual wreath laying event is a result of Worcester Wreath Company owner Morrill Worcester's boyhood dream of doing something to honor those laid to rest in the National Cemetery.[1]
ArlingtonUnknown.JPG
Författare/Upphovsman: TheAgency (CJStumpf) 18:08, 10 February 2007 (UTC), Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Arlington National Cemetery, Washington, D.C., United States; Tomb of the Unknown Solider
Arlington25.JPG
Författare/Upphovsman: TheAgency (CJStumpf) 18:04, 10 February 2007 (UTC), Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Arlington National Cemetery, Arlingtion, Virgina, United States
Arlington National Cemetery - 9-11 Memorial to Pentagon Victims - SW side - 2011.jpg
Författare/Upphovsman: Tim1965, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Looking northwest at the southeast corner of the Victims of Terrorist Attack on the Pentagon Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States.
JFK grave.jpg
Författare/Upphovsman: User Morn, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
    The grave of John F. Kennedy with the Eternal Flame
Arlington House.jpg
Arlington House also known as the Robert E. Lee Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery. Section 32 of the cemetery is in the foreground.