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Grave of Robert F. Kennedy

The grave of Robert F. Kennedy is a historic grave site and memorial to assassinated United States Senator and 1968 Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy located in section 45 of Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia, in the United States. It was dedicated on December 6, 1971, and replaced a temporary grave in which Kennedy was originally buried on June 8, 1968. It is adjacent to the John F. Kennedy Eternal Flame.

Grave of Robert F. Kennedy in 2023

The grave is aligned along an east–west axis, roughly along the line of sight between Arlington House and the Jefferson Memorial.[1] The grave consists of an unadorned, white wooden cross at the head of the grave and a simple grey granite marker set flush with the earth at the foot of it.

The memorial consists of a small semicircular granite plaza, which provides viewing for the grave. At the back (straight) axis of the plaza is a low rectangular grey granite wall inscribed with quotations from two of Kennedy's speeches. A small, rectangular reflecting pool is at the base of the wall.

Initial burial at Arlington National Cemetery Edit

Robert F. Kennedy was shot and mortally wounded on June 5, 1968. He died at 1:44 AM on June 6.[2] Kennedy's body was flown aboard Air Force One to New York City on the evening of June 6, where it lay in repose in St. Patrick's Cathedral from approximately 10:00 PM until 10:00 AM on June 8.[3]

Selection of the burial site occurred almost immediately after Kennedy's death. Kennedy had often said he wished to be buried in the family plot in Massachusetts, but the Kennedy family decided to have him buried at Arlington National Cemetery next to John F. Kennedy instead.[4] Late on June 6, Alfred B. Fitt, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Manpower and Reserve Affairs, flew from Washington to New York City to confer with the Kennedy family about burial at Arlington National Cemetery. The family had already decided to bury Robert F. Kennedy near his brother's memorial, and Fitt carried with him photographs of several areas of the John F. Kennedy grave site which would be suitable as a burial site.[5] At 10:30 PM on June 7, the Kennedy family announced that Robert F. Kennedy would be buried at Arlington National Cemetery in a grassy area just southeast of the John F. Kennedy grave site.[6]

A high requiem mass attended by Ethel Kennedy (Kennedy's widow), Kennedy's children, Jacqueline Kennedy and her children, Rose Kennedy (Kennedy's mother)[7] members of the extended Kennedy family, President Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife Lady Bird Johnson, and members of the Johnson Cabinet was held at St. Patrick's Cathedral at 10:00 AM on June 8.[8] Kennedy's body was taken by train from Pennsylvania Station in New York City to Union Station in Washington, D.C. It was due to depart New York at 12:30 PM,[9] but was delayed by the slow pace of mourners leaving the cathedral.[10] The normally four-hour trip took eight hours and six minutes, due to the thick crowds lining the tracks on the 225-mile (362 km) journey.[11][12] In Elizabeth, New Jersey, a north-bound train struck two people who had moved out of the way of the funeral train, and the Kennedys asked their engineers to slow down even more.[13]

Scheduled to arrive at about 4:30 PM,[5][6] the funeral train arrived in Washington at 9:10 PM on June 8.[11] All funeral flowers were taken to Arlington National Cemetery, where they lay in deep banks on the hill around the grave site.[14] Floodlights were rushed into position in order to illuminate the burial site.[10] More than 1,500 candles were hurriedly donated by the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle (where John F. Kennedy's funeral had occurred) and handed out to the crowd and the mourners.[15] As the funeral motorcade entered the cemetery, the crowd lining the roadway spontaneously lit their candles—lighting the way.[10] The hearse arrived at the grave site at 10:24 PM, and the 15-minute ceremony (originally scheduled to begin at 5:30 PM) began six minutes later.[9][10] The service ended at 10:45 PM.[11] Cardinal Patrick O'Boyle, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Washington, officiated at the graveside service in lieu of Cardinal Richard Cushing of Boston, who fell ill during the trip.[11] Archbishop of New York Terence Cooke also officiated.[10] Astronaut John Glenn folded the American flag which draped the coffin, and handed it to Senator Kennedy, who handed it to Joseph P. Kennedy II, eldest son of Robert Kennedy. Joseph handed the flag to his mother, Ethel.[10] Kennedy's coffin was lowered into the grave after family and friends had departed, and his body buried at 11:34 PM.[11]

Arlington National Cemetery officials claimed in 2011 that Robert F. Kennedy's burial is the only one ever to have taken place at night in the cemetery.[16] However, in 1963, there was another night burial in the cemetery. Shortly after John F. Kennedy's burial, his two infant children were buried next to him in Arlington at night.[10][17] Senator Edward M. Kennedy's burial in 2009 also occurred at night.[18]

As with John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy's first grave was a temporary one, about 10 feet (3.0 m) upslope from its current location.[19][20] A simple white wooden cross stood at the head of the grave, while a spray of flowers marked the foot of it.[11] About 50,000 people (7,000 in the first three hours alone) visited the grave the day after the burial, while another 20,000 visited it the second day.[21] More than 7 million people visited both Kennedy grave sites between June 10, 1968, and June 6, 1969.[22]

Permanent grave site and memorial Edit

 
Looking down from Custis Walk at the Robert F. Kennedy memorial. The grave is out of sight just below the hill.

The design of a permanent grave and memorial for Robert F. Kennedy was undertaken by the United States Army in full consultation with the Kennedy family.[23] The family decided to build a memorial in the early fall of 1968.[24] In late 1968, Ethel Kennedy chose I. M. Pei as the architect.[24] Pei had worked with Robert F. Kennedy in 1966 as a consultant for a rejuvenation project of the Bedford–Stuyvesant neighborhood in Brooklyn.[25] and had been chosen by the Kennedy family as the architect for the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston.[26]

Pei's design for the grave and memorial strongly reflected that of the nearby John F. Kennedy grave site designed by John Carl Warnecke, but on a much smaller scale. It was clear from the outset that the grave itself would not receive any special treatment. When John F. Kennedy was buried, Robert Kennedy had argued for a simple white cross for a burial marker. He was overruled by Jacqueline Kennedy.[27] Bowing to Robert Kennedy's previously expressed thoughts on the matter, the Kennedy family chose to adorn his grave with only a cross and a stone.[28][29] Pei's plan called for an informal grove of trees to surround the grave.[30]

The design for the memorial included a small semicircular plaza, a low grey granite wall inscribed with quotations from Robert Kennedy's speeches (similar to the wall at the John F. Kennedy site), and a small reflecting pool.[31] The reflecting pool was designed to be only a few inches deep and about 4 feet (1.2 m) wide, and to extend the length of the wall. A straight granite pathway lead from the terrace at the John F. Kennedy grave to the semicircular plaza.[30] The original plan called for a grove of trees to be planted between the two Kennedy grave sites (to screen them from one another), another grove to be planted close by, and a large American Beech to be grown south of the plaza.[31]

Pei's design for the grave and memorial took only a few weeks to complete.[24] Using the same agreement reached by the government and the Kennedy family during the construction of the John F. Kennedy memorial, the Kennedy family agreed to pay 58 percent of the total cost of the Robert F. Kennedy site. This covered the grave and the memorial, with the total cost estimated at US$1,016,000.[24] The government's share covered the construction of access roads and pathways, landscaping, and utilities.[24] The plan for the grave site and memorial were approved by the Kennedy family, the U.S. Army, the United States Commission of Fine Arts, and the National Capital Planning Commission.[24][32]

Using public funds for the grave and memorial proved contentious. Some members of the public expressed anger that the federal government was spending several hundred thousand dollars on a memorial to a private citizen. Others asked why a mere U.S. Senator was receiving special treatment when other senators buried at Arlington were not so honored.[33] Some of these arguments appeared in letters to the editor of The Washington Post. An angry Charles H. Percy, a Republican senator from Illinois, defended the expenditure, arguing that not making the improvements would lead to significant harm to the cemetery grounds as large numbers of people visited the grave.[34] The Washington Post also strongly editorialized in favor of the expenditure.[33]

The United States Army Corps of Engineers submitted a budget request of $431,000 to cover its share of the costs in 1969. But President Johnson, for reasons which were not made clear, deleted the request from the Army's budget submission to Congress. Johnson added the request to the president's contingency fund budget submission instead, which effectively left the decision to build the memorial to the next president, Richard M. Nixon (who took office in January 1969).[24] On February 1, 1969, Nixon approved the expenditure from the presidential funds, and placed presidential aide Bryce Harlow in charge of seeing construction through.[35]

The Army formally announced on June 6, 1969, that the memorial would be built for a total cost of US$677,000, with the Kennedys picking up about 62 percent of the total cost (and agreeing to pay for any cost overruns). The memorial would be due south of the John F. Kennedy grave site. The Army said, however, that construction would not begin until funds had been appropriated by Congress.[22]

As the presidential contingency fund budget request wound its way through Congress, some members of Congress also concluded that the federal government should not pick up the cost of the memorial's access roads and improvements. In the House of Representatives, Representative William J. Scherle (a Republican from Iowa) sponsored an amendment to strip the memorial funds from the president's budget request. The House defeated his amendment, 74-to-27, but the vote showed that there was at least some support for Scherle's position.[36]

The cost of the grave and memorial were estimated again in 1970 and found to still be US$677,000, of which 62 percent would still be borne by the Kennedys.[23] On October 21, 1970, Roubin and Janeiro, Inc. (a construction company based in Fairfax, Virginia) was awarded a contract to construct the new grave and memorial. The value of the contract was US$527,914.[30] The total cost for the project was now US$747,000, with the Kennedy family now paying about 75.8 percent of the total cost.[37] Construction began on November 9, 1970, and was expected to take a year.[30] The approaches to both Kennedy graves were altered when the Robert F. Kennedy memorial was built. Previously, the approaches to the John F. Kennedy site consisted of a series of long steps. But several individuals in wheelchairs appealed to Senator Edward M. Kennedy, and the steps were replaced by long ramps in June 1971. The design for the Robert Kennedy memorial, too, was changed to feature ramps rather than stairs.[38]

Final site design Edit

 
Aerial view of the John F. Kennedy (left) and Robert F. Kennedy graves in 2005, showing the relationship between the two sites.

Robert F. Kennedy was disinterred on December 1, 1971, and his body moved to the new grave site.[39] The disinterment, witnessed by Ethel Kennedy and Senator Edward M. Kennedy, began at 5:30 PM. Reburial was complete at about 9:00 PM.[40] The final grave site and granite plaza were dedicated on December 6, 1971.[28][39]

Robert F. Kennedy's final resting place is about 50 feet (15 m) southwest of the terrace of the John F. Kennedy grave site.[19] Robert Kennedy is buried upslope from the plaza, his burial vault marked by a white wooden cross at its head and a slate footstone set flush with the earth at its foot.[19] A low granite wall at the rear (straight, southeast side) of the plaza contains quotations from two famous Robert F. Kennedy speeches, with a small reflecting pool at the base of the wall.[19] The granite for the plaza came from Deer Isle, Maine, which was also the source for the granite for the terrace at the John F. Kennedy gravesite.[37]

One quotation, which inspired the reflecting pool, is from a speech Kennedy delivered to students in South Africa in 1966. It reads:[28]

It is from numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped each time a man stands up for an ideal or acts to improve the lot of others or strikes out against injustice. He sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest wall of oppression and resistance.

The second quotation is from an impromptu address Kennedy gave to an angry crowd of African Americans in Indianapolis, Indiana, the night Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated. It reads:[28]

Aeschylus...wrote, "Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God.' What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness; but is love and wisdom, and compassion toward one another, and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether they be white or whether they be black.

The final cost of the grave and memorial were US$747,000.[40]

Journalist Evan Thomas later wrote that the overall impression left by the Robert F. Kennedy grave and memorial plaza is one of loneliness and sadness.[29]

Vandalism and theft Edit

On January 4, 1970, vandals uprooted the white cross at the head of Kennedy's grave. Arlington National Cemetery officials quietly placed it back into position the same day.[41]

The cross and the footstone marking Robert F. Kennedy's grave were stolen in 1981 and never recovered.[42] They were replaced.[43]

References Edit

  1. ^ This is in contrast to the John F. Kennedy grave site, which is aligned along a line-of-sight between Arlington House and the Lincoln Memorial.
  2. ^ Hill, Gladwin. "Kennedy Is Dead, Victim of Assassin." New York Times. June 6, 1968.
  3. ^ Lukas, J. Anthony. "Kennedy's Body Is Flown Here For Funeral Rites." New York Times. June 7, 1968.
  4. ^ Martin, p. 19; Barnes, p. 289.
  5. ^ a b White, Jean M. "Kennedy to Be Buried Near Brother." Washington Post. June 7, 1968.
  6. ^ a b Madden, Richard L. "Kennedy Will Be Buried a Few Steps From the Arlington Grave of His Brother." New York Times. June 8, 1968.
  7. ^ Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., Kennedy's father, was too frail to travel to the funeral in New York City or the interment at Arlington National Cemetery.
  8. ^ Shipler, David K. "Family Serves In Funeral Mass." New York Times. June 9, 1968; Kilpatrick, Carroll. "Johnsons Attend Kennedy Services." Washington Post. June 9, 1968.
  9. ^ a b "Kennedy Rites Are Announced." Washington Post. June 7, 1968.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Wicker, Tom. "President Joins Kennedys in Tribute at Graveside." New York Times. June 9, 1968.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Reed, Roy. "Thousands Visit Kennedy's Grave on Day of Mourning." New York Times. June 10, 1968.
  12. ^ The train had two sections. The first section, which contained an engine and 15 to 20 coaches, contained family friends, official guests, and members of the press. The second section, which also had an engine, consisted of three coaches. The first two coaches held about 70 of Kennedy's closest friends. The last coach, an observation car, contained Kennedy's wife and children, members of his immediate family (including Senator Edward M. Kennedy), and the coffin. The two sections separated shortly before reaching Washington. The first section pulled into Track 16 at 9:08 PM, and the second section into Track 17 at 9:25 PM. See: Madden, Richard L. "Kennedy Will Be Buried a Few Steps From the Arlington Grave of His Brother." New York Times. June 8, 1968; Wicker, Tom. "President Joins Kennedys in Tribute at Graveside." New York Times. June 9, 1968.
  13. ^ Monteith, p. 146; Clarke, p. 3.
  14. ^ "All Funeral Flowers Directed to Arlington." Washington Post. June 7, 1968.
  15. ^ Bigler, p. 89.
  16. ^ "Robert F. Kennedy Grave Site." Arlington National Cemetery. 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-22.
  17. ^ John and Jacqueline Kennedy had a stillborn daughter, Arabella, in 1956. They also had a son, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, who was born in August 1963 but who lived only a few days. See: Raymond, Jack. "Arlington Assigns Plot of Three Acres to Kennedy Family." New York Times. December 6, 1963; Pottker, 2001, pp. 229–31.
  18. ^ Barry, Dan. "Kennedy Mourners Memorialize 'Soul of the Democratic Party'." New York Times. August 30, 2009. Accessed 2012-07-22.
  19. ^ a b c d Reed, Roy. "Mourners Mark the Death of Robert Kennedy." New York Times. June 7, 1969.
  20. ^ The Washington Post said the grave was originally about 75 yards (69 m) downslope from its permanent location. See: "Kennedy in Arlington." Washington Post. February 9, 1969. This report appears to be incorrect, as the newspaper eight months later reported that Robert Kennedy's grave was "next to" the John F. Kennedy grave site. See: "Kennedy Gravesite Funds Remain in Bill." Washington Post. October 11, 1969. Photography scholar Francisca Fuentes says Robert F. Kennedy was initially buried north-northeast of the John F. Kennedy grave site. She cites Philip Bigler's In Honored Glory (4th ed.) for this claim, but Bigler (4th ed.) does not mention the exact location of the grave. See: Fuentes, p. 202, fn. 3; Bigler, pp. 89–90. A map in the New York Times showed the location of the temporary burial to be very near the permanent site. See: Madden, Richard L. "Kennedy Will Be Buried a Few Steps From the Arlington Grave of His Brother." New York Times. June 8, 1968.
  21. ^ "RFK Grave Is Visited By 20,000." Washington Post. June 11, 1968.
  22. ^ a b "Family Leads Homage to Robert Kennedy." Washington Post. June 7, 1969.
  23. ^ a b Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries, p. 4320.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g "Memorial for RFK Is Left Up to Nixon." Washington Post. February 1, 1969.
  25. ^ Morrone and Iska, p. 252.
  26. ^ Wiseman, p. 99.
  27. ^ Isaacson, p. 301.
  28. ^ a b c d Coonerty and Highsmith, 2007, p. 45.
  29. ^ a b Thomas, p. 9.
  30. ^ a b c d Subcommittee on Public Works, p. 1247.
  31. ^ a b Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries, p. 4319.
  32. ^ Committee on Veterans' Affairs, House of Representatives, 1972, p. 149.
  33. ^ a b "Kennedy in Arlington." Washington Post. February 9, 1969.
  34. ^ Percy, Charles H. "The Funds for the Kennedy Gravesite." Washington Post. February 9, 1969.
  35. ^ "RFK Site Approved By Nixon." Washington Post. February 2, 1969.
  36. ^ "Kennedy Gravesite Funds Remain in Bill." Washington Post. October 11, 1969.
  37. ^ a b "Contract Let for Construction Of $747,000 Gravesite for RFK." Washington Post. November 5, 1970.
  38. ^ McCardle, Dorothy. "Paths for the Handicapped at Kennedy Grave Sites." Washington Post. June 27, 1971.
  39. ^ a b "Robert Kennedy's Body Now at Permanent Site." United Press International. December 2, 1971.
  40. ^ a b "RFK's Vault Moved to New Grave." Washington Post. December 2, 1971.
  41. ^ "Vandals Uproot Kennedy Cross." Washington Post. January 5, 1970.
  42. ^ "Robert Kennedy's Grave Loses Marker to Thieves." Associated Press. December 28, 1981.
  43. ^ Poole, p. 256.

Bibliography Edit

  • Barnes, John A. Irish-American Landmarks. Canton, Mich.: Visible Ink, 1995.
  • Bigler, Philip. In Honored Glory: Arlington National Cemetery, the Final Post. 4th ed. St. Petersburg, Fla.: Vandamere Press, 2005. ISBN 0918339677
  • Clarke, Thurston. The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America. New York: Henry Holt, 2009.
  • Committee on Veterans' Affairs. National Cemeteries Act of 1972: Hearings. Vol. 1. House of Representatives. 92d Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.
  • Coonerty, Ryan and Highsmith, Carol M. Etched in Stone: Enduring Words From Our Nation's Monuments. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic, 2007.
  • Fuentes, Francisca D. "Paul Fusco's RFK Funeral Train: The Photobook as Memory Text." In Writing With Light: Words and Photographs in American Texts. Mick Gidley, ed. New York: P. Lang, 2010.
  • Isaacson, Walter. Profiles in Leadership: Historians on the Elusive Quality of Greatness. New York: W.W. Norton, 2010.
  • Martin, Zachary J. The Mindless Menace of Violence: Robert F. Kennedy's Vision and the Fierce Urgency of Now. Lanham, Md.: Hamilton Books, 2009.
  • Monteith, Sharon. American Culture in the 1960s. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2008.
  • Morrone, Francis and Iska, James. An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn. Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith, 2001.
  • Poole, Robert M. On Hallowed Ground: The Story of Arlington National Cemetery. New York: Walker & Co., 2009.
  • Pottker, Janice. Janet and Jackie: The Story of a Mother and Her Daughter, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2001.
  • Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries. Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Bills Related to the National Cemetery System. House of Representatives. 91st Cong., 2d sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.
  • Subcommittee on Public Works. Committee on Appropriations. Public Works for Water and Power Development and Atomic Energy Commission Appropriation Bill, 1972. Vol. 2. House of Representatives. 92d Cong., 1st sess. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
  • Thomas, Evan. "RFK Funeral Train, June 8, 1968." In RFK Funeral Train. Paul Fusco, ed. Stockport, NY: Dewi Lewis, 2001.
  • Wiseman, Carter. I.M. Pei: A Profile in American Architecture. New York: H.N. Abrams, 2001.

External links Edit

  • "Robert Francis Kennedy". at ArlingtonCemetery.net. (Unofficial website).
  • "Burial Detail: Kennedy, Robert F. (Section 45, Grave S-45-A)". ANC Explorer. Arlington National Cemetery. (Official website).

38°52′52.3″N 77°4′17.3″W / 38.881194°N 77.071472°W / 38.881194; -77.071472

grave, robert, kennedy, grave, robert, kennedy, historic, grave, site, memorial, assassinated, united, states, senator, 1968, democratic, presidential, candidate, robert, kennedy, located, section, arlington, national, cemetery, arlington, county, virginia, un. The grave of Robert F Kennedy is a historic grave site and memorial to assassinated United States Senator and 1968 Democratic presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy located in section 45 of Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County Virginia in the United States It was dedicated on December 6 1971 and replaced a temporary grave in which Kennedy was originally buried on June 8 1968 It is adjacent to the John F Kennedy Eternal Flame Grave of Robert F Kennedy in 2023The grave is aligned along an east west axis roughly along the line of sight between Arlington House and the Jefferson Memorial 1 The grave consists of an unadorned white wooden cross at the head of the grave and a simple grey granite marker set flush with the earth at the foot of it The memorial consists of a small semicircular granite plaza which provides viewing for the grave At the back straight axis of the plaza is a low rectangular grey granite wall inscribed with quotations from two of Kennedy s speeches A small rectangular reflecting pool is at the base of the wall Contents 1 Initial burial at Arlington National Cemetery 2 Permanent grave site and memorial 2 1 Final site design 2 2 Vandalism and theft 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksInitial burial at Arlington National Cemetery EditRobert F Kennedy was shot and mortally wounded on June 5 1968 He died at 1 44 AM on June 6 2 Kennedy s body was flown aboard Air Force One to New York City on the evening of June 6 where it lay in repose in St Patrick s Cathedral from approximately 10 00 PM until 10 00 AM on June 8 3 Selection of the burial site occurred almost immediately after Kennedy s death Kennedy had often said he wished to be buried in the family plot in Massachusetts but the Kennedy family decided to have him buried at Arlington National Cemetery next to John F Kennedy instead 4 Late on June 6 Alfred B Fitt Assistant Secretary of Defense for Manpower and Reserve Affairs flew from Washington to New York City to confer with the Kennedy family about burial at Arlington National Cemetery The family had already decided to bury Robert F Kennedy near his brother s memorial and Fitt carried with him photographs of several areas of the John F Kennedy grave site which would be suitable as a burial site 5 At 10 30 PM on June 7 the Kennedy family announced that Robert F Kennedy would be buried at Arlington National Cemetery in a grassy area just southeast of the John F Kennedy grave site 6 A high requiem mass attended by Ethel Kennedy Kennedy s widow Kennedy s children Jacqueline Kennedy and her children Rose Kennedy Kennedy s mother 7 members of the extended Kennedy family President Lyndon B Johnson and his wife Lady Bird Johnson and members of the Johnson Cabinet was held at St Patrick s Cathedral at 10 00 AM on June 8 8 Kennedy s body was taken by train from Pennsylvania Station in New York City to Union Station in Washington D C It was due to depart New York at 12 30 PM 9 but was delayed by the slow pace of mourners leaving the cathedral 10 The normally four hour trip took eight hours and six minutes due to the thick crowds lining the tracks on the 225 mile 362 km journey 11 12 In Elizabeth New Jersey a north bound train struck two people who had moved out of the way of the funeral train and the Kennedys asked their engineers to slow down even more 13 Scheduled to arrive at about 4 30 PM 5 6 the funeral train arrived in Washington at 9 10 PM on June 8 11 All funeral flowers were taken to Arlington National Cemetery where they lay in deep banks on the hill around the grave site 14 Floodlights were rushed into position in order to illuminate the burial site 10 More than 1 500 candles were hurriedly donated by the Cathedral of St Matthew the Apostle where John F Kennedy s funeral had occurred and handed out to the crowd and the mourners 15 As the funeral motorcade entered the cemetery the crowd lining the roadway spontaneously lit their candles lighting the way 10 The hearse arrived at the grave site at 10 24 PM and the 15 minute ceremony originally scheduled to begin at 5 30 PM began six minutes later 9 10 The service ended at 10 45 PM 11 Cardinal Patrick O Boyle Roman Catholic Archbishop of Washington officiated at the graveside service in lieu of Cardinal Richard Cushing of Boston who fell ill during the trip 11 Archbishop of New York Terence Cooke also officiated 10 Astronaut John Glenn folded the American flag which draped the coffin and handed it to Senator Kennedy who handed it to Joseph P Kennedy II eldest son of Robert Kennedy Joseph handed the flag to his mother Ethel 10 Kennedy s coffin was lowered into the grave after family and friends had departed and his body buried at 11 34 PM 11 Arlington National Cemetery officials claimed in 2011 that Robert F Kennedy s burial is the only one ever to have taken place at night in the cemetery 16 However in 1963 there was another night burial in the cemetery Shortly after John F Kennedy s burial his two infant children were buried next to him in Arlington at night 10 17 Senator Edward M Kennedy s burial in 2009 also occurred at night 18 As with John F Kennedy Robert Kennedy s first grave was a temporary one about 10 feet 3 0 m upslope from its current location 19 20 A simple white wooden cross stood at the head of the grave while a spray of flowers marked the foot of it 11 About 50 000 people 7 000 in the first three hours alone visited the grave the day after the burial while another 20 000 visited it the second day 21 More than 7 million people visited both Kennedy grave sites between June 10 1968 and June 6 1969 22 Permanent grave site and memorial Edit nbsp Looking down from Custis Walk at the Robert F Kennedy memorial The grave is out of sight just below the hill The design of a permanent grave and memorial for Robert F Kennedy was undertaken by the United States Army in full consultation with the Kennedy family 23 The family decided to build a memorial in the early fall of 1968 24 In late 1968 Ethel Kennedy chose I M Pei as the architect 24 Pei had worked with Robert F Kennedy in 1966 as a consultant for a rejuvenation project of the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood in Brooklyn 25 and had been chosen by the Kennedy family as the architect for the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston 26 Pei s design for the grave and memorial strongly reflected that of the nearby John F Kennedy grave site designed by John Carl Warnecke but on a much smaller scale It was clear from the outset that the grave itself would not receive any special treatment When John F Kennedy was buried Robert Kennedy had argued for a simple white cross for a burial marker He was overruled by Jacqueline Kennedy 27 Bowing to Robert Kennedy s previously expressed thoughts on the matter the Kennedy family chose to adorn his grave with only a cross and a stone 28 29 Pei s plan called for an informal grove of trees to surround the grave 30 The design for the memorial included a small semicircular plaza a low grey granite wall inscribed with quotations from Robert Kennedy s speeches similar to the wall at the John F Kennedy site and a small reflecting pool 31 The reflecting pool was designed to be only a few inches deep and about 4 feet 1 2 m wide and to extend the length of the wall A straight granite pathway lead from the terrace at the John F Kennedy grave to the semicircular plaza 30 The original plan called for a grove of trees to be planted between the two Kennedy grave sites to screen them from one another another grove to be planted close by and a large American Beech to be grown south of the plaza 31 Pei s design for the grave and memorial took only a few weeks to complete 24 Using the same agreement reached by the government and the Kennedy family during the construction of the John F Kennedy memorial the Kennedy family agreed to pay 58 percent of the total cost of the Robert F Kennedy site This covered the grave and the memorial with the total cost estimated at US 1 016 000 24 The government s share covered the construction of access roads and pathways landscaping and utilities 24 The plan for the grave site and memorial were approved by the Kennedy family the U S Army the United States Commission of Fine Arts and the National Capital Planning Commission 24 32 Using public funds for the grave and memorial proved contentious Some members of the public expressed anger that the federal government was spending several hundred thousand dollars on a memorial to a private citizen Others asked why a mere U S Senator was receiving special treatment when other senators buried at Arlington were not so honored 33 Some of these arguments appeared in letters to the editor of The Washington Post An angry Charles H Percy a Republican senator from Illinois defended the expenditure arguing that not making the improvements would lead to significant harm to the cemetery grounds as large numbers of people visited the grave 34 The Washington Post also strongly editorialized in favor of the expenditure 33 The United States Army Corps of Engineers submitted a budget request of 431 000 to cover its share of the costs in 1969 But President Johnson for reasons which were not made clear deleted the request from the Army s budget submission to Congress Johnson added the request to the president s contingency fund budget submission instead which effectively left the decision to build the memorial to the next president Richard M Nixon who took office in January 1969 24 On February 1 1969 Nixon approved the expenditure from the presidential funds and placed presidential aide Bryce Harlow in charge of seeing construction through 35 The Army formally announced on June 6 1969 that the memorial would be built for a total cost of US 677 000 with the Kennedys picking up about 62 percent of the total cost and agreeing to pay for any cost overruns The memorial would be due south of the John F Kennedy grave site The Army said however that construction would not begin until funds had been appropriated by Congress 22 As the presidential contingency fund budget request wound its way through Congress some members of Congress also concluded that the federal government should not pick up the cost of the memorial s access roads and improvements In the House of Representatives Representative William J Scherle a Republican from Iowa sponsored an amendment to strip the memorial funds from the president s budget request The House defeated his amendment 74 to 27 but the vote showed that there was at least some support for Scherle s position 36 The cost of the grave and memorial were estimated again in 1970 and found to still be US 677 000 of which 62 percent would still be borne by the Kennedys 23 On October 21 1970 Roubin and Janeiro Inc a construction company based in Fairfax Virginia was awarded a contract to construct the new grave and memorial The value of the contract was US 527 914 30 The total cost for the project was now US 747 000 with the Kennedy family now paying about 75 8 percent of the total cost 37 Construction began on November 9 1970 and was expected to take a year 30 The approaches to both Kennedy graves were altered when the Robert F Kennedy memorial was built Previously the approaches to the John F Kennedy site consisted of a series of long steps But several individuals in wheelchairs appealed to Senator Edward M Kennedy and the steps were replaced by long ramps in June 1971 The design for the Robert Kennedy memorial too was changed to feature ramps rather than stairs 38 Final site design Edit nbsp Aerial view of the John F Kennedy left and Robert F Kennedy graves in 2005 showing the relationship between the two sites Robert F Kennedy was disinterred on December 1 1971 and his body moved to the new grave site 39 The disinterment witnessed by Ethel Kennedy and Senator Edward M Kennedy began at 5 30 PM Reburial was complete at about 9 00 PM 40 The final grave site and granite plaza were dedicated on December 6 1971 28 39 Robert F Kennedy s final resting place is about 50 feet 15 m southwest of the terrace of the John F Kennedy grave site 19 Robert Kennedy is buried upslope from the plaza his burial vault marked by a white wooden cross at its head and a slate footstone set flush with the earth at its foot 19 A low granite wall at the rear straight southeast side of the plaza contains quotations from two famous Robert F Kennedy speeches with a small reflecting pool at the base of the wall 19 The granite for the plaza came from Deer Isle Maine which was also the source for the granite for the terrace at the John F Kennedy gravesite 37 One quotation which inspired the reflecting pool is from a speech Kennedy delivered to students in South Africa in 1966 It reads 28 It is from numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped each time a man stands up for an ideal or acts to improve the lot of others or strikes out against injustice He sends forth a tiny ripple of hope and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest wall of oppression and resistance The second quotation is from an impromptu address Kennedy gave to an angry crowd of African Americans in Indianapolis Indiana the night Dr Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated It reads 28 Aeschylus wrote Even in our sleep pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart until in our own despair against our will comes wisdom through the awful grace of God What we need in the United States is not division what we need in the United States is not hatred what we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness but is love and wisdom and compassion toward one another and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country whether they be white or whether they be black The final cost of the grave and memorial were US 747 000 40 Journalist Evan Thomas later wrote that the overall impression left by the Robert F Kennedy grave and memorial plaza is one of loneliness and sadness 29 Vandalism and theft Edit On January 4 1970 vandals uprooted the white cross at the head of Kennedy s grave Arlington National Cemetery officials quietly placed it back into position the same day 41 The cross and the footstone marking Robert F Kennedy s grave were stolen in 1981 and never recovered 42 They were replaced 43 References Edit This is in contrast to the John F Kennedy grave site which is aligned along a line of sight between Arlington House and the Lincoln Memorial Hill Gladwin Kennedy Is Dead Victim of Assassin New York Times June 6 1968 Lukas J Anthony Kennedy s Body Is Flown Here For Funeral Rites New York Times June 7 1968 Martin p 19 Barnes p 289 a b White Jean M Kennedy to Be Buried Near Brother Washington Post June 7 1968 a b Madden Richard L Kennedy Will Be Buried a Few Steps From the Arlington Grave of His Brother New York Times June 8 1968 Joseph P Kennedy Sr Kennedy s father was too frail to travel to the funeral in New York City or the interment at Arlington National Cemetery Shipler David K Family Serves In Funeral Mass New York Times June 9 1968 Kilpatrick Carroll Johnsons Attend Kennedy Services Washington Post June 9 1968 a b Kennedy Rites Are Announced Washington Post June 7 1968 a b c d e f g Wicker Tom President Joins Kennedys in Tribute at Graveside New York Times June 9 1968 a b c d e f Reed Roy Thousands Visit Kennedy s Grave on Day of Mourning New York Times June 10 1968 The train had two sections The first section which contained an engine and 15 to 20 coaches contained family friends official guests and members of the press The second section which also had an engine consisted of three coaches The first two coaches held about 70 of Kennedy s closest friends The last coach an observation car contained Kennedy s wife and children members of his immediate family including Senator Edward M Kennedy and the coffin The two sections separated shortly before reaching Washington The first section pulled into Track 16 at 9 08 PM and the second section into Track 17 at 9 25 PM See Madden Richard L Kennedy Will Be Buried a Few Steps From the Arlington Grave of His Brother New York Times June 8 1968 Wicker Tom President Joins Kennedys in Tribute at Graveside New York Times June 9 1968 Monteith p 146 Clarke p 3 All Funeral Flowers Directed to Arlington Washington Post June 7 1968 Bigler p 89 Robert F Kennedy Grave Site Arlington National Cemetery 2011 Retrieved 2012 07 22 John and Jacqueline Kennedy had a stillborn daughter Arabella in 1956 They also had a son Patrick Bouvier Kennedy who was born in August 1963 but who lived only a few days See Raymond Jack Arlington Assigns Plot of Three Acres to Kennedy Family New York Times December 6 1963 Pottker 2001 pp 229 31 Barry Dan Kennedy Mourners Memorialize Soul of the Democratic Party New York Times August 30 2009 Accessed 2012 07 22 a b c d Reed Roy Mourners Mark the Death of Robert Kennedy New York Times June 7 1969 The Washington Post said the grave was originally about 75 yards 69 m downslope from its permanent location See Kennedy in Arlington Washington Post February 9 1969 This report appears to be incorrect as the newspaper eight months later reported that Robert Kennedy s grave was next to the John F Kennedy grave site See Kennedy Gravesite Funds Remain in Bill Washington Post October 11 1969 Photography scholar Francisca Fuentes says Robert F Kennedy was initially buried north northeast of the John F Kennedy grave site She cites Philip Bigler s In Honored Glory 4th ed for this claim but Bigler 4th ed does not mention the exact location of the grave See Fuentes p 202 fn 3 Bigler pp 89 90 A map in the New York Times showed the location of the temporary burial to be very near the permanent site See Madden Richard L Kennedy Will Be Buried a Few Steps From the Arlington Grave of His Brother New York Times June 8 1968 RFK Grave Is Visited By 20 000 Washington Post June 11 1968 a b Family Leads Homage to Robert Kennedy Washington Post June 7 1969 a b Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries p 4320 a b c d e f g Memorial for RFK Is Left Up to Nixon Washington Post February 1 1969 Morrone and Iska p 252 Wiseman p 99 Isaacson p 301 a b c d Coonerty and Highsmith 2007 p 45 a b Thomas p 9 a b c d Subcommittee on Public Works p 1247 a b Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries p 4319 Committee on Veterans Affairs House of Representatives 1972 p 149 a b Kennedy in Arlington Washington Post February 9 1969 Percy Charles H The Funds for the Kennedy Gravesite Washington Post February 9 1969 RFK Site Approved By Nixon Washington Post February 2 1969 Kennedy Gravesite Funds Remain in Bill Washington Post October 11 1969 a b Contract Let for Construction Of 747 000 Gravesite for RFK Washington Post November 5 1970 McCardle Dorothy Paths for the Handicapped at Kennedy Grave Sites Washington Post June 27 1971 a b Robert Kennedy s Body Now at Permanent Site United Press International December 2 1971 a b RFK s Vault Moved to New Grave Washington Post December 2 1971 Vandals Uproot Kennedy Cross Washington Post January 5 1970 Robert Kennedy s Grave Loses Marker to Thieves Associated Press December 28 1981 Poole p 256 Bibliography Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grave of Robert F Kennedy Barnes John A Irish American Landmarks Canton Mich Visible Ink 1995 Bigler Philip In Honored Glory Arlington National Cemetery the Final Post 4th ed St Petersburg Fla Vandamere Press 2005 ISBN 0918339677 Clarke Thurston The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America New York Henry Holt 2009 Committee on Veterans Affairs National Cemeteries Act of 1972 Hearings Vol 1 House of Representatives 92d Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1972 Coonerty Ryan and Highsmith Carol M Etched in Stone Enduring Words From Our Nation s Monuments Washington D C National Geographic 2007 Fuentes Francisca D Paul Fusco s RFK Funeral Train The Photobook as Memory Text In Writing With Light Words and Photographs in American Texts Mick Gidley ed New York P Lang 2010 Isaacson Walter Profiles in Leadership Historians on the Elusive Quality of Greatness New York W W Norton 2010 Martin Zachary J The Mindless Menace of Violence Robert F Kennedy s Vision and the Fierce Urgency of Now Lanham Md Hamilton Books 2009 Monteith Sharon American Culture in the 1960s Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2008 Morrone Francis and Iska James An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn Layton Utah Gibbs Smith 2001 Poole Robert M On Hallowed Ground The Story of Arlington National Cemetery New York Walker amp Co 2009 Pottker Janice Janet and Jackie The Story of a Mother and Her Daughter Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis New York St Martin s Griffin 2001 Special Subcommittee on Cemeteries Committee on Veterans Affairs Bills Related to the National Cemetery System House of Representatives 91st Cong 2d sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1970 Subcommittee on Public Works Committee on Appropriations Public Works for Water and Power Development and Atomic Energy Commission Appropriation Bill 1972 Vol 2 House of Representatives 92d Cong 1st sess Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1971 Thomas Evan RFK Funeral Train June 8 1968 In RFK Funeral Train Paul Fusco ed Stockport NY Dewi Lewis 2001 Wiseman Carter I M Pei A Profile in American Architecture New York H N Abrams 2001 External links Edit Robert Francis Kennedy at ArlingtonCemetery net Unofficial website Burial Detail Kennedy Robert F Section 45 Grave S 45 A ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Official website 38 52 52 3 N 77 4 17 3 W 38 881194 N 77 071472 W 38 881194 77 071472 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grave of Robert F Kennedy amp oldid 1161324558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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