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Arlington Memorial Amphitheater

Memorial Amphitheater is an outdoor amphitheater, exhibit hall, and nonsectarian chapel located in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia, in the United States. Designed in 1913 as a replacement for the older, wooden amphitheater near Arlington House, ground was broken for its construction in March 1915 and it was dedicated in May 1920. In the center of its eastern steps is the Tomb of the Unknowns, dedicated in 1921. It has served as the site for numerous Veterans Day and Memorial Day services, as well as for memorial services and funerals for many individuals.

Memorial Amphitheater
Aerial view looking southeast at Memorial Amphitheater
LocationArlington County, Virginia
Coordinates38°52.585′N 77°4.379′W / 38.876417°N 77.072983°W / 38.876417; -77.072983
EstablishedMay 15, 1920; 103 years ago (1920-05-15)
Governing bodyU.S. Department of the Army
Location of Memorial Amphitheater in Virginia
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater and Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater and Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater and Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

Building the amphitheater edit

 
The Old Amphitheater (now named Tanner Amphitheater), whose small size, rustic nature, and connection to the Civil War prompted construction of Memorial Amphitheater.

Genesis of the amphitheater edit

Arlington National Cemetery was established in 1864. Due to the growing importance of the cemetery as well as the much larger crowds attending Memorial Day observances, Brigadier General Montgomery C. Meigs (who was Quartermaster General of the United States Army) decided a formal meeting space at the cemetery was needed.[1] A grove of close-growing trees just southwest of Arlington House Grove was cut down and a wooden amphitheater (today known as the Tanner Amphitheater) constructed in 1873.[2]

By the early years of the 1900s, however, the Old Amphitheater had grown far too small for the large ceremonies which were held there. Judge Ivory Kimball, Commander of the Department of the Potomac chapter of the Grand Army of the Republic (or GAR, a veterans' group for those who fought for the Union in the Civil War), believed that not only should a new and larger facility be built, but also that the new amphitheater represent the dead of all wars in which the nation had fought.[3] Kimball and the GAR began their push for a new amphitheater in 1903, and sketches for the amphitheater drawn up by Frederick D. Owen, a civilian engineer working for the United States Army Corps of Engineers.[4] But legislation failed to pass Congress in 1905, 1907, and 1908.[5] Legislation passed in 1908 authorizing the establishment of a memorial commission, but it received only $5,000 in funding.[6] Legislation was introduced again in 1912 by Senator George Sutherland. Sutherland's bill proposed construction of a 5,000-seat amphitheater with an underground crypt (for the burial of famous individuals) to cost no more than $750,000.[7] Prospects for passage initially seemed dim. But during the third session of the 62nd Congress, a number of new federal memorials were approved, including the Arlington Memorial Bridge, the Lincoln Memorial, a memorial to women who served in the Civil War (now the American Red Cross National Headquarters), and a George Washington memorial auditorium.[8] The successful push for new memorials helped supporters win the passage of legislation authorizing construction of Memorial Amphitheater.[9] President William Howard Taft, in one of his last acts as president, signed the legislation into law on March 4, 1913.[10]

 
Judge Ivory G. Kimball, a primary backer of the new amphitheater, in 1909.

The 1908 authorizing legislation established an Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission (AMAC) to oversee the design and construction of the structure. Its members included the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, the Superintendent of the U.S. Capitol, Judge Kimball (as a representative of the GAR), and Charles W. Newton (as a representative of the United Spanish War Veterans, a Spanish–American War veterans group).[11]

It immediately became apparent, however, that although Congress had authorized the expenditure of $250,000 for Memorial Amphitheater, it had not actually appropriated any such funds from the U.S. Treasury. This left the AMAC without any funds to conduct its business.[12] It was not until August 1, 1914, that Congress finally appropriated money for the amphitheater's construction.[13] Ten days later, Colonel William W. Harts of the United States Army Corps of Engineers was elected the commission's executive director. On October 12, 1914, the AMAC contracted with the New York-based architectural firm of Carrère and Hastings to design the building. The AMAC hired the George A. Fuller Co. to construct it on February 11, 1915.[14][15]

There is some disagreement among sources as to who should receive the majority of credit for designing Memorial Amphitheater. Lemos, Morrison, Warren, and Hewitt specifically name Thomas Hastings,[16] as does the United States Commission of Fine Arts[17] and others.[18] But other sources name Frederick D. Owen, a civilian engineer working for the Corps of Engineers (and who also designed the flag of the president of the United States). Owen is named by architectural historians Butler and Wilson and by historian Rick Atkinson.[19][20] The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission is not clear as to who deserves the credit, as it notes that Owen "drew the first sketches for plans for the great Memorial in 1904"[21] and later gave "suggestions and advice as to the form of the Memorial".[22] Owen's significant role is made clear by the AMAC in other ways as well: He designed the memorial trowel used by President Woodrow Wilson to lay the cornerstone;[21] he served on the reception committee for the cornerstone laying ceremony;[23] he co-chaired the planning committee for the 1921 dedication;[24] and he chaired the reception committee for the dedication.[25] But the AMAC also said Carrère and Hastings prepared the plans for the building,[26] provided the explanation of the design to the AMAC,[27] and was named by Congress as the architects.[28]

The AMAC's composition changed somewhat after Congress amended the commission's authorizing legislation on March 3, 1915. Congress added the leader of Camp 171, United Confederate Veterans of the District of Columbia, to the commission as a full voting member.[14]

Construction of the amphitheater edit

 
Corner Stone
 
Construction begins on Memorial Amphitheater in 1916.

The site chosen for the new Memorial Amphitheater was the top of a hill about 1,000 feet (300 m) south of Arlington House. A gravel pit, opened in the mid-1800s, existed there previously.[29]

Ground for Memorial Amphitheater was broken on March 1, 1915.[14] President Woodrow Wilson laid its cornerstone in a ceremony on October 13, 1915.[30] A copper box placed in a hollowed out section of the cornerstone contained a copy of the United States Constitution, a copy of the United States Declaration of Independence, the Bible, the flag of the United States, one each of every coin and postage stamp then in circulation, a Congressional directory, a telephone directory of the District of Columbia, an autographed photograph of President Wilson, and several items connected with Arlington National Cemetery.[9] Kimball participated in the ground-breaking and cornerstone ceremonies, but did not live to see the amphitheater completed: He died on May 15, 1916.[31]

Excavation of the foundation was complete by the end of June 1915. Concrete foundations had also been laid and cured, and most of the brick foundation was in place as well.[14] Most of the amphitheater's foundation was complete by June 30, 1916. The foundation included 629,000 bricks, 24 short tons (22 t) of structural steel, and 21,644 cubic yards (16,548 m3) of marble (for the exterior of the structure). The Guastavino tile system, patented in 1885, was used to create arches and vaults in the basement. More than 2,500 square feet (230 m2) of this tile were used. The heating, clean water, and sewage systems were also complete. The Corps of Engineers also finished the architectural drawings for the approaches around the amphitheater as well, and was ready to start work on them.[32]

A major design changed also occurred in June 1915. Originally, plans for the amphitheater called for wooden balustrades, plaster moldings, cement floors and ceilings, and wooden doors. But on June 26, all of these materials were changed to marble. The total cost of the changes was $41,000.[33]

Work on the amphitheater slowed in mid-1916 and throughout 1917 due to a lack of high quality marble available for the work. Severe winter weather also meant that work on the approaches did not begin until late June 1917. The amphitheater was supposed to have neared completion on February 15, 1917, but these lengthy delays meant that the construction schedule was extended for a full year.[34] The amphitheater was also proving to be much more costly than expected. Bids from contractors were all far above what the Corps of Engineers expected, but work went ahead anyway.[35] By June 30, 1917, much of the amphitheater and its colonnade were done. Another 35,140 cubic feet (995 m3) of marble had been placed for the columns, and 11,856 cubic feet (335.7 m3) of concrete and 26 short tons (24 t) of structural steel were used to support them. Skylights and ornamental ironwork stairs were in place, and ornamental plastering and marble carving had begun.[36]

 
Memorial Amphitheater under construction in 1917.

The amphitheater, chapel, and most of the entrance hall were finished in 1918. The entrance hall was built with red brick (257,100 of them), and clad in 57,711 cubic feet (1,634.2 m3) of marble. Another in 1,060 cubic feet (30 m3) of marble were used for interior columns. The extent to which marble was used was eye-opening: 4,790 square feet (445 m2) for flooring, 4,694 square feet (436.1 m2) for stairs, 1,272 square feet (118.2 m2) for door and window frames, and 2,033 feet (620 m) of moldings. The eastern steps consumed 4,526 square feet (420.5 m2) of concrete. The interior was decorated with ornamental plaster, terra cotta partitions, terrazzo flooring, bronze doors and grillwork, ornamental ironwork railings and stairs, and glazed tile.[37] While more than $7,000 ($161,500 in 2013 inflation-adjusted U.S. dollars) was spent on carving for the amphitheater,[34] just $2,933 was spent for carving on the inside and outside of the entrance hall.[37]

 
Construction progress on Memorial Amphitheater in June 1918.

The advent of World War I had a significant impact on the construction of Memorial Amphitheater. The United States entered the war in April 1917, and by spring 1918 American troops were arriving in Europe. Most skilled workers were diverted to the war effort, although artisans (such as marble carvers) were still available. The Corps of Engineers was able to obtain, after lengthy delays, the high-quality marble it needed for the approaches from the island of Vinalhaven, Maine.[37][38] But railroads and cargo ships were so congested carrying war materiél and military personnel that the marble could not be transported to Arlington National Cemetery until late 1917. By then, another severe winter had set in. Intensely cold weather continued into the late spring, further delaying work. Only a limited amount of work on the approaches had concluded by the end of June 1918.[37] Some modifications were also made to the structure because of the war. The largest of these changes eliminated the seating planned for the top of the colonnade.[39]

 
Secretary of War Newton D. Baker dedicates the Arlington Amphitheater on 15 May 1920

By June 1918, nearly all of Memorial Amphitheater's exterior was complete. The interior work on the chapel and the first-floor reception hall was also done, leaving only the basement-level kitchen storage areas and the second-floor offices to be worked on. Construction of the concrete floor of the amphitheater also was under way.[39]

Interior work on Memorial Amphitheater ended in June 1919. The remainder of the basement rooms and all of the second floor were now finished, too. All that remained to be done was decoration of the chapel ceiling, some interior and exterior inscriptions, and installation of lighting fixtures. The Corps of Engineers was also ready to connect the water and sewer lines, grade the grounds and roads, and install plantings and sod.[40] During the next nine months, these items were all finished, and the interior painted. The masonry approaches were also completed, and the roadways and sidewalks paved.[41] The G.B. Mullin Co. did the landscape design and work, which involved replanting 20 cedar trees around the three amphitheater entrances.[42] The total cost of the structure and its grounds was $810,812.[41] In total, 87,000 cubic feet (2,500 m3) of Mountain White marble from the Danby quarries of Vermont were used in its construction.[43]

Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated on May 15, 1920.[44] The Corps of Engineers turned it over to the Quartermaster General's office on July 1.[41]

Design edit

 
Apse, three-level stage, and klismos chair in the amphitheater.

Memorial Amphitheater was designed by Thomas Hastings to be the center of a biaxial grouping of landscape features and monuments that included the USS Maine Mast Memorial in the west, the Spanish–American War Memorial to the south, and a formal Italianate garden to the east.[45] Greek Revival, Romanesque Revival, and Renaissance decorative elements are used throughout the structure.[16] Ulysses Ricci designed the various friezes, ornamental devices, and decorative elements of the amphitheater and entrance hall.[42] Hastings said he wanted Memorial Amphitheater to be the building he was most remembered by.[16]

As constructed, Memorial Amphitheater consisted of an elliptical outdoor amphitheater that sat 4,000.[41] The bays formed by the colonnade can seat another 150 individuals.[46] Another 1,000 individuals may be accommodated by standing.[38]

The amphitheater is surrounded by a colonnade, with main entrances at the east and west axes.[41] The capitals of the columns are Doric,[19] but rest on an Attic base.[16] The entablature above the columns, however, is Ionic to allow for inscriptions. These inscriptions, on the exterior of the entablature, list 44 major battles from the American Revolutionary War through the Spanish–American War.[16][38] Low, backless marble benches in concentric circles face the semi-circular main stage, which has three levels.[47][48] The lowest level features a klismos, a form of ancient Greek informal chair meant for rulers. The klismos chair faces the audience, much as a cathedra (or bishop's chair) does. Hastings intended the klismos chair to remind the audience of the missing heroes honored by the amphitheater.[47] The second level of the stage has a podium. The stage and amphitheater are designed so that any speaker must look down at the klismos chair while addressing the audience, and must look at the USS Maine Mast Memorial if looking up.[49] The third and uppermost level of the stage contains a semi-circular seating area for about 100 people and an apse in the back.

 
Inscription within the apse:
"When we assumed the soldier we did not lay aside the citizen"

The interior dome of the apse is richly carved, and the square pilasters on either side of the stage list the names of famous American generals (left, as you face the stage) and admirals (right) from the American Revolutionary War through the Spanish–American War.[48] A quote from General George Washington's June 26, 1775, letter to the Continental Congress is inscribed inside the apse: "When we assumed the soldier we did not lay aside the citizen."[50] A quote from President Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address is inscribed above the stage: "We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain."[51] Decorative 9-foot (2.7 m) tall urns carved with eagles, rams' heads, and snakes were placed on pedestals in niches on either side of the stage.[51]

 
Standing in the south gallery of the entrance hall, looking north. The main doors are to the right.

Above the west entrance of the amphitheater is a quote from the Roman poet Horace: "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori" ("It is sweet and fitting to die for one's country").[50] Under the colonnade are 300 crypts, which were intended for the burial of important people.[38][41]

In the basement (or ground floor, if approached from the west) beneath the amphitheater stage is a chapel. This domed structure was designed to seat 150, and has a raised ambulatory around the edges.[48]

As originally designed, the main entrance was in the east through the doors of the cruciform entrance hall.[41][45] The entrance hall is fronted by a six-columned portico with Corinthian capitals.[45] A frieze above the main bronze doors depicts symbolic trophies of war.[52] The entrance hall is not connected internally with the amphitheater.[53] Stairways, bridges, and short corridors on the outside of the entrance hall provide access to the stage in the amphitheater.[48] The main floor of the reception hall is clad in Botticino marble.[38] The main floor originally housed a reception hall (with two side galleries for the display of battle flags and war trophies) and stage, and the second floor housed a museum.[41][48] In 1929, the main floor became a Memorial Exhibit Hall displaying honors received by the unknown soldiers lying beneath the Tomb of the Unknowns, and the second floor became offices.[54]

Steps lead from the main doors of the entrance hall down to a small plaza. Hastings designed a series of short steps to lead from the plaza down to a landing, and then a series of monumental steps to lead from the landing to the eastern formal garden below. In the center of the short steps was a pedestal for a statue. No artwork was ever placed there. This pedestal was later removed, and the Tomb of the Unknowns took its place in 1921.[16] The planned monumental steps leading down to the formal garden were not built when Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated. A retaining wall with false arches was constructed instead.[45]

A roadway was designed to cross the plaza and circle the entire structure.[52]

History edit

 
Memorial Amphitheater after its completion in 1921.

Construction of the monumental stairs edit

On March 4, 1921, the Congress approved the construction of a memorial to an unidentified American serviceman from World War I to be placed in the stairs leading up from the east landing to the plaza in front of Memorial Amphitheater. An unknown soldier was identified and brought back from France, and interred inside a small marble tomb on Armistice Day on November 11, 1921. To construct the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (as it was then informally called), the pedestal for the memorial statue envisioned in Hastings' design was removed. Workers dug 20 feet (6.1 m) down into the earth behind the retaining wall. At this level, concrete footings 16 feet 2 inches (4.93 m) long by 9 feet 6 inches (2.90 m) wide were constructed. The earthen walls were reinforced with a burial vault consisting of concrete walls 7 feet (2.1 m) thick at the bottom, narrowing to just 2 feet 4 inches (0.71 m) thick at the top. A hollow rectangular plinth was constructed on top of the vault walls, above which was a slightly smaller hollow marble base. On top of the marble base was a rectangular capstone with curved sides, which was also pierced through the center. A 2-inch (5.1 cm) deep layer of soil brought from France along with the unknown soldier's body lined the bottom of the burial vault. After the unknown soldier was lowered into the vault and rested on the soil below, the capstone was sealed with a marble lid.[55]

Additional changes to the east front came within just a few years. On July 3, 1926, Congress authorized the completion of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier with an appropriate memorial. A design by architect Lorimer Rich and sculptor Thomas Hudson Jones was selected on December 10, 1928.[56] The Lorimer/Hudson design, like nearly all the other submissions, anticipated removing the retaining wall below the tomb and building the monumental staircase first envisioned by Thomas Hastings. Congress agreed with this revision, and on February 28, 1929, authorized construction of the stairs, new road and pedestrian approaches, alterations to the formal gardens, and a new overlook.[57] The Construction Division of the Quartermaster General's office oversaw the work, which was performed by the Hegman-Harris Company of New York City.[58]

1956 renovation and expansion of the tomb edit

 
Looking west across the Italianate formal garden at Memorial Amphitheater. The monumental steps were constructed as part of the Tomb of the Unknowns between 1929 and 1932, and the central roadway removed.

Little additional work was done at Memorial Amphitheater until 1954. By then, settling of the amphitheater and entrance hall, cracking of walls and exterior marble, water damage, and other serious problems were beginning to affect the structure. Congress appropriated $15,000 for fiscal 1954 (which began June 30, 1953) for a year-long study of the problems. A preliminary estimate indicated that repairs would cost $179,000. But the finished study identified even more serious issues, almost all of which were caused by design deficiencies which did not take into account the seasonal expansion and contraction of the building's marble. Arlington National Cemetery officials were forced to ask Congress for $447,000 to repair the amphitheater and $179,000 to repair the entrance building. Congress approved the request.[59][60]

A second major change was made to the plaza in 1958. President Dwight Eisenhower signed legislation in August 1956 to allow the interment of unidentified remains for soldiers from World War II and the Korean War at the Tomb of the Unknowns. Two new burial vaults, to the northwest and southwest, were dug in the plaza before the eastern entrance hall.[61] Carved into the granite in front of the tomb sarcophagus were the dates "1917-1918".[62] The Korean War unknown was interred in the northwest vault beneath a slab with the dates "1950-1953" carved into its western edge. The World War II unknown was interred in the southwest vault beneath a slab with the dates "1941-1945" carved into its western edge.[63] The cover slabs of both new vaults were flush with the plaza.[64] The two unknowns were interred on Memorial Day on May 30, 1958.[65]

In August, 1960, Congress abolished the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission and transferred its duties to the Secretary of Defense. Although the commission had long ago fulfilled its basic mission of the construction of Memorial Amphitheater, it still had the legal authority to approve the placement of plaques, markers, and other commemorations on the inside, on the exterior, or on the grounds of the structure.[66]

On May 24, 1964, Memorial Amphitheater was the site of a late-afternoon ceremony celebrating the 100th anniversary of the founding of Arlington National Cemetery.[67] During its 50th year anniversary in 1969, the American Legion, along with the American Legion Auxiliary donated an exterior lighting system so that Memorial Amphitheater and the Tomb of the Unknowns could remain lit at night.[68] In the midst of ceremonies also marking the 50th anniversary of the Paris Caucus – President Richard Nixon formally took possession of the lighting system in the nation’s name, flipping the switch that turned the lights on.[69]

1974 renovation edit

Additional physical plant problems appeared at Memorial Amphitheater in 1965. The retaining walls adjacent to the east plaza began cracking vertically, and extensive horizontal cracks and spalling were found on the Tomb of the Unknowns as well. Additional damage occurred over the next five years. Congress then appropriated $522,000 in fiscal year 1972 to repair these problems as well as provide yet another renovation of the exhibit hall. By this time, attendance at Arlington National Cemetery had soared with the construction of the John F. Kennedy Eternal Flame in 1967 and the addition of the grave of Robert F. Kennedy in 1971. To accommodate the much larger crowds wishing to see the Tomb of the Unknowns, Congress appropriated an additional $478,000 in fiscal 1972 to widen pedestrian walkway approaches to accommodate the larger crowds. To make Memorial Amphitheater more accessible for the disabled, steep slopes around the structure were eliminated and steps were replaced with ramps.[59] Congress appropriated an additional $3 million in 1974, to bring the construction project's total to $4 million. The extra funds paid for widening of the steps and portico in front of the east entrance — increasing the number of people who could view the changing of the guard at the tomb to 800 individuals from 200. In addition, the tomb honor guard received new guard posts on the plaza in front of the amphitheater.[68]

The mid-1970s widening of the Memorial Amphitheater portico, reconstruction of the pedestrian approaches, and repairs to the plaza around the Tomb of the Unknowns represented the first major construction at the site since 1920.[68]

Dedications and adding memorials edit

An attempt to dedicate the chapel at Memorial Amphitheater occurred in 1977. The National Cemetery Act of 1973 required the Secretary of Defense to locate unidentified remains of a Vietnam War veteran, construct a vault for these remains at the Tomb of the Unknowns, and inter the remains there. The vault was constructed between the World War II and Korean War vaults on the plaza, and a marble slab with the word "VIETNAM" inscribed on it placed over the empty burial shaft. By 1977, many remains had been located, but all of them were subsequently identified. Vietnam veterans and their supporters, concerned that no unidentified remains would ever be located, pushed to have the chapel in Memorial Amphitheater dedicated to veterans who served in Southeast Asia from 1958 to 1975. Legislation to require the change was introduced in Congress, but most legislators felt that if the chapel were to be dedicated it should be to all veterans. The legislation did not pass, and the chapel remained nameless.[70]

On Veterans Day in 1978, President Jimmy Carter dedicated a plaque inside the exhibit hall which honored Vietnam War veterans.[71] Two temporary plaques in the exhibit hall were dedicated by Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger on Memorial Day in 1983. One plaque commemorated military personnel who died in the Vietnam War, and the second explained why no Vietnam War unknown had been interred at the Tomb of the Unknowns.[72]

1995–1996 renovations and controversy edit

 
A replacement urn on the south side of the stage in Memorial Amphitheater. The original urns were removed in 1996 and made their way into private hands; they were returned in 2011.

Extensive additional renovations in the amphitheater were made in the mid-1990s. Congress appropriated $4.82 million in fiscal 1992 to repair rainwater damage and fix leaks, and an additional $4.5 million in fiscal 1993 to restore damaged marble. Although the project was planned for completion in July 1995, a six-month delay occurred because of protests regarding the way the contracts were awarded.[73] Bids for the project came in much lower than anticipated, creating $2.7 million in savings.[74] The Army used $34,405 to make whole the bidder who had protested the improper contract award.[75] About $1.4 million of these savings were used to build new wheelchair access ramps and improve access to the amphitheater for handicapped or disabled individuals. The remaining $1.3 million were used to build a columbarium at the cemetery.[74] The repairs included installation of new waterproof membranes; removing water and rust stains; patching and repainting cement, marble, and stone; replacement of all deteriorated marble sculptures, balusters, and benches; replacement of worn and rusted iron railings and drinking fountains; replacement of worn and broken flagstone walkways; and installation of new and upgraded signage and trash containers. These repairs and improvements were almost complete by the end of March 1996.[75]

Clark Construction Group, which was the general contractor for these renovations, received an Excellence in Construction Award from the D.C./Virginia chapter of the Associated Builders and Contractors for the outstanding quality of its work.[76]

Controversy about the renovation erupted in January 2011, however, when original decorative urns from the 1995–1996 renovation turned up at auction. The two 9-foot (2.7 m) tall urns, sculpted by Ulysses Ricci, formerly stood on either side of the stage in the amphitheater.[51] By 1995, they had significantly weathered and many details had softened so much as to be unrecognizable.[77] Omni Construction, one of Clark Construction's subcontractors, was assigned to dispose of the urns. Omni turned the urns over to Pagliaro Brothers Stone of Upper Marlboro, Maryland. Pagliaro Brothers Stone said they did not have records about the urns' ultimate fate, but in 1997 the urns ended up in the hands of an unidentified antiques dealer. The dealer sold them to DHS Designs, an antique shop in Queenstown, Maryland. The urns (priced at $125,000) never sold, and in 2010 the owner of DHS Designs closed his store and put the urns up for auction. Potomack Company, the Alexandria, Virginia, auction house assigned to handle the urns, advertised them in December 2010—which brought the urns to the attention of preservationists in the D.C. area. According to unnamed preservationist experts interviewed by The Washington Post, the historic urns should have been restored or placed in a museum—not donated to private owners for sale. The U.S. Army, which manages Arlington National Cemetery, said it could not find the 1995 renovation contract and was unable to say what provisions for the urns' disposal had been made nor whether federal property and preservation agencies had been consulted before the urns were replaced.[51]

Within a week of press reports about the sale, Arlington National Cemetery officials said that Clark Construction had been instructed to preserve the urns. These instructions met the requirements of Virginia law, which forbade the discard of historic artifacts. Alerted to the sale by The Washington Post, the Army asked Potomack Company to postpone the sale pending investigation of ownership.[77]

On January 24, 2011, DHS Designs returned the urns at no cost to Arlington National Cemetery. The Army did not say whether it would display the urns at the cemetery or move them to another Army museum.[77]

2012 renovation edit

In 1999, moisture damage to the ceiling in the Memorial Amphitheater chapel wore away a hole, which allowed water to begin dripping into the chapel.[78]

The plaza of Memorial Amphitheater was altered once more in 1999. The unidentified remains of a Vietnam War servicemember were interred in the Vietnam War vault at the Tomb of the Unknowns on May 28, 1984. But questions were raised in 1994 that indicated the Army (under pressure from the Reagan administration to placate veterans' groups by finding a Vietnam War unknown) ignored evidence that the remains could be identified. After extensive media attention, the Vietnam War unknown was exhumed from the Tomb of the Unknowns on May 14, 1998. DNA testing revealed on June 30, 1998, that the remains were those of United States Air Force 1st Lieutenant Michael Blassie. On September 16, 1999, the marble slab over the now-empty burial vault was replaced by a new slab in a ceremony overseen by Secretary of Defense William Cohen. The new slab was inscribed with the words "Honoring and Keeping Faith with America's Missing Servicemen." Department of Defense officials decided to replace the old slab with a new one given how unlikely it was that unidentified Vietnam War remains would ever be found. Covering the vault to make it appear as if it did not exist was rejected.[79]

 
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater (March 2023)

By 2000, the east entrance hall at Memorial Amphitheater was suffering water damage and other problems yet again. Congress appropriated $800,000 in fiscal year 2001 to identify what fixes might be needed.[80] Repairs were made in 2006, which included ameliorating water damage in the basement, first floor, and second floor; repairing and improving roof and exterior drainage; and installing new waterproofing and drains to prevent flooding in the basement women's restroom and chapel.[81]

Additional repairs to the walkways around Memorial Amphitheater were made in 2012. In the wake of the Arlington National Cemetery mismanagement controversy of 2008-2011, Arlington National Cemetery officials discovered that more than $32.6 million in funds for cemetery improvements, maintenance, and operations had gone unspent. A portion of these funds were used to replace approximately 230,000 square feet (21,000 m2) of the flagstone walkway around Memorial Amphitheater and to replace fire alarm systems in the east entrance hall.[82]

Famous funerals and services at the amphitheater edit

 
President Warren G. Harding (standing on stage, left of the casket) at the funeral of the Unknown Soldier of World War I (November 11, 1921)
 
Frank Buckles, the last surviving American veteran of World War I, lies in state in 2011 in the chapel beneath the amphitheater.

Memorial Amphitheater has been the site of numerous Memorial Day and Veterans Day ceremonies. Every American President except Woodrow Wilson has visited the building since it was dedicated in 1921.[83] Although the structure was dedicated during Wilson's presidency, he never visited Memorial Amphitheater or the Tomb of the Unknowns due to a massive stroke on October 2, 1919, from which he never recovered. He died on February 3, 1924. President Warren G. Harding was the first sitting president to visit Memorial Amphitheater, which he did on Memorial Day on May 30, 1921.[84] President Harding was the first President to visit the Tomb of the Unknowns, as he was present during its dedication in November 1921.[85] Harding was also the first president to speak in the Memorial Amphitheater before laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns, which he did on Memorial Day on May 30, 1923.[86] Harding attended a service in the amphitheater on Memorial Day in May 1922, but did not speak or lay a wreath.[87] He laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns on Veterans Day in November 1922, but did not speak in the amphitheater.[88] On June 1, 1923, Colonel Charles Young (United States Army), The United States Military's first African American Colonel, became the fourth soldier honored with a funeral service at Arlington Memorial Amphitheater. He had died the previous year with serving as an attaché in Africa.[89]

While memorial services in Memorial Amphitheater are common, the amphitheater has also hosted the funerals of many famous Americans. The first funeral to be held in the amphitheater was that of sculptor Moses Jacob Ezekiel, creator of the Confederate Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery, on March 30, 1921.[90] Other funerals held in the amphitheater since then include those of General of the Armies John J. "Black Jack" Pershing,[91] General of the Air Force Henry H. "Hap" Arnold,[92] Secretary of Defense James Forrestal,[93] and Antarctic explorer and Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd.[94] A funeral service for the unidentified remains of 30 victims of the September 11 attacks on The Pentagon was held at Memorial Amphitheater in 2002. It was the first time the amphitheater had held such a service since the interment of an unknown member of the armed forces representing Vietnam War dead in 1984.[95]

Frank Buckles, the last American veteran of World War I, lay in state in the Memorial Amphitheater Chapel in 2011.[96]

An Easter sunrise service has been held at Memorial Amphitheater every year since 1931. The first such service was held in 1931 and organized by the Knights Templar, a group of Freemasons. Music was provided by the United States Marine Band.[97] President Herbert Hoover attended the service, along with several thousand people.[98] Along with Memorial Day and Veterans Day ceremonies, it is one of the annual and most well-attended events in the amphitheater.[99]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cultural Landscape Program, p. 107-108. 2012-11-08 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013-05-13.
  2. ^ Cultural Landscape Program, p. 108. 2012-11-08 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013-05-13.
  3. ^ Peters, p. 243-244.
  4. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 8, 22.
  5. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 8; "Plan New Memorial." The Washington Post. February 11, 1908; "Urge Arlington Building." The Washington Post. March 21, 1908.
  6. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 9–10.
  7. ^ "Favor Big Memorial." The Washington Post. March 30, 1912; "Blocks Big Memorial." The Washington Post. May 8, 1912.
  8. ^ "Agrees on Memorial." The Washington Post. January 30, 1913; "Orders Big Buildings." The Washington Post. February 22, 1913.
  9. ^ a b Corfield, p. 80.
  10. ^ "District Saves Bill." The Washington Post. March 5, 1913.
  11. ^ War Department Annual Reports, 1915, p. 1683. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  12. ^ "Memorial Plan Hitch." The Washington Post. July 10, 1913.
  13. ^ "Arlington Memorial Amphitheater, Deficiency," Document No. 1732, House Documents, Volume 116, p. 2. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  14. ^ a b c d War Department Annual Reports, 1915, p. 1684. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  15. ^ The AMAC final report claims that Carrère and Hastings drew up plans for the memorial in 1908, that these were approved by the commission, and that the commission submitted them to Congress on February 15, 1909. The report does not say a contract was signed, however. The commission's final report notes that it was not until 1913 that Congress authorized a contract with Carrère and Hastings "for their full professional services". See: Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 11–12.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Lemos, et al., p. 251.
  17. ^ Commission of Fine Arts, p. 69.
  18. ^ Dickon, p. 75; Marter, p. 410.
  19. ^ a b Butler and Wilson, p. 48.
  20. ^ Atkinson, p. 41.
  21. ^ a b Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 22.
  22. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 7.
  23. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 23.
  24. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 47.
  25. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 60.
  26. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 10.
  27. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 11.
  28. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, p. 12.
  29. ^ Cultural Landscape Program, p. 130.
  30. ^ "President Lays Stone." The Washington Post. October 14, 1915.
  31. ^ "Mourn Judge Kimball." The Washington Post. May 16, 1916.
  32. ^ War Department Annual Reports, 1916, p. 1807.
  33. ^ "Spending More at Arlington." The Washington Post. June 27, 1915.
  34. ^ a b War Department Annual Reports, 1917, p. 3728. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  35. ^ War Department Annual Reports, 1917, p. 3726, 3728. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  36. ^ War Department Annual Reports, 1917, p. 3726. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  37. ^ a b c d War Department Annual Reports, 1918, p. 3803. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  38. ^ a b c d e "The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater," p. 96. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  39. ^ a b Baltimore District, Army Corps of Engineers, 1918, p. 1944. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  40. ^ War Department Annual Reports, 1919, p. 2058. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h Baltimore District, Army Corps of Engineers, 1920, p. 2045-2046. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  42. ^ a b War Department Annual Reports, 1919, p. 3850. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  43. ^ Miglorie, p. 115.
  44. ^ "Army and Navy Chiefs and Veterans' Representatives Dedicate Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington Cemetery." The Washington Post. May 16, 1920.
  45. ^ a b c d Lemos, et al., p. 248.
  46. ^ "The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater," p. 94, 96. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  47. ^ a b Lemos, et al., p. 249.
  48. ^ a b c d e "The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater," p. 94. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  49. ^ Lemos, et al., p. 250-251.
  50. ^ a b "Memorial Amphitheater." Arlington National Cemetery. No date. 2013-04-23 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013-05-15.
  51. ^ a b c d Davenport, Christian. "Arlington Cemetery Urns Turn Up on Auction Block, But How'd They Get There?" The Washington Post. January 23, 2011.
  52. ^ a b "The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater," p. 91. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  53. ^ Lemos, et al., p. 248–249.
  54. ^ "Trophies to Be Moved in Arlington Cemetery." The New York Times. July 17, 1929.
  55. ^ Arlington National Cemetery. "Arlington National Cemetery Tomb of the Unknowns Monument Repair or Replacement Project." Draft paper. June 1, 2006, p. 2. Accessed 2013-05-14.
  56. ^ "Awaits Appropriation by Congress to Complete National Shrine." The Washington Post. December 11, 1928.
  57. ^ Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits, p. 3262.
  58. ^ Neil, Donald R. "Nature Honors the Unknown Soldier." The Quartermaster Review. January-February 1932. 2011-10-20 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013-05-14.
  59. ^ a b Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, p. 2303.
  60. ^ "House Approves Peace Cross Funds." The Washington Post. June 17, 1955.
  61. ^ "2 Unknown Soldiers Join Comrade in May." United Press International. November 8, 1957.
  62. ^ White, Jean. "'Unknowns' Laid to Rest In Arlington." The Washington Post. May 31, 1958.
  63. ^ Duffus, R.L. "The Three 'Known But to God'." The New York Times. May 25, 1958.
  64. ^ "2 More War Dead to Be Enshrined." United Press International. November 10, 1957.
  65. ^ Raymond, Jack (May 31, 1958). "Unknowns of World War II and Korea Are Enshrined". The New York Times. p. 1.
  66. ^ "House Unit Clears Harpers Ferry Bill." The Washington Post. June 23, 1960; Carberry, James. "Bill to Tighten Relief Passes Senate." The Washington Post. June 29, 1960; "Transfer Bill Passed." The Washington Post. August 24, 1960.
  67. ^ "Cemetery's Centennial Slated Today." The Washington Post. May 24, 1964.
  68. ^ a b c "Renovations at the Tomb of the Unknowns, Arlington National Cemetery." American Legion Magazine. September 1975, p. 25.
  69. ^ "A moment in time | The American Legion". www.legion.org. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  70. ^ Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits, p. 29.
  71. ^ Subcommittee on Compensation, Pension, Insurance, and Memorial Affairs, p. 250.
  72. ^ "Washington News." United Press International. April 18, 1983.
  73. ^ Dola, p. 112.
  74. ^ a b Zirschky, p. 10–11.
  75. ^ a b Lancaster, p. 53.
  76. ^ "Annual Awards Presented to Builders, Contractors." Richmond Times Dispatch. September 29, 1996.
  77. ^ a b c Davenport, Christian. "Arlington Cemetery Urns to Be Returned Instead of Auctioned." The Washington Post. January 25, 2011.
  78. ^ Wee, Eric L. "Decay at Arlington Cemetery Dismays Lawmakers." The Washington Post. May 21, 1999.
  79. ^ Burns, Robert. "Cohen Dedicates New Inscription on Tomb of Vietnam Unknown." Associated Press. September 17, 1999.
  80. ^ Westphal, p. 68.
  81. ^ Metzler, p. 32.
  82. ^ Condon, p. 6. Accessed 2013-05-14.
  83. ^ "Capital Today Pays Tribue of Love to Dead of 3 Wars." The Washington Post. May 30, 1924; "Program on Memorial Day to Be Observed in Capital." The Washington Post. May 30, 1929; "Armistice Day Rites to Be Led By Roosevelt." The Washington Post. November 11, 1935; "Truman Talk Tops Plans for Armistice Day." The Washington Post. November 8, 1946; Casey, Phil. "U.S. Ready to Face War, JFK Warns." The Washington Post. November 12, 1961; Clopton, Willard. "Traffic Lights Here Go on Blink As City Has Quiet Memorial Day." The Washington Post. May 31, 1966; Kiernan, Laura A. "Ford Pledges 70,000 Jobs For Veterans." The Washington Post. October 29, 1974; Mansfield, Stephanie. "Veterans Day." The Washington Post. November 12, 1978; Denton, Herbert H. "Reagan: Arms Reduction Talks Open June 29." The Washington Post. June 1, 1982; Jordan, Mary. "A Capital Thank-You." The Washington Post. June 9, 1991; Adams, Lorraine. "Clinton Hails D-Day On Memorial Day." The Washington Post. May 31, 1994; Masters, Brooke A. and Jenkins, Chris L. "A Day for Reflection, Festivities." The Washington Post. May 29, 2001; Turque, Bill. "A Day to Salute 'the Best of America'." The Washington Post. May 26, 2009. It is not clear that President Richard Nixon entered the amphitheater or entrance hall during his visit to the Tomb of the Unknowns in November 1971. See: "President, at Arlington, Honors Dead of All Wars." The Washington Post. November 12, 1971.
  84. ^ "First Duty of National Is to Its Own, Harding Declares at Arlington." The Washington Post. May 31, 1921.
  85. ^ Price, Harry N. "End All War, Pleads Harding Over Tomb." The Washington Post. November 12, 1921.
  86. ^ Price, Harry N. "Stand Against War Urged By President." The Washington Post. May 31, 1923.
  87. ^ "Harding Leads in Tribute to Heroes at Arlington." The Washington Post. May 31, 1922.
  88. ^ "Cites Duty to World." The Washington Post. November 11, 1922.
  89. ^ "Colonel Charles Young - Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument (U.S. National Park Service)".
  90. ^ "Sir Moses Ezekiel Burial; Services for Confederate Soldier and Sculptor at Arlington". The New York Times. March 31, 1921. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
  91. ^ Mossman and Stark, p. 28.
  92. ^ "Arnold's Body Lies in State, Burial Today." The Washington Post. January 19, 1950.
  93. ^ Mossman and Stark, p. 45.
  94. ^ Mossman and Stark, p. 89.
  95. ^ Vogel, Steve. "Facing the Scene of Disaster." The Washington Post. September 1, 2002.
  96. ^ "Frank Buckles, Last U.S. WWI Vet, Laid to Rest." Air Force Times. March 15, 2011. Accessed 2013-05-13.
  97. ^ "Sunrise Services Planned on Easter." The Washington Post. March 28, 1931.
  98. ^ "Hoovers Greet Easter Crowd." The Washington Post. April 4, 1931.
  99. ^ Fodor's 2013 Washington, D.C., p. 139.

Bibliography edit

  • "The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater." Architectural Forum. January 1921, p. 91-96.
  • Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission. Final Report of the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1923.
  • "Arlington Memorial Amphitheater, Deficiency." Document No. 1732. House Documents. Volume 116. U.S. House of Representatives. 65th Cong., 3rd sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1919.
  • Atkinson, Rick. Where Valor Rests: Arlington National Cemetery. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society, 2007.
  • Baltimore District. Army Corps of Engineers. Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers on Civil Works Activities. Baltimore, Md.: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1918.
  • Baltimore District. Army Corps of Engineers. Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers on Civil Works Activities. Baltimore, Md.: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1920.
  • Butler, Sara A. and Wilson, Richard Guy. Buildings of Virginia: Tidewater and Piedmont. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.
  • Commission of Fine Arts. Tenth Report. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1926.
  • Condon, Kathryn A. Sustaining the Sacred Trust: An Update on Our National Cemeteries. Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs. Committee on Veterans' Affairs. U.S. House of Representatives. 113th Cong., 1st sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2013.
  • Corfield, Justin. "Arlington National Cemetery." In Encyclopedia of the Veteran in America. William Pencak, ed. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2009.
  • Cultural Landscape Program. Arlington House: The Robert E. Lee Memorial Cultural Landscape Report. National Capital Region. National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. Washington, D.C.: 2001.
  • Dickon, Chris (2011). The Foreign Burial of American War Dead: A History. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. ISBN 978-0786446124. OCLC 659753667.
  • Dola, Steven. Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations for 1995. Part 4. Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Other Independent Agencies. Committee on Appropriations. U.S. House of Representatives. 103d Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1994.
  • Fodor's 2013 Washington, D.C. New York: Fodors Travel Publications, 2013.
  • Lancaster, Martin H. Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations for 1997. Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations. Committee on Appropriations. U.S. House of Representatives. 104th Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1996.
  • Lemos, Kate; Morrison, William; Warren, Charles D.; and Hewitt, Mark Alan. Carrere & Hastings, Architects. Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK: Acanthus Press, 2006.
  • Marter, Joan M., ed. The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.
  • Metzler, John C. Veterans Cemeteries: Honoring Those Who Served. Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs. Committee on House Veterans Affairs. U.S. House of Representatives. 110th Cong., 1st sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2007.
  • Miglorie, Catherine. Vermont's Marble Industry. Mount Pleasant, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing, 2013.
  • Mossman, Billy C. and Stark, M.W. The Last Salute: Civil and Military Funerals, 1921-1969. Washington, D.C.: Department of the Army, 1972.
  • Peters, James Edward. Arlington National Cemetery, Shrine to America's Heroes. 2d ed. Bethesda, Md.: Woodbine House, 2000.
  • Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits. Administration of Cemeteries: Availability of Cemetery Space for Burial of Eligible War Veterans, and Administration of Such Cemeteries. Committee on Veterans' Affairs. U.S. House of Representatives. 90th Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968.
  • Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations. Public Works for Water and Power Development and Atomic Energy Commission Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1972. Committee on Appropriations. U.S. Senate. 92d Cong., 1st sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
  • Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits. Hearings on the National Cemetery System and Related Matters and on H.R. 7263, H.R. 11843, H.R. 10253, H.R. 11844, and H.R. 3863. Committee on Veterans' Affairs. U.S. House of Representatives. 95th Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1978.
  • Subcommittee on Compensation, Pension, Insurance, and Memorial Affairs. Oversight of VA Cemetery System: Overseas Military Cemeteries and Memorials, Status of Site Selection Region IV National Cemetery, National Cemeteries Including Arlington National Cemetery. Committee on Veterans' Affairs. U.S. House of Representatives. 96th Cong., 1st sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979.
  • War Department Annual Reports, 1915. Volume 2: Report of the Chief of Engineers. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1915.
  • War Department Annual Reports, 1916. Volume 3: Report of the Chief of Engineers. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1916.
  • War Department Annual Reports, 1917. Volume 3: Report of the Chief of Engineers. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1917.
  • War Department Annual Reports, 1918. Volume 3: Report of the Chief of Engineers. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1918.
  • War Department Annual Reports, 1919. Volume 2: Report of the Chief of Engineers. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1919.
  • Westphal, Joseph W. Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations for 2001. Part 2. Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations. Committee on Appropriations. U.S. House of Representatives. 106th Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2000.
  • Zirschky, John H. Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Independent Agencies Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1996. Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations. Committee on Appropriations. U.S. Senate. 104th Cong., 1st sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1995.

External links edit

  • Arlington National Cemetery Web site

arlington, memorial, amphitheater, memorial, amphitheater, outdoor, amphitheater, exhibit, hall, nonsectarian, chapel, located, arlington, national, cemetery, arlington, county, virginia, united, states, designed, 1913, replacement, older, wooden, amphitheater. Memorial Amphitheater is an outdoor amphitheater exhibit hall and nonsectarian chapel located in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County Virginia in the United States Designed in 1913 as a replacement for the older wooden amphitheater near Arlington House ground was broken for its construction in March 1915 and it was dedicated in May 1920 In the center of its eastern steps is the Tomb of the Unknowns dedicated in 1921 It has served as the site for numerous Veterans Day and Memorial Day services as well as for memorial services and funerals for many individuals Memorial AmphitheaterAerial view looking southeast at Memorial AmphitheaterLocationArlington County VirginiaCoordinates38 52 585 N 77 4 379 W 38 876417 N 77 072983 W 38 876417 77 072983EstablishedMay 15 1920 103 years ago 1920 05 15 Governing bodyU S Department of the ArmyLocation of Memorial Amphitheater in Virginia Arlington Memorial Amphitheater and Tomb of the Unknown SoldierArlington Memorial Amphitheater and Tomb of the Unknown SoldierArlington Memorial Amphitheater and Tomb of the Unknown SoldierContents 1 Building the amphitheater 1 1 Genesis of the amphitheater 1 2 Construction of the amphitheater 2 Design 3 History 3 1 Construction of the monumental stairs 3 2 1956 renovation and expansion of the tomb 3 3 1974 renovation 3 4 Dedications and adding memorials 3 5 1995 1996 renovations and controversy 3 6 2012 renovation 4 Famous funerals and services at the amphitheater 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBuilding the amphitheater edit nbsp The Old Amphitheater now named Tanner Amphitheater whose small size rustic nature and connection to the Civil War prompted construction of Memorial Amphitheater Genesis of the amphitheater edit Arlington National Cemetery was established in 1864 Due to the growing importance of the cemetery as well as the much larger crowds attending Memorial Day observances Brigadier General Montgomery C Meigs who was Quartermaster General of the United States Army decided a formal meeting space at the cemetery was needed 1 A grove of close growing trees just southwest of Arlington House Grove was cut down and a wooden amphitheater today known as the Tanner Amphitheater constructed in 1873 2 By the early years of the 1900s however the Old Amphitheater had grown far too small for the large ceremonies which were held there Judge Ivory Kimball Commander of the Department of the Potomac chapter of the Grand Army of the Republic or GAR a veterans group for those who fought for the Union in the Civil War believed that not only should a new and larger facility be built but also that the new amphitheater represent the dead of all wars in which the nation had fought 3 Kimball and the GAR began their push for a new amphitheater in 1903 and sketches for the amphitheater drawn up by Frederick D Owen a civilian engineer working for the United States Army Corps of Engineers 4 But legislation failed to pass Congress in 1905 1907 and 1908 5 Legislation passed in 1908 authorizing the establishment of a memorial commission but it received only 5 000 in funding 6 Legislation was introduced again in 1912 by Senator George Sutherland Sutherland s bill proposed construction of a 5 000 seat amphitheater with an underground crypt for the burial of famous individuals to cost no more than 750 000 7 Prospects for passage initially seemed dim But during the third session of the 62nd Congress a number of new federal memorials were approved including the Arlington Memorial Bridge the Lincoln Memorial a memorial to women who served in the Civil War now the American Red Cross National Headquarters and a George Washington memorial auditorium 8 The successful push for new memorials helped supporters win the passage of legislation authorizing construction of Memorial Amphitheater 9 President William Howard Taft in one of his last acts as president signed the legislation into law on March 4 1913 10 nbsp Judge Ivory G Kimball a primary backer of the new amphitheater in 1909 The 1908 authorizing legislation established an Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission AMAC to oversee the design and construction of the structure Its members included the Secretary of War the Secretary of the Navy the Superintendent of the U S Capitol Judge Kimball as a representative of the GAR and Charles W Newton as a representative of the United Spanish War Veterans a Spanish American War veterans group 11 It immediately became apparent however that although Congress had authorized the expenditure of 250 000 for Memorial Amphitheater it had not actually appropriated any such funds from the U S Treasury This left the AMAC without any funds to conduct its business 12 It was not until August 1 1914 that Congress finally appropriated money for the amphitheater s construction 13 Ten days later Colonel William W Harts of the United States Army Corps of Engineers was elected the commission s executive director On October 12 1914 the AMAC contracted with the New York based architectural firm of Carrere and Hastings to design the building The AMAC hired the George A Fuller Co to construct it on February 11 1915 14 15 There is some disagreement among sources as to who should receive the majority of credit for designing Memorial Amphitheater Lemos Morrison Warren and Hewitt specifically name Thomas Hastings 16 as does the United States Commission of Fine Arts 17 and others 18 But other sources name Frederick D Owen a civilian engineer working for the Corps of Engineers and who also designed the flag of the president of the United States Owen is named by architectural historians Butler and Wilson and by historian Rick Atkinson 19 20 The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission is not clear as to who deserves the credit as it notes that Owen drew the first sketches for plans for the great Memorial in 1904 21 and later gave suggestions and advice as to the form of the Memorial 22 Owen s significant role is made clear by the AMAC in other ways as well He designed the memorial trowel used by President Woodrow Wilson to lay the cornerstone 21 he served on the reception committee for the cornerstone laying ceremony 23 he co chaired the planning committee for the 1921 dedication 24 and he chaired the reception committee for the dedication 25 But the AMAC also said Carrere and Hastings prepared the plans for the building 26 provided the explanation of the design to the AMAC 27 and was named by Congress as the architects 28 The AMAC s composition changed somewhat after Congress amended the commission s authorizing legislation on March 3 1915 Congress added the leader of Camp 171 United Confederate Veterans of the District of Columbia to the commission as a full voting member 14 Construction of the amphitheater edit nbsp Corner Stone nbsp Construction begins on Memorial Amphitheater in 1916 The site chosen for the new Memorial Amphitheater was the top of a hill about 1 000 feet 300 m south of Arlington House A gravel pit opened in the mid 1800s existed there previously 29 Ground for Memorial Amphitheater was broken on March 1 1915 14 President Woodrow Wilson laid its cornerstone in a ceremony on October 13 1915 30 A copper box placed in a hollowed out section of the cornerstone contained a copy of the United States Constitution a copy of the United States Declaration of Independence the Bible the flag of the United States one each of every coin and postage stamp then in circulation a Congressional directory a telephone directory of the District of Columbia an autographed photograph of President Wilson and several items connected with Arlington National Cemetery 9 Kimball participated in the ground breaking and cornerstone ceremonies but did not live to see the amphitheater completed He died on May 15 1916 31 Excavation of the foundation was complete by the end of June 1915 Concrete foundations had also been laid and cured and most of the brick foundation was in place as well 14 Most of the amphitheater s foundation was complete by June 30 1916 The foundation included 629 000 bricks 24 short tons 22 t of structural steel and 21 644 cubic yards 16 548 m3 of marble for the exterior of the structure The Guastavino tile system patented in 1885 was used to create arches and vaults in the basement More than 2 500 square feet 230 m2 of this tile were used The heating clean water and sewage systems were also complete The Corps of Engineers also finished the architectural drawings for the approaches around the amphitheater as well and was ready to start work on them 32 A major design changed also occurred in June 1915 Originally plans for the amphitheater called for wooden balustrades plaster moldings cement floors and ceilings and wooden doors But on June 26 all of these materials were changed to marble The total cost of the changes was 41 000 33 Work on the amphitheater slowed in mid 1916 and throughout 1917 due to a lack of high quality marble available for the work Severe winter weather also meant that work on the approaches did not begin until late June 1917 The amphitheater was supposed to have neared completion on February 15 1917 but these lengthy delays meant that the construction schedule was extended for a full year 34 The amphitheater was also proving to be much more costly than expected Bids from contractors were all far above what the Corps of Engineers expected but work went ahead anyway 35 By June 30 1917 much of the amphitheater and its colonnade were done Another 35 140 cubic feet 995 m3 of marble had been placed for the columns and 11 856 cubic feet 335 7 m3 of concrete and 26 short tons 24 t of structural steel were used to support them Skylights and ornamental ironwork stairs were in place and ornamental plastering and marble carving had begun 36 nbsp Memorial Amphitheater under construction in 1917 The amphitheater chapel and most of the entrance hall were finished in 1918 The entrance hall was built with red brick 257 100 of them and clad in 57 711 cubic feet 1 634 2 m3 of marble Another in 1 060 cubic feet 30 m3 of marble were used for interior columns The extent to which marble was used was eye opening 4 790 square feet 445 m2 for flooring 4 694 square feet 436 1 m2 for stairs 1 272 square feet 118 2 m2 for door and window frames and 2 033 feet 620 m of moldings The eastern steps consumed 4 526 square feet 420 5 m2 of concrete The interior was decorated with ornamental plaster terra cotta partitions terrazzo flooring bronze doors and grillwork ornamental ironwork railings and stairs and glazed tile 37 While more than 7 000 161 500 in 2013 inflation adjusted U S dollars was spent on carving for the amphitheater 34 just 2 933 was spent for carving on the inside and outside of the entrance hall 37 nbsp Construction progress on Memorial Amphitheater in June 1918 The advent of World War I had a significant impact on the construction of Memorial Amphitheater The United States entered the war in April 1917 and by spring 1918 American troops were arriving in Europe Most skilled workers were diverted to the war effort although artisans such as marble carvers were still available The Corps of Engineers was able to obtain after lengthy delays the high quality marble it needed for the approaches from the island of Vinalhaven Maine 37 38 But railroads and cargo ships were so congested carrying war materiel and military personnel that the marble could not be transported to Arlington National Cemetery until late 1917 By then another severe winter had set in Intensely cold weather continued into the late spring further delaying work Only a limited amount of work on the approaches had concluded by the end of June 1918 37 Some modifications were also made to the structure because of the war The largest of these changes eliminated the seating planned for the top of the colonnade 39 nbsp Secretary of War Newton D Baker dedicates the Arlington Amphitheater on 15 May 1920By June 1918 nearly all of Memorial Amphitheater s exterior was complete The interior work on the chapel and the first floor reception hall was also done leaving only the basement level kitchen storage areas and the second floor offices to be worked on Construction of the concrete floor of the amphitheater also was under way 39 Interior work on Memorial Amphitheater ended in June 1919 The remainder of the basement rooms and all of the second floor were now finished too All that remained to be done was decoration of the chapel ceiling some interior and exterior inscriptions and installation of lighting fixtures The Corps of Engineers was also ready to connect the water and sewer lines grade the grounds and roads and install plantings and sod 40 During the next nine months these items were all finished and the interior painted The masonry approaches were also completed and the roadways and sidewalks paved 41 The G B Mullin Co did the landscape design and work which involved replanting 20 cedar trees around the three amphitheater entrances 42 The total cost of the structure and its grounds was 810 812 41 In total 87 000 cubic feet 2 500 m3 of Mountain White marble from the Danby quarries of Vermont were used in its construction 43 Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated on May 15 1920 44 The Corps of Engineers turned it over to the Quartermaster General s office on July 1 41 Design edit nbsp Apse three level stage and klismos chair in the amphitheater Memorial Amphitheater was designed by Thomas Hastings to be the center of a biaxial grouping of landscape features and monuments that included the USS Maine Mast Memorial in the west the Spanish American War Memorial to the south and a formal Italianate garden to the east 45 Greek Revival Romanesque Revival and Renaissance decorative elements are used throughout the structure 16 Ulysses Ricci designed the various friezes ornamental devices and decorative elements of the amphitheater and entrance hall 42 Hastings said he wanted Memorial Amphitheater to be the building he was most remembered by 16 As constructed Memorial Amphitheater consisted of an elliptical outdoor amphitheater that sat 4 000 41 The bays formed by the colonnade can seat another 150 individuals 46 Another 1 000 individuals may be accommodated by standing 38 The amphitheater is surrounded by a colonnade with main entrances at the east and west axes 41 The capitals of the columns are Doric 19 but rest on an Attic base 16 The entablature above the columns however is Ionic to allow for inscriptions These inscriptions on the exterior of the entablature list 44 major battles from the American Revolutionary War through the Spanish American War 16 38 Low backless marble benches in concentric circles face the semi circular main stage which has three levels 47 48 The lowest level features a klismos a form of ancient Greek informal chair meant for rulers The klismos chair faces the audience much as a cathedra or bishop s chair does Hastings intended the klismos chair to remind the audience of the missing heroes honored by the amphitheater 47 The second level of the stage has a podium The stage and amphitheater are designed so that any speaker must look down at the klismos chair while addressing the audience and must look at the USS Maine Mast Memorial if looking up 49 The third and uppermost level of the stage contains a semi circular seating area for about 100 people and an apse in the back nbsp Inscription within the apse When we assumed the soldier we did not lay aside the citizen The interior dome of the apse is richly carved and the square pilasters on either side of the stage list the names of famous American generals left as you face the stage and admirals right from the American Revolutionary War through the Spanish American War 48 A quote from General George Washington s June 26 1775 letter to the Continental Congress is inscribed inside the apse When we assumed the soldier we did not lay aside the citizen 50 A quote from President Abraham Lincoln s Gettysburg Address is inscribed above the stage We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain 51 Decorative 9 foot 2 7 m tall urns carved with eagles rams heads and snakes were placed on pedestals in niches on either side of the stage 51 nbsp Standing in the south gallery of the entrance hall looking north The main doors are to the right Above the west entrance of the amphitheater is a quote from the Roman poet Horace Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori It is sweet and fitting to die for one s country 50 Under the colonnade are 300 crypts which were intended for the burial of important people 38 41 In the basement or ground floor if approached from the west beneath the amphitheater stage is a chapel This domed structure was designed to seat 150 and has a raised ambulatory around the edges 48 As originally designed the main entrance was in the east through the doors of the cruciform entrance hall 41 45 The entrance hall is fronted by a six columned portico with Corinthian capitals 45 A frieze above the main bronze doors depicts symbolic trophies of war 52 The entrance hall is not connected internally with the amphitheater 53 Stairways bridges and short corridors on the outside of the entrance hall provide access to the stage in the amphitheater 48 The main floor of the reception hall is clad in Botticino marble 38 The main floor originally housed a reception hall with two side galleries for the display of battle flags and war trophies and stage and the second floor housed a museum 41 48 In 1929 the main floor became a Memorial Exhibit Hall displaying honors received by the unknown soldiers lying beneath the Tomb of the Unknowns and the second floor became offices 54 Steps lead from the main doors of the entrance hall down to a small plaza Hastings designed a series of short steps to lead from the plaza down to a landing and then a series of monumental steps to lead from the landing to the eastern formal garden below In the center of the short steps was a pedestal for a statue No artwork was ever placed there This pedestal was later removed and the Tomb of the Unknowns took its place in 1921 16 The planned monumental steps leading down to the formal garden were not built when Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated A retaining wall with false arches was constructed instead 45 A roadway was designed to cross the plaza and circle the entire structure 52 History edit nbsp Memorial Amphitheater after its completion in 1921 Construction of the monumental stairs edit On March 4 1921 the Congress approved the construction of a memorial to an unidentified American serviceman from World War I to be placed in the stairs leading up from the east landing to the plaza in front of Memorial Amphitheater An unknown soldier was identified and brought back from France and interred inside a small marble tomb on Armistice Day on November 11 1921 To construct the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier as it was then informally called the pedestal for the memorial statue envisioned in Hastings design was removed Workers dug 20 feet 6 1 m down into the earth behind the retaining wall At this level concrete footings 16 feet 2 inches 4 93 m long by 9 feet 6 inches 2 90 m wide were constructed The earthen walls were reinforced with a burial vault consisting of concrete walls 7 feet 2 1 m thick at the bottom narrowing to just 2 feet 4 inches 0 71 m thick at the top A hollow rectangular plinth was constructed on top of the vault walls above which was a slightly smaller hollow marble base On top of the marble base was a rectangular capstone with curved sides which was also pierced through the center A 2 inch 5 1 cm deep layer of soil brought from France along with the unknown soldier s body lined the bottom of the burial vault After the unknown soldier was lowered into the vault and rested on the soil below the capstone was sealed with a marble lid 55 Additional changes to the east front came within just a few years On July 3 1926 Congress authorized the completion of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier with an appropriate memorial A design by architect Lorimer Rich and sculptor Thomas Hudson Jones was selected on December 10 1928 56 The Lorimer Hudson design like nearly all the other submissions anticipated removing the retaining wall below the tomb and building the monumental staircase first envisioned by Thomas Hastings Congress agreed with this revision and on February 28 1929 authorized construction of the stairs new road and pedestrian approaches alterations to the formal gardens and a new overlook 57 The Construction Division of the Quartermaster General s office oversaw the work which was performed by the Hegman Harris Company of New York City 58 1956 renovation and expansion of the tomb edit nbsp Looking west across the Italianate formal garden at Memorial Amphitheater The monumental steps were constructed as part of the Tomb of the Unknowns between 1929 and 1932 and the central roadway removed Little additional work was done at Memorial Amphitheater until 1954 By then settling of the amphitheater and entrance hall cracking of walls and exterior marble water damage and other serious problems were beginning to affect the structure Congress appropriated 15 000 for fiscal 1954 which began June 30 1953 for a year long study of the problems A preliminary estimate indicated that repairs would cost 179 000 But the finished study identified even more serious issues almost all of which were caused by design deficiencies which did not take into account the seasonal expansion and contraction of the building s marble Arlington National Cemetery officials were forced to ask Congress for 447 000 to repair the amphitheater and 179 000 to repair the entrance building Congress approved the request 59 60 A second major change was made to the plaza in 1958 President Dwight Eisenhower signed legislation in August 1956 to allow the interment of unidentified remains for soldiers from World War II and the Korean War at the Tomb of the Unknowns Two new burial vaults to the northwest and southwest were dug in the plaza before the eastern entrance hall 61 Carved into the granite in front of the tomb sarcophagus were the dates 1917 1918 62 The Korean War unknown was interred in the northwest vault beneath a slab with the dates 1950 1953 carved into its western edge The World War II unknown was interred in the southwest vault beneath a slab with the dates 1941 1945 carved into its western edge 63 The cover slabs of both new vaults were flush with the plaza 64 The two unknowns were interred on Memorial Day on May 30 1958 65 In August 1960 Congress abolished the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission and transferred its duties to the Secretary of Defense Although the commission had long ago fulfilled its basic mission of the construction of Memorial Amphitheater it still had the legal authority to approve the placement of plaques markers and other commemorations on the inside on the exterior or on the grounds of the structure 66 On May 24 1964 Memorial Amphitheater was the site of a late afternoon ceremony celebrating the 100th anniversary of the founding of Arlington National Cemetery 67 During its 50th year anniversary in 1969 the American Legion along with the American Legion Auxiliary donated an exterior lighting system so that Memorial Amphitheater and the Tomb of the Unknowns could remain lit at night 68 In the midst of ceremonies also marking the 50th anniversary of the Paris Caucus President Richard Nixon formally took possession of the lighting system in the nation s name flipping the switch that turned the lights on 69 1974 renovation edit Additional physical plant problems appeared at Memorial Amphitheater in 1965 The retaining walls adjacent to the east plaza began cracking vertically and extensive horizontal cracks and spalling were found on the Tomb of the Unknowns as well Additional damage occurred over the next five years Congress then appropriated 522 000 in fiscal year 1972 to repair these problems as well as provide yet another renovation of the exhibit hall By this time attendance at Arlington National Cemetery had soared with the construction of the John F Kennedy Eternal Flame in 1967 and the addition of the grave of Robert F Kennedy in 1971 To accommodate the much larger crowds wishing to see the Tomb of the Unknowns Congress appropriated an additional 478 000 in fiscal 1972 to widen pedestrian walkway approaches to accommodate the larger crowds To make Memorial Amphitheater more accessible for the disabled steep slopes around the structure were eliminated and steps were replaced with ramps 59 Congress appropriated an additional 3 million in 1974 to bring the construction project s total to 4 million The extra funds paid for widening of the steps and portico in front of the east entrance increasing the number of people who could view the changing of the guard at the tomb to 800 individuals from 200 In addition the tomb honor guard received new guard posts on the plaza in front of the amphitheater 68 The mid 1970s widening of the Memorial Amphitheater portico reconstruction of the pedestrian approaches and repairs to the plaza around the Tomb of the Unknowns represented the first major construction at the site since 1920 68 Dedications and adding memorials edit An attempt to dedicate the chapel at Memorial Amphitheater occurred in 1977 The National Cemetery Act of 1973 required the Secretary of Defense to locate unidentified remains of a Vietnam War veteran construct a vault for these remains at the Tomb of the Unknowns and inter the remains there The vault was constructed between the World War II and Korean War vaults on the plaza and a marble slab with the word VIETNAM inscribed on it placed over the empty burial shaft By 1977 many remains had been located but all of them were subsequently identified Vietnam veterans and their supporters concerned that no unidentified remains would ever be located pushed to have the chapel in Memorial Amphitheater dedicated to veterans who served in Southeast Asia from 1958 to 1975 Legislation to require the change was introduced in Congress but most legislators felt that if the chapel were to be dedicated it should be to all veterans The legislation did not pass and the chapel remained nameless 70 On Veterans Day in 1978 President Jimmy Carter dedicated a plaque inside the exhibit hall which honored Vietnam War veterans 71 Two temporary plaques in the exhibit hall were dedicated by Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger on Memorial Day in 1983 One plaque commemorated military personnel who died in the Vietnam War and the second explained why no Vietnam War unknown had been interred at the Tomb of the Unknowns 72 1995 1996 renovations and controversy edit nbsp A replacement urn on the south side of the stage in Memorial Amphitheater The original urns were removed in 1996 and made their way into private hands they were returned in 2011 Extensive additional renovations in the amphitheater were made in the mid 1990s Congress appropriated 4 82 million in fiscal 1992 to repair rainwater damage and fix leaks and an additional 4 5 million in fiscal 1993 to restore damaged marble Although the project was planned for completion in July 1995 a six month delay occurred because of protests regarding the way the contracts were awarded 73 Bids for the project came in much lower than anticipated creating 2 7 million in savings 74 The Army used 34 405 to make whole the bidder who had protested the improper contract award 75 About 1 4 million of these savings were used to build new wheelchair access ramps and improve access to the amphitheater for handicapped or disabled individuals The remaining 1 3 million were used to build a columbarium at the cemetery 74 The repairs included installation of new waterproof membranes removing water and rust stains patching and repainting cement marble and stone replacement of all deteriorated marble sculptures balusters and benches replacement of worn and rusted iron railings and drinking fountains replacement of worn and broken flagstone walkways and installation of new and upgraded signage and trash containers These repairs and improvements were almost complete by the end of March 1996 75 Clark Construction Group which was the general contractor for these renovations received an Excellence in Construction Award from the D C Virginia chapter of the Associated Builders and Contractors for the outstanding quality of its work 76 Controversy about the renovation erupted in January 2011 however when original decorative urns from the 1995 1996 renovation turned up at auction The two 9 foot 2 7 m tall urns sculpted by Ulysses Ricci formerly stood on either side of the stage in the amphitheater 51 By 1995 they had significantly weathered and many details had softened so much as to be unrecognizable 77 Omni Construction one of Clark Construction s subcontractors was assigned to dispose of the urns Omni turned the urns over to Pagliaro Brothers Stone of Upper Marlboro Maryland Pagliaro Brothers Stone said they did not have records about the urns ultimate fate but in 1997 the urns ended up in the hands of an unidentified antiques dealer The dealer sold them to DHS Designs an antique shop in Queenstown Maryland The urns priced at 125 000 never sold and in 2010 the owner of DHS Designs closed his store and put the urns up for auction Potomack Company the Alexandria Virginia auction house assigned to handle the urns advertised them in December 2010 which brought the urns to the attention of preservationists in the D C area According to unnamed preservationist experts interviewed by The Washington Post the historic urns should have been restored or placed in a museum not donated to private owners for sale The U S Army which manages Arlington National Cemetery said it could not find the 1995 renovation contract and was unable to say what provisions for the urns disposal had been made nor whether federal property and preservation agencies had been consulted before the urns were replaced 51 Within a week of press reports about the sale Arlington National Cemetery officials said that Clark Construction had been instructed to preserve the urns These instructions met the requirements of Virginia law which forbade the discard of historic artifacts Alerted to the sale by The Washington Post the Army asked Potomack Company to postpone the sale pending investigation of ownership 77 On January 24 2011 DHS Designs returned the urns at no cost to Arlington National Cemetery The Army did not say whether it would display the urns at the cemetery or move them to another Army museum 77 2012 renovation edit In 1999 moisture damage to the ceiling in the Memorial Amphitheater chapel wore away a hole which allowed water to begin dripping into the chapel 78 The plaza of Memorial Amphitheater was altered once more in 1999 The unidentified remains of a Vietnam War servicemember were interred in the Vietnam War vault at the Tomb of the Unknowns on May 28 1984 But questions were raised in 1994 that indicated the Army under pressure from the Reagan administration to placate veterans groups by finding a Vietnam War unknown ignored evidence that the remains could be identified After extensive media attention the Vietnam War unknown was exhumed from the Tomb of the Unknowns on May 14 1998 DNA testing revealed on June 30 1998 that the remains were those of United States Air Force 1st Lieutenant Michael Blassie On September 16 1999 the marble slab over the now empty burial vault was replaced by a new slab in a ceremony overseen by Secretary of Defense William Cohen The new slab was inscribed with the words Honoring and Keeping Faith with America s Missing Servicemen Department of Defense officials decided to replace the old slab with a new one given how unlikely it was that unidentified Vietnam War remains would ever be found Covering the vault to make it appear as if it did not exist was rejected 79 nbsp Arlington Memorial Amphitheater March 2023 By 2000 the east entrance hall at Memorial Amphitheater was suffering water damage and other problems yet again Congress appropriated 800 000 in fiscal year 2001 to identify what fixes might be needed 80 Repairs were made in 2006 which included ameliorating water damage in the basement first floor and second floor repairing and improving roof and exterior drainage and installing new waterproofing and drains to prevent flooding in the basement women s restroom and chapel 81 Additional repairs to the walkways around Memorial Amphitheater were made in 2012 In the wake of the Arlington National Cemetery mismanagement controversy of 2008 2011 Arlington National Cemetery officials discovered that more than 32 6 million in funds for cemetery improvements maintenance and operations had gone unspent A portion of these funds were used to replace approximately 230 000 square feet 21 000 m2 of the flagstone walkway around Memorial Amphitheater and to replace fire alarm systems in the east entrance hall 82 Famous funerals and services at the amphitheater edit nbsp President Warren G Harding standing on stage left of the casket at the funeral of the Unknown Soldier of World War I November 11 1921 nbsp Frank Buckles the last surviving American veteran of World War I lies in state in 2011 in the chapel beneath the amphitheater Memorial Amphitheater has been the site of numerous Memorial Day and Veterans Day ceremonies Every American President except Woodrow Wilson has visited the building since it was dedicated in 1921 83 Although the structure was dedicated during Wilson s presidency he never visited Memorial Amphitheater or the Tomb of the Unknowns due to a massive stroke on October 2 1919 from which he never recovered He died on February 3 1924 President Warren G Harding was the first sitting president to visit Memorial Amphitheater which he did on Memorial Day on May 30 1921 84 President Harding was the first President to visit the Tomb of the Unknowns as he was present during its dedication in November 1921 85 Harding was also the first president to speak in the Memorial Amphitheater before laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns which he did on Memorial Day on May 30 1923 86 Harding attended a service in the amphitheater on Memorial Day in May 1922 but did not speak or lay a wreath 87 He laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns on Veterans Day in November 1922 but did not speak in the amphitheater 88 On June 1 1923 Colonel Charles Young United States Army The United States Military s first African American Colonel became the fourth soldier honored with a funeral service at Arlington Memorial Amphitheater He had died the previous year with serving as an attache in Africa 89 While memorial services in Memorial Amphitheater are common the amphitheater has also hosted the funerals of many famous Americans The first funeral to be held in the amphitheater was that of sculptor Moses Jacob Ezekiel creator of the Confederate Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery on March 30 1921 90 Other funerals held in the amphitheater since then include those of General of the Armies John J Black Jack Pershing 91 General of the Air Force Henry H Hap Arnold 92 Secretary of Defense James Forrestal 93 and Antarctic explorer and Rear Admiral Richard E Byrd 94 A funeral service for the unidentified remains of 30 victims of the September 11 attacks on The Pentagon was held at Memorial Amphitheater in 2002 It was the first time the amphitheater had held such a service since the interment of an unknown member of the armed forces representing Vietnam War dead in 1984 95 Frank Buckles the last American veteran of World War I lay in state in the Memorial Amphitheater Chapel in 2011 96 An Easter sunrise service has been held at Memorial Amphitheater every year since 1931 The first such service was held in 1931 and organized by the Knights Templar a group of Freemasons Music was provided by the United States Marine Band 97 President Herbert Hoover attended the service along with several thousand people 98 Along with Memorial Day and Veterans Day ceremonies it is one of the annual and most well attended events in the amphitheater 99 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arlington Memorial Amphitheater List of contemporary amphitheatresReferences edit Cultural Landscape Program p 107 108 Archived 2012 11 08 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013 05 13 Cultural Landscape Program p 108 Archived 2012 11 08 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013 05 13 Peters p 243 244 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 8 22 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 8 Plan New Memorial The Washington Post February 11 1908 Urge Arlington Building The Washington Post March 21 1908 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 9 10 Favor Big Memorial The Washington Post March 30 1912 Blocks Big Memorial The Washington Post May 8 1912 Agrees on Memorial The Washington Post January 30 1913 Orders Big Buildings The Washington Post February 22 1913 a b Corfield p 80 District Saves Bill The Washington Post March 5 1913 War Department Annual Reports 1915 p 1683 Accessed 2013 05 13 Memorial Plan Hitch The Washington Post July 10 1913 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Deficiency Document No 1732 House Documents Volume 116 p 2 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b c d War Department Annual Reports 1915 p 1684 Accessed 2013 05 13 The AMAC final report claims that Carrere and Hastings drew up plans for the memorial in 1908 that these were approved by the commission and that the commission submitted them to Congress on February 15 1909 The report does not say a contract was signed however The commission s final report notes that it was not until 1913 that Congress authorized a contract with Carrere and Hastings for their full professional services See Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 11 12 a b c d e f Lemos et al p 251 Commission of Fine Arts p 69 Dickon p 75 Marter p 410 a b Butler and Wilson p 48 Atkinson p 41 a b Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 22 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 7 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 23 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 47 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 60 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 10 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 11 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission p 12 Cultural Landscape Program p 130 President Lays Stone The Washington Post October 14 1915 Mourn Judge Kimball The Washington Post May 16 1916 War Department Annual Reports 1916 p 1807 Spending More at Arlington The Washington Post June 27 1915 a b War Department Annual Reports 1917 p 3728 Accessed 2013 05 13 War Department Annual Reports 1917 p 3726 3728 Accessed 2013 05 13 War Department Annual Reports 1917 p 3726 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b c d War Department Annual Reports 1918 p 3803 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b c d e The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater p 96 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b Baltimore District Army Corps of Engineers 1918 p 1944 Accessed 2013 05 13 War Department Annual Reports 1919 p 2058 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b c d e f g h Baltimore District Army Corps of Engineers 1920 p 2045 2046 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b War Department Annual Reports 1919 p 3850 Accessed 2013 05 13 Miglorie p 115 Army and Navy Chiefs and Veterans Representatives Dedicate Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington Cemetery The Washington Post May 16 1920 a b c d Lemos et al p 248 The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater p 94 96 Accessed 2013 05 13 a b Lemos et al p 249 a b c d e The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater p 94 Accessed 2013 05 13 Lemos et al p 250 251 a b Memorial Amphitheater Arlington National Cemetery No date Archived 2013 04 23 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013 05 15 a b c d Davenport Christian Arlington Cemetery Urns Turn Up on Auction Block But How d They Get There The Washington Post January 23 2011 a b The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater p 91 Accessed 2013 05 13 Lemos et al p 248 249 Trophies to Be Moved in Arlington Cemetery The New York Times July 17 1929 Arlington National Cemetery Arlington National Cemetery Tomb of the Unknowns Monument Repair or Replacement Project Draft paper June 1 2006 p 2 Accessed 2013 05 14 Awaits Appropriation by Congress to Complete National Shrine The Washington Post December 11 1928 Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits p 3262 Neil Donald R Nature Honors the Unknown Soldier The Quartermaster Review January February 1932 Archived 2011 10 20 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013 05 14 a b Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations p 2303 House Approves Peace Cross Funds The Washington Post June 17 1955 2 Unknown Soldiers Join Comrade in May United Press International November 8 1957 White Jean Unknowns Laid to Rest In Arlington The Washington Post May 31 1958 Duffus R L The Three Known But to God The New York Times May 25 1958 2 More War Dead to Be Enshrined United Press International November 10 1957 Raymond Jack May 31 1958 Unknowns of World War II and Korea Are Enshrined The New York Times p 1 House Unit Clears Harpers Ferry Bill The Washington Post June 23 1960 Carberry James Bill to Tighten Relief Passes Senate The Washington Post June 29 1960 Transfer Bill Passed The Washington Post August 24 1960 Cemetery s Centennial Slated Today The Washington Post May 24 1964 a b c Renovations at the Tomb of the Unknowns Arlington National Cemetery American Legion Magazine September 1975 p 25 A moment in time The American Legion www legion org Retrieved 2017 06 29 Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits p 29 Subcommittee on Compensation Pension Insurance and Memorial Affairs p 250 Washington News United Press International April 18 1983 Dola p 112 a b Zirschky p 10 11 a b Lancaster p 53 Annual Awards Presented to Builders Contractors Richmond Times Dispatch September 29 1996 a b c Davenport Christian Arlington Cemetery Urns to Be Returned Instead of Auctioned The Washington Post January 25 2011 Wee Eric L Decay at Arlington Cemetery Dismays Lawmakers The Washington Post May 21 1999 Burns Robert Cohen Dedicates New Inscription on Tomb of Vietnam Unknown Associated Press September 17 1999 Westphal p 68 Metzler p 32 Condon p 6 Accessed 2013 05 14 Capital Today Pays Tribue of Love to Dead of 3 Wars The Washington Post May 30 1924 Program on Memorial Day to Be Observed in Capital The Washington Post May 30 1929 Armistice Day Rites to Be Led By Roosevelt The Washington Post November 11 1935 Truman Talk Tops Plans for Armistice Day The Washington Post November 8 1946 Casey Phil U S Ready to Face War JFK Warns The Washington Post November 12 1961 Clopton Willard Traffic Lights Here Go on Blink As City Has Quiet Memorial Day The Washington Post May 31 1966 Kiernan Laura A Ford Pledges 70 000 Jobs For Veterans The Washington Post October 29 1974 Mansfield Stephanie Veterans Day The Washington Post November 12 1978 Denton Herbert H Reagan Arms Reduction Talks Open June 29 The Washington Post June 1 1982 Jordan Mary A Capital Thank You The Washington Post June 9 1991 Adams Lorraine Clinton Hails D Day On Memorial Day The Washington Post May 31 1994 Masters Brooke A and Jenkins Chris L A Day for Reflection Festivities The Washington Post May 29 2001 Turque Bill A Day to Salute the Best of America The Washington Post May 26 2009 It is not clear that President Richard Nixon entered the amphitheater or entrance hall during his visit to the Tomb of the Unknowns in November 1971 See President at Arlington Honors Dead of All Wars The Washington Post November 12 1971 First Duty of National Is to Its Own Harding Declares at Arlington The Washington Post May 31 1921 Price Harry N End All War Pleads Harding Over Tomb The Washington Post November 12 1921 Price Harry N Stand Against War Urged By President The Washington Post May 31 1923 Harding Leads in Tribute to Heroes at Arlington The Washington Post May 31 1922 Cites Duty to World The Washington Post November 11 1922 Colonel Charles Young Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument U S National Park Service Sir Moses Ezekiel Burial Services for Confederate Soldier and Sculptor at Arlington The New York Times March 31 1921 Retrieved 2018 09 01 Mossman and Stark p 28 Arnold s Body Lies in State Burial Today The Washington Post January 19 1950 Mossman and Stark p 45 Mossman and Stark p 89 Vogel Steve Facing the Scene of Disaster The Washington Post September 1 2002 Frank Buckles Last U S WWI Vet Laid to Rest Air Force Times March 15 2011 Accessed 2013 05 13 Sunrise Services Planned on Easter The Washington Post March 28 1931 Hoovers Greet Easter Crowd The Washington Post April 4 1931 Fodor s 2013 Washington D C p 139 Bibliography edit The Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Architectural Forum January 1921 p 91 96 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission Final Report of the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission Washington D C Government Printing Office 1923 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Deficiency Document No 1732 House Documents Volume 116 U S House of Representatives 65th Cong 3rd sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1919 Atkinson Rick Where Valor Rests Arlington National Cemetery Washington D C National Geographic Society 2007 Baltimore District Army Corps of Engineers Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers on Civil Works Activities Baltimore Md U S Army Corps of Engineers 1918 Baltimore District Army Corps of Engineers Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers on Civil Works Activities Baltimore Md U S Army Corps of Engineers 1920 Butler Sara A and Wilson Richard Guy Buildings of Virginia Tidewater and Piedmont Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 Commission of Fine Arts Tenth Report Washington D C Government Printing Office 1926 Condon Kathryn A Sustaining the Sacred Trust An Update on Our National Cemeteries Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs Committee on Veterans Affairs U S House of Representatives 113th Cong 1st sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 2013 Corfield Justin Arlington National Cemetery In Encyclopedia of the Veteran in America William Pencak ed Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO 2009 Cultural Landscape Program Arlington House The Robert E Lee Memorial Cultural Landscape Report National Capital Region National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Washington D C 2001 Dickon Chris 2011 The Foreign Burial of American War Dead A History Jefferson NC McFarland amp Co ISBN 978 0786446124 OCLC 659753667 Dola Steven Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Independent Agencies Appropriations for 1995 Part 4 Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Other Independent Agencies Committee on Appropriations U S House of Representatives 103d Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1994 Fodor s 2013 Washington D C New York Fodors Travel Publications 2013 Lancaster Martin H Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Independent Agencies Appropriations for 1997 Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations Committee on Appropriations U S House of Representatives 104th Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1996 Lemos Kate Morrison William Warren Charles D and Hewitt Mark Alan Carrere amp Hastings Architects Woodbridge Suffolk UK Acanthus Press 2006 Marter Joan M ed The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art New York Oxford University Press 2011 Metzler John C Veterans Cemeteries Honoring Those Who Served Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs Committee on House Veterans Affairs U S House of Representatives 110th Cong 1st sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 2007 Miglorie Catherine Vermont s Marble Industry Mount Pleasant S C Arcadia Publishing 2013 Mossman Billy C and Stark M W The Last Salute Civil and Military Funerals 1921 1969 Washington D C Department of the Army 1972 Peters James Edward Arlington National Cemetery Shrine to America s Heroes 2d ed Bethesda Md Woodbine House 2000 Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits Administration of Cemeteries Availability of Cemetery Space for Burial of Eligible War Veterans and Administration of Such Cemeteries Committee on Veterans Affairs U S House of Representatives 90th Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1968 Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations Public Works for Water and Power Development and Atomic Energy Commission Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1972 Committee on Appropriations U S Senate 92d Cong 1st sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1971 Subcommittee on Cemeteries and Burial Benefits Hearings on the National Cemetery System and Related Matters and on H R 7263 H R 11843 H R 10253 H R 11844 and H R 3863 Committee on Veterans Affairs U S House of Representatives 95th Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1978 Subcommittee on Compensation Pension Insurance and Memorial Affairs Oversight of VA Cemetery System Overseas Military Cemeteries and Memorials Status of Site Selection Region IV National Cemetery National Cemeteries Including Arlington National Cemetery Committee on Veterans Affairs U S House of Representatives 96th Cong 1st sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1979 War Department Annual Reports 1915 Volume 2 Report of the Chief of Engineers Washington D C Government Printing Office 1915 War Department Annual Reports 1916 Volume 3 Report of the Chief of Engineers Washington D C Government Printing Office 1916 War Department Annual Reports 1917 Volume 3 Report of the Chief of Engineers Washington D C Government Printing Office 1917 War Department Annual Reports 1918 Volume 3 Report of the Chief of Engineers Washington D C Government Printing Office 1918 War Department Annual Reports 1919 Volume 2 Report of the Chief of Engineers Washington D C Government Printing Office 1919 Westphal Joseph W Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Independent Agencies Appropriations for 2001 Part 2 Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations Committee on Appropriations U S House of Representatives 106th Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 2000 Zirschky John H Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Independent Agencies Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1996 Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations Committee on Appropriations U S Senate 104th Cong 1st sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1995 External links editArlington National Cemetery Web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arlington Memorial Amphitheater amp oldid 1160457106, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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