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Tanner Amphitheater

The James Tanner Amphitheater is a historic wood and brick amphitheater located at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia, in the United States. The amphitheater, which was originally unnamed, was constructed in 1873 and served as the cemetery's main public meeting space until the completion of Memorial Amphitheater in 1920. The amphitheater was informally called the Old Amphitheater from 1920 to May 2014, when it was renamed the James R. Tanner Amphitheater in honor of James R. Tanner, a disabled American Civil War veteran and influential veterans' organization leader.

James Tanner Amphitheater
United States
Looking east at the dais and colonnade of Tanner Amphitheater
For James R. Tanner, disabled American Civil War veteran and civil servant
UnveiledMay 29, 1873; 150 years ago (May 29, 1873)
Location38°52′49″N 77°04′26″W / 38.880255°N 77.073878°W / 38.880255; -77.073878
near 

History of the site edit

Construction of Arlington House and "the Grove" edit

In 1778, John Parke Custis purchased an 1,100-acre (450 ha) tract of forested land on the Potomac River north of the town of Alexandria, Virginia. This land became the Arlington Estate. John Custis died in September 1781, and in 1799 his son, George Washington Parke Custis ("G.W.P.")—foster-grandson of George Washington—inherited the site. G.W.P Custis moved onto the estate in 1802, and between 1802 and 1818 constructed Arlington House. Custis also extensively developed the estate grounds. Much of the steep slope to the east of the house became a cultivated English landscape park, while a large flower garden with an arbor was constructed and planted south of the house.[1]

To the west of Arlington House, tall grass and low native plants led down a slope into a natural area of close-growing trees the Custises called "the Grove."[2] Located about 60 feet (18 m) west of the flower garden, "the Grove" contained tall elm and oak trees which formed a canopy. An informal flower garden was planted beneath the trees and maintained by the Custis daughters.[3] It is not clear when "the Grove" began to be developed, but it was under way by at least 1853.[3]

G.W.P.'s daughter, Mary Anna Randolph Custis, married Robert E. Lee, an impoverished lieutenant in the United States Army, in June 1831. The Lees took up residence at Arlington House.[4] Mary Custis died in 1853, and Mary Custis Lee had her buried in "the Grove". G.W.P. Custis died in October 1857, and he was buried next to his wife in "the Grove".[5]

Cemetery edit

 
Map of the grounds of Arlington National Cemetery as they existed between 1865 and 1880. The location of the amphitheater can be seen southwest (upper-left corner) of Arlington House.

Arlington Estate's history changed forever with the outbreak of the American Civil War. Robert E. Lee resigned from the United States Army on April 20, 1861, and took command of Virginia's armed forces on April 23.[6] Armed forces loyal to the United States ("Union" forces) realized that artillery placed on the heights of the estate would be able to shell the city of Washington at will.[7] Aware that Union forces were likely to seize her home, Mary Custis Lee packed up most of her belongings and fled to her family estate at Ravensworth in Fairfax County, Virginia, on May 17.[8][9] Union troops occupied Arlington Estate and Arlington House on May 24.[10]

On July 16, 1862, the United States Congress passed legislation authorizing the U.S. federal government to purchase land for national cemeteries for military dead, and put the U.S. Army Quartermaster General in charge of this program.[11] At this time, the Soldiers' Home in nearby Washington, D.C., and the Alexandria Cemetery were the primary burying grounds for war dead in the D.C. area, but by late 1863 both cemeteries were full.[11] In May 1864, large numbers of Union forces died in the Battle of the Wilderness. Quartermaster General Montgomery C. Meigs ordered that an examination of eligible sites be made for the establishment for a large new national military cemetery. Within weeks, his staff reported that Arlington Estate was the most suitable property in the area.[11] The estate was high and free from floods (which might unearth graves), it had a view of the District of Columbia, and it was aesthetically pleasing. It was also the home of the leader of the armed forces of the Confederate States of America, and denying Robert E. Lee use of his home after the war was a valuable political consideration.[12] Although the first military burial at Arlington was made on May 13,[13] Meigs did not authorize establishment of burials until June 15, 1864.[14]

Most burials initially occurred near the freedmen's cemetery in the northeast corner of the estate. But in mid-June 1864 Meigs ordered that burials commence immediately on the grounds adjacent to Arlington House.[13] The first officer burial had occurred next to the flower garden on May 17, but with Meigs' order another 44 officers were buried along the southern and eastern sides of this area within a month.[13] In December 1865, Robert E. Lee's brother, Sydney Smith Lee, visited Arlington House and observed that the house could be made livable again if the graves around the flower garden were removed.[15] Meigs hated Lee for betraying the Union,[16] and ordered that more burials occur near the house in order to make it politically impossible for disinterment to occur.[17]

The large number of Union troops, their need for firewood and animal fodder, and the need to construct extensive fortifications led to extensive degradation of Arlington Estate during the Civil War. By 1865, most of "the Grove" had been lost. Its flower beds and paths had been trampled out of existence by troops and pack animals, and some of its trees had been cut down.[18]

Design and construction of the amphitheater edit

Decoration Day and the need for an amphitheater edit

 
John A. Logan, who popularized Decoration Day, in 1886.

The popularity of Arlington[a][19] as a site for patriotic meetings and Civil War remembrance events soared after the establishment of Decoration Day (later known as Memorial Day). Spontaneous decoration of Civil War graves and the maintenance of cemeteries had occurred since the early days of the war in both the North and the South since the earliest days of the war. John A. Logan, a former major general in the Union Army, had been elected "Commander in Chief" of the Grand Army of the Republic, an organization for Union Civil War veterans. Aware of the growing acceptance of Decoration Day as a holiday, Logan issued a statement on May 5, 1868, calling for "Decoration Day" to be observed nationwide on an annual basis.[20] Logan set the date for May 30, because it was not the anniversary of any particular battle.[21]

The establishment of Decoration Day as an official government holiday (by proclamation, not by law) swiftly occurred, and the holiday was almost immediately a popular one. At Arlington cemetery, the number of people attending the annual event swiftly overwhelmed the limited facilities.[22] The first Decoration Day event was held in front of Arlington House. James A. Garfield, a former Major General in the Union Army (and future President of the United States), addressed a "large crowd" from the mansion's back steps.[23][24] The following year, President Ulysses S. Grant closed the federal government for the holiday, and most businesses followed, which greatly contributed to attendance at the cemetery. A dais seating 400 people was erected in what remained of "the Grove" at the rear of Arlington House[23][25] to accommodate speakers and dignitaries—which, for the first time, included President Grant. The Civil War Unknowns Monument, which was located 180 feet (55 m) south-southwest of Arlington House, was covered by a canopy. Several American flags hung from the canopy, red-white-and-blue bunting was draped along the monument's top, and numerous floral tributes were laid against it. An estimated 25,000 people attended the event throughout the day.[26] Two sites for ceremonies were used in 1870. A very large speakers' dais was erected near the Sheridan Gate and McClellan Gate on the cemetery's east side, and used for speeches throughout the day. For the more important speakers, a second dais seating 200 was erected at the rear of Arlington House (although not with "the Grove"). A stand, permitting the seating of 500, was built nearby for a grand chorus (which sang for the crowd). Again, the Civil War Unknowns Monument was canopied and decorated. About 20,000 people attended the event that year, with rain keeping the numbers low.[27] In 1871, the speakers' dais moved back to "the Grove" and expanded to accommodate 300 people. Frederick Douglass, the former African American slave and abolitionist, was the featured speaker that year. "Hundreds" of people attended his address, including President Grant.[25] The dais moved again in 1872, this time to a location a few yards to the south of the Civil War Unknowns Monument. The dais was slightly reduced in size so that it only sat 200, but it now included a thrust on which stood a speaker's podium. More than 5,000 people attended the 1872 event.[28]

Building the amphitheater edit

 
Brig. General Montgomery C. Meigs, Quartermaster General of the U.S. Army and designer of the amphitheater.

Due to the growing importance of the cemetery as well as the much larger crowds attending Memorial Day observances, General Meigs decided a large, formal amphitheater was needed at the cemetery.[29][30] The site chosen was what remained of "the Grove". It was both beautiful and had spectacular panoramic views of Washington, D.C., which appealed to planners for its solemnity and inspirational qualities.[31] The last trees of "the Grove" were cut down, and an amphitheater constructed on the cleared space.[29][b][32]

Construction on the amphitheater began on May 2, 1873, and was complete by May 29.[33][34][c][29][35][36][37][38][39][40][35][32]

The Arlington cemetery amphitheater was designed by Meigs, who in addition to being Quartermaster General was also an excellent engineer and architect.[41][34] The enclosing structure was a pergola, a popular structure in American gardens in the 1800s.[42] Why Meigs chose a pergola is not clear. According to the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS), "There is no substantial evidence as to Meigs' intentions regarding the amphitheater."[43] Nonetheless, HABS argues, Meigs undoubtedly was influenced by garden cemetery movement, and the pergola fit with this design aesthetic.[44]

Rushed into construction,[45] a work group consisting of 23 carpenters, 12 bricklayers, and 30 general laborers built the amphitheater in just 28 days.[34] A "Colonel Curtis" oversaw the work, under the supervision of General William Myers (the quartermaster in charge of the Washington, D.C., quartermaster's depot).[34][46] A bowl was dug in the earth and the removed soil used to create a 4-foot (1.2 m) high berm on which the pergola was erected.[34] Excavation work was accomplished by contractor Harvey Bell. Bricklaying was done by the firm of Carroll & Shaw, and the carpentry work by contractor D.J. McCarty. Plastering, stuccoing, and painting of the pergola columns was done by contractor Joseph Beckert, while painting of the wooden trellis was accomplished by James Hudson. Sod was provided by Harvey Bell.[46] At the time of its completion, no shrubs, trees, or vines had yet been planted at the amphitheater.[34] A dais in the northern side of the amphitheater provided a platform for speakers and guests. The dais supported 12 round, smooth columns. To reinforce the dais and the trellis above it, the A. Schneider firm made and affixed metal braces.[46] The dais columns were topped by Ionic capitals. The double base consisted of a two-stepped, round base with egg-and-dart decoration, below which was a simple square plinth. The capitals and bases were made of cast iron, and manufactured by James Hudson.[47]

History of the amphitheater edit

The amphitheater was first used on May 30, 1873, for Decoration Day ceremonies.[34] Present for the amphitheater's inauguration were President Grant, Secretary of State Hamilton Fish, Secretary of War William W. Belknap, Secretary of the Treasury William Adams Richardson, Attorney General George Henry Williams, and Frederick Douglass. The Reverend Thomas De Witt Talmage, D.D., one of the great public orators of the day, addressed the crowd.[34] That same year, Meigs hired trained landscape gardener David H. Rhodes to oversee the beautification of the cemetery with plants.[48] Rhodes quickly planted wisteria vines and leafy green shrubs around the columns of the pergola and wisteria below the columns of the dais.[49] By May 1876, the wisteria covered almost the entire structure.[50]

 
The face of the Rostrum.

Meigs intended for an awning of sorts to cover the amphitheater bowl to provide protection from hot sun or rain. Canvas awnings (whose description, method of erection, and use are not known) were employed on Decoration Day in 1874, but came loose in the wind and were greatly disliked by people attending the ceremonies.[51][52] A second set of awnings were constructed for use in time for the 1875 Decoration Day. Manufactured by M.G. Copeland (who both cut and fit them to the pergola),[46] these blue-and-white striped awnings (made of an unidentified material) were attached to the trellis above the dais and sections of the trellis around the amphitheater. But these, too, proved difficult to control in wind, which blew them around when not properly tied down.[53] The striped awnings were replaced in 1877 by a tent-like canopy. Manufactured by sailmaker Charles Lawrence of Philadelphia,[47] the new covering was made of duck canvas and covered both the dais and the amphitheater's grassy bowl. Designed by Meigs, this tent-like structure was supported by two poles erected inside the ellipse. Long ropes passed over and through the trellises and were attached to stakes driven into the earth outside the amphitheater. Lawrence supplied the tent, while the federal government supplied the rope, stakes, and poles. The canopy was first used on Decoration Day 1878, and on many occasions thereafter.[51]

A marble speaker's podium, known as the "Rostrum" (and sometimes as the "Altar"), was added to the dais in 1880.[47] The Rostrum was designed by prominent D.C. architect John L. Smithmeyer (who later co-designed the main building of the Library of Congress). Just 5.3 feet (1.6 m) in length and 4.3 feet (1.3 m) high,[54] the ends featured a modified blank Swiss escutcheon surrounded by a wreath, while the front was emblazoned with palm fronds and the Latin phrase "E Pluribus Unum" (from many, one).[43] The Rostrum was physically sculpted by the firm of William Struthers & Sons of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,[47] and was delivered just before Decoration Day in May 1880.[43]

 
James Tanner, Civil War veteran, and veterans activist

Replacement structure edit

By 1900, crowds at events at Arlington National Cemetery were too large to be accommodated by the amphitheater.[55] A larger structure was clearly needed. Judge Ivory Kimball, Commander of the Department of the Potomac chapter of the Grand Army of the Republic, believed that not only should a new and larger facility be built, but also that the new amphitheater memorialize the dead of all wars in which the nation had fought.[55] Kimball and the GAR began their push for a new amphitheater in 1903, but legislation failed to pass for the next five years.[56][57] Legislation authorizing the establishment of a memorial was finally enacted in 1908, but almost no funding was provided for the amphitheater's design and none for its construction.[58] In 1912, legislation was introduced by Senator George Sutherland to authorize construction of a 5,000-seat memorial amphitheater.[59] 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. The successful push for new memorials helped supporters win passage of legislation authorizing construction of Memorial Amphitheater.[60] President William Howard Taft, in one of his last acts as president, signed the legislation into law on March 4, 1913.[61]

Construction proceeded swiftly despite the pressure on funding and resources imposed by World War I, and Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated on May 15, 1920.[62]

Renaming edit

 
Unveiling of the plaque at the renamed Tanner Amphitheater on May 30, 2014.

With the construction of Memorial Amphitheater, the older structure came to be known informally as the Old Amphitheater.[63]

In 2014, Arlington National Cemetery officials dedicated the Old Amphitheater as the James Tanner Amphitheater. James R. Tanner, a Union Army veteran, lost both legs during the American Civil War. He became a stenographer and clerk with the United States Department of War, and took down most of the eyewitness testimony during the early hours of the investigation into the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Tanner is buried a few yards from the amphitheater which now bears his name.[63] The amphitheater's new name was unveiled at a ceremony on May 29, 2014.[64]

About Tanner Amphitheater edit

No architectural plans or drawings for the 1873 structure exist. The earliest plans for Tanner Amphitheater are those drawn by General Meigs in 1877 (apparently for the use of canopy-maker Charles Lawrence).[47]

Tanner Amphitheater consists of an elliptical wooden colonnade built on a 4-foot (1.2 m) high berm, with a bowl-shaped depression in the middle. The amphitheater is oriented to the north, where a dais and speaker's rostrum are placed.[51] The exterior dimensions of the amphitheater are 118 by 139 feet (36 by 42 m), while the interior dimensions are 68 by 96 feet (21 by 29 m). The north–south intercolumnation[d] is 12.7 feet (3.9 m), while the east–west intercolumnation is 10.4 feet (3.2 m). The width of the middle bay on each side of the ellipse is 17.4 feet (5.3 m). The dais is rectangular in shape, and 41.5 by 28.5 feet (12.6 by 8.7 m) in size.[65]

 
Detail of the trellis above the dais, showing the cast iron Ionic capitals, double-girder bolted beams, and cross-braces.

The amphitheater's colonnade is formed by three concentric rings[66] of 46 square brick columns.[54] Each column is approximately 2 feet (0.61 m) on a side. The base of each column is a brick square slightly larger than the column. A wooden Doric capital tops each brick column.[50] The top of each capital is protected by zinc and tin flashing.[54] The colonnade is topped by a 25-foot (7.6 m) wide trellis. The trellis consists of beams made of 2-by-6-inch (5.1 by 15.2 cm) wooden planks, set upright on their short ends.[50] Joists made of 2-by-6es are set perpendicular to the planks. The joists are connected to the planks by halved joints. The joists project about 1-foot (0.30 m) beyond the beams on both ends. The bottom of each projection is carved into a dentil decorative shape. There are roughly 12 joists between each column. Running parallel and between each beam is a second 2-by-6 joist attached with halved joints to the top of the beam-perpendicular joists. The floor of the colonnade between the outer and middle trellis columns consists of grey granite rectangular slabs set into the soil.[50]

Tanner Amphitheater is oriented toward the dais on the north side of the structure. The dais is 41.5 feet (12.6 m) wide and 28.5 feet (8.7 m) deep,[65] and is large enough to seat 300 people.[51] The dais is constructed of brick, with decorative blind corbel arches on all four sides. A four-tread set of stone steps provides access on the east and west sides.[51] Twelve smooth, round columns,[51] made of brick,[54] support a trellis overhead. Each column is topped by an Ionic capital. Each column has a two-stepped, round base with egg-and-dart decoration, below which is a simple square plinth.[47] The capitals and bases are made of cast iron, and the brick columns clad in smooth stucco.[54] The trellis above the dais is formed by beams, which are made of two 2-by-12-inch (5.1 by 30.5 cm) planks bolted together. Two beams form a girder. Girders run east and west and north and south, connecting all the columns together. Joists made of 2-by-12-inch (5.1 by 30.5 cm) planks connected to the top of the girders with halved joints. These joists form most of the trellis structure on which plants climb. There are six joists between each east–west column, and one between each north–south column.[54] The deck of the dais consists of stone pavers over fill earth. A low, simple, wrought-iron railing surrounds the dais on the east, west, and north sides.[51]

All the wood, brick, stucco, and iron which make up Tanner Amphitheater are painted white.[54]

 
Landscaping below the colonnade trellis.

Tanner Amphitheater is extensively landscaped. Sod surrounds the amphitheater and lines the bowl.[50][46] Originally, wisteria and various kinds of grape and other vines were planted at the base of the columns. These covered the trellis thickly. Although most of the vines have been removed, the wisteria remains.[51] Between the inner and middle trellis columns are planted low boxwood hedges. Planting beds of flowers and flowering shrubs ring the amphitheater.[50]

Tanner Amphitheater has a seating capacity of 1,500 when tightly packed wooden folding chairs are used.[50]

As of 1995, Tanner Amphitheater was in good but slightly deteriorated condition. Settling of the dais caused the north edge to bow out, and the century-old brickwork was deteriorating in several places. Pieces had fallen from some of the cast iron capitals, and not been replaced.[66]

Some parts of Tanner Amphitheater have required replacement over the years. Three columns in the colonnade were severely damaged when a tree fell against them, and had to be replaced with new brick columns. Their cast iron capitals were too damaged to reuse, and were replaced with cast concrete capitals.[54] The wood in the trellis has also been replaced through the years, as needed.[54]

Aesthetic assessment edit

The Historic American Buildings Survey has a positive aesthetic assessment of Tanner Amphitheater. Its pergola design fits well with and enhances the setting in which it is situated, the organization says, while the Neoclassical style of the columns and Rostrum bring to mind the values of strength, simplicity, and democracy.[44] Tanner Amphitheater fit well with and reinforced the bucolic, pastoral nature of Arlington National Cemetery in the 1800s. The new amphitheater, however, signaled a reorientation of the cemetery toward a monumental, dominating style.[42] As historian Peter Andrews put it, Arlington "ceased to be a pastoral, semiprivate resting ground for the career military and instead became a national shrine."[67]

Tanner Amphitheater has also proved influential. The Historic American Buildings Survey, in their architectural study of the old amphitheater, points out that Memorial Amphitheater clearly mimics Tanner Amphitheater with its elliptical design, colonnade, and dais with rostrum.[66]

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Arlington would not become a national cemetery until 1874.
  2. ^ Peters mistakenly locates the amphitheater in the Arlington House garden. Peters does not say which garden, the kitchen garden north of the house or the flower garden south of it. Tanner Amphitheater is not located in either place, and Peters appears to be inaccurate regarding the amphitheater's site.
  3. ^ A number of sources, such as the Cultural Landscape Program of the National Park Service, the United States Commission of Fine Arts, and historians Owen Andrews, Philip Bigler, David Miller, Cynthia Parzych, and Robert Poole all assert that the date of completion was 1874. But primary source documents, such as construction records cited by the Historic American Buildings Survey and the 1873 article in The Evening Star, clearly show the date of completion to be May 29, 1873. Historian James Edward Peters claims the amphitheater was completed in 1868, in time for the first Decoration Day, but that is clearly in error.
  4. ^ Intercolumnation is the space between the columns.
Citations
  1. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, pp. 22–23, 27–28, 52–55.
  2. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 54.
  3. ^ a b Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 59.
  4. ^ Eicher 2002, pp. 13–16.
  5. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 60.
  6. ^ Corfield 2009, p. 77.
  7. ^ Chase 1930, p. 173.
  8. ^ McCaslin 2004, pp. 79–80.
  9. ^ Atkinson 2007, p. 25.
  10. ^ Chase 1930, p. 176.
  11. ^ a b c Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 84.
  12. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 88.
  13. ^ a b c Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 86.
  14. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 85.
  15. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 87.
  16. ^ Peters 2000, p. 142.
  17. ^ Poole, Robert M. (November 2009a). "How Arlington National Cemetery Came to Be". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved April 29, 2012.
  18. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 96.
  19. ^ Loth 1999, p. 40.
  20. ^ Jabbour & Jabbour 2010, p. 125.
  21. ^ Cohen & Coffin 1991, p. 215.
  22. ^ Parzych 2009, pp. 32–33.
  23. ^ a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 6.
  24. ^ "Decoration of the Soldiers' Graves at Arlington". The Evening Star. May 30, 1868. p. 1.
  25. ^ a b "Memorial Day". The Evening Star. May 30, 1871. p. 1.
  26. ^ "In Memoriam". The Evening Star. May 29, 1869. p. 1.
  27. ^ "In Memoriam". The Evening Star. May 30, 1870. p. 1.
  28. ^ "Memorial Day". The Evening Star. May 30, 1872. p. 1.
  29. ^ a b c Cultural Landscape Program 2001, pp. 107–108.
  30. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 7.
  31. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey (1995a). Old Amphitheater – Arlington National Cemetery. Sheet 1 of 10 Sheets. Old Amphitheater Documentation Project. HABS VA,7-ARL,11A- (Report). National Park Service. p. 1. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  32. ^ a b Peters 2000, p. 254.
  33. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 1.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h "Memorial Day – 1873". The Evening Star. May 30, 1873. p. 1.
  35. ^ a b United States Commission of Fine Arts 1965, p. 46.
  36. ^ Andrews 1994, p. 60.
  37. ^ Bigler 1986, p. 27.
  38. ^ Miller 2000, p. 260.
  39. ^ Parzych 2009, p. 33.
  40. ^ Poole 2009, p. 324.
  41. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, pp. 1, 3.
  42. ^ a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 12.
  43. ^ a b c Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 9.
  44. ^ a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 11.
  45. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, pp. 7, 9.
  46. ^ a b c d e Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 2.
  47. ^ a b c d e f Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 3.
  48. ^ Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 106.
  49. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, pp. 3, 11.
  50. ^ a b c d e f g Cultural Landscape Program 2001, p. 108.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 8.
  52. ^ "Decoration Day, 1874". The Evening Star. May 30, 1874. p. 1.
  53. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, pp. 8–9.
  54. ^ a b c d e f g h i Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 14.
  55. ^ a b Peters 2000, pp. 243–244.
  56. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission 1923, pp. 8, 22.
  57. ^ "Plan New Memorial". The Washington Post. February 11, 1908. p. 5; "Urges Arlington Building". The Washington Post. March 21, 1908. p. 4.
  58. ^ Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission 1923, p. 9-10.
  59. ^ "Favor Big Memorial". The Washington Post. March 30, 1912. p. 4.
  60. ^ Corfield 2009, p. 80.
  61. ^ "District Saves Bill". The Washington Post. March 5, 1913. p. 10.
  62. ^ "Army and Navy Chiefs and Veterans' Representatives Dedicate Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington Cemetery". The Washington Post. May 16, 1920. p. 2.
  63. ^ a b Ruane, Michael E. (May 16, 2014). "Arlington Cemetery to Rename Old Amphitheater for Civil War Double Amputee James Tanner". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
  64. ^ Carr, Jette (June 2, 2014). "Old Amphitheater Renaming Connects Arlington National Cemetery to Past". Air Force News Service. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
  65. ^ a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, pp. 13–14.
  66. ^ a b c Historic American Buildings Survey 1995, p. 13.
  67. ^ Andrews 1966, p. 98.

Bibliography edit

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  • McCaslin, Richard B. (2004). Lee in the Shadow of Washington. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0807126969.
  • Miller, David W. (2000). Second Only to Grant: Quartermaster General Montgomery C. Meigs. Shippensburg, Pa.: White Maine Books. ISBN 1572492120.
  • Parzych, Cynthia (2009). Arlington National Cemetery. Guilford, Conn.: GPP Travel. ISBN 9780762753291.
  • Peters, James Edward (2000). Arlington National Cemetery, Shrine to America's Heroes. Bethesda, Md.: Woodbine House. ISBN 1890627143.
  • Poole, Robert M. (2009). On Hallowed Ground: The Story of Arlington National Cemetery. New York: Walker & Co. ISBN 9780802715487.
  • United States Commission of Fine Arts (1965). Report of the Commission of Fine Arts, 1 July 1958 to 30 June 1963. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.

External links edit

  • Official Web site

tanner, amphitheater, james, historic, wood, brick, amphitheater, located, arlington, national, cemetery, arlington, county, virginia, united, states, amphitheater, which, originally, unnamed, constructed, 1873, served, cemetery, main, public, meeting, space, . The James Tanner Amphitheater is a historic wood and brick amphitheater located at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County Virginia in the United States The amphitheater which was originally unnamed was constructed in 1873 and served as the cemetery s main public meeting space until the completion of Memorial Amphitheater in 1920 The amphitheater was informally called the Old Amphitheater from 1920 to May 2014 when it was renamed the James R Tanner Amphitheater in honor of James R Tanner a disabled American Civil War veteran and influential veterans organization leader James Tanner AmphitheaterUnited StatesLooking east at the dais and colonnade of Tanner AmphitheaterFor James R Tanner disabled American Civil War veteran and civil servantUnveiledMay 29 1873 150 years ago May 29 1873 Location38 52 49 N 77 04 26 W 38 880255 N 77 073878 W 38 880255 77 073878 near Arlington County Virginia U S Contents 1 History of the site 1 1 Construction of Arlington House and the Grove 1 2 Cemetery 2 Design and construction of the amphitheater 2 1 Decoration Day and the need for an amphitheater 2 2 Building the amphitheater 3 History of the amphitheater 3 1 Replacement structure 3 2 Renaming 4 About Tanner Amphitheater 4 1 Aesthetic assessment 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory of the site editConstruction of Arlington House and the Grove edit In 1778 John Parke Custis purchased an 1 100 acre 450 ha tract of forested land on the Potomac River north of the town of Alexandria Virginia This land became the Arlington Estate John Custis died in September 1781 and in 1799 his son George Washington Parke Custis G W P foster grandson of George Washington inherited the site G W P Custis moved onto the estate in 1802 and between 1802 and 1818 constructed Arlington House Custis also extensively developed the estate grounds Much of the steep slope to the east of the house became a cultivated English landscape park while a large flower garden with an arbor was constructed and planted south of the house 1 To the west of Arlington House tall grass and low native plants led down a slope into a natural area of close growing trees the Custises called the Grove 2 Located about 60 feet 18 m west of the flower garden the Grove contained tall elm and oak trees which formed a canopy An informal flower garden was planted beneath the trees and maintained by the Custis daughters 3 It is not clear when the Grove began to be developed but it was under way by at least 1853 3 G W P s daughter Mary Anna Randolph Custis married Robert E Lee an impoverished lieutenant in the United States Army in June 1831 The Lees took up residence at Arlington House 4 Mary Custis died in 1853 and Mary Custis Lee had her buried in the Grove G W P Custis died in October 1857 and he was buried next to his wife in the Grove 5 Cemetery edit nbsp Map of the grounds of Arlington National Cemetery as they existed between 1865 and 1880 The location of the amphitheater can be seen southwest upper left corner of Arlington House Arlington Estate s history changed forever with the outbreak of the American Civil War Robert E Lee resigned from the United States Army on April 20 1861 and took command of Virginia s armed forces on April 23 6 Armed forces loyal to the United States Union forces realized that artillery placed on the heights of the estate would be able to shell the city of Washington at will 7 Aware that Union forces were likely to seize her home Mary Custis Lee packed up most of her belongings and fled to her family estate at Ravensworth in Fairfax County Virginia on May 17 8 9 Union troops occupied Arlington Estate and Arlington House on May 24 10 On July 16 1862 the United States Congress passed legislation authorizing the U S federal government to purchase land for national cemeteries for military dead and put the U S Army Quartermaster General in charge of this program 11 At this time the Soldiers Home in nearby Washington D C and the Alexandria Cemetery were the primary burying grounds for war dead in the D C area but by late 1863 both cemeteries were full 11 In May 1864 large numbers of Union forces died in the Battle of the Wilderness Quartermaster General Montgomery C Meigs ordered that an examination of eligible sites be made for the establishment for a large new national military cemetery Within weeks his staff reported that Arlington Estate was the most suitable property in the area 11 The estate was high and free from floods which might unearth graves it had a view of the District of Columbia and it was aesthetically pleasing It was also the home of the leader of the armed forces of the Confederate States of America and denying Robert E Lee use of his home after the war was a valuable political consideration 12 Although the first military burial at Arlington was made on May 13 13 Meigs did not authorize establishment of burials until June 15 1864 14 Most burials initially occurred near the freedmen s cemetery in the northeast corner of the estate But in mid June 1864 Meigs ordered that burials commence immediately on the grounds adjacent to Arlington House 13 The first officer burial had occurred next to the flower garden on May 17 but with Meigs order another 44 officers were buried along the southern and eastern sides of this area within a month 13 In December 1865 Robert E Lee s brother Sydney Smith Lee visited Arlington House and observed that the house could be made livable again if the graves around the flower garden were removed 15 Meigs hated Lee for betraying the Union 16 and ordered that more burials occur near the house in order to make it politically impossible for disinterment to occur 17 The large number of Union troops their need for firewood and animal fodder and the need to construct extensive fortifications led to extensive degradation of Arlington Estate during the Civil War By 1865 most of the Grove had been lost Its flower beds and paths had been trampled out of existence by troops and pack animals and some of its trees had been cut down 18 Design and construction of the amphitheater editDecoration Day and the need for an amphitheater edit nbsp John A Logan who popularized Decoration Day in 1886 The popularity of Arlington a 19 as a site for patriotic meetings and Civil War remembrance events soared after the establishment of Decoration Day later known as Memorial Day Spontaneous decoration of Civil War graves and the maintenance of cemeteries had occurred since the early days of the war in both the North and the South since the earliest days of the war John A Logan a former major general in the Union Army had been elected Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic an organization for Union Civil War veterans Aware of the growing acceptance of Decoration Day as a holiday Logan issued a statement on May 5 1868 calling for Decoration Day to be observed nationwide on an annual basis 20 Logan set the date for May 30 because it was not the anniversary of any particular battle 21 The establishment of Decoration Day as an official government holiday by proclamation not by law swiftly occurred and the holiday was almost immediately a popular one At Arlington cemetery the number of people attending the annual event swiftly overwhelmed the limited facilities 22 The first Decoration Day event was held in front of Arlington House James A Garfield a former Major General in the Union Army and future President of the United States addressed a large crowd from the mansion s back steps 23 24 The following year President Ulysses S Grant closed the federal government for the holiday and most businesses followed which greatly contributed to attendance at the cemetery A dais seating 400 people was erected in what remained of the Grove at the rear of Arlington House 23 25 to accommodate speakers and dignitaries which for the first time included President Grant The Civil War Unknowns Monument which was located 180 feet 55 m south southwest of Arlington House was covered by a canopy Several American flags hung from the canopy red white and blue bunting was draped along the monument s top and numerous floral tributes were laid against it An estimated 25 000 people attended the event throughout the day 26 Two sites for ceremonies were used in 1870 A very large speakers dais was erected near the Sheridan Gate and McClellan Gate on the cemetery s east side and used for speeches throughout the day For the more important speakers a second dais seating 200 was erected at the rear of Arlington House although not with the Grove A stand permitting the seating of 500 was built nearby for a grand chorus which sang for the crowd Again the Civil War Unknowns Monument was canopied and decorated About 20 000 people attended the event that year with rain keeping the numbers low 27 In 1871 the speakers dais moved back to the Grove and expanded to accommodate 300 people Frederick Douglass the former African American slave and abolitionist was the featured speaker that year Hundreds of people attended his address including President Grant 25 The dais moved again in 1872 this time to a location a few yards to the south of the Civil War Unknowns Monument The dais was slightly reduced in size so that it only sat 200 but it now included a thrust on which stood a speaker s podium More than 5 000 people attended the 1872 event 28 Building the amphitheater edit nbsp Brig General Montgomery C Meigs Quartermaster General of the U S Army and designer of the amphitheater Due to the growing importance of the cemetery as well as the much larger crowds attending Memorial Day observances General Meigs decided a large formal amphitheater was needed at the cemetery 29 30 The site chosen was what remained of the Grove It was both beautiful and had spectacular panoramic views of Washington D C which appealed to planners for its solemnity and inspirational qualities 31 The last trees of the Grove were cut down and an amphitheater constructed on the cleared space 29 b 32 Construction on the amphitheater began on May 2 1873 and was complete by May 29 33 34 c 29 35 36 37 38 39 40 35 32 The Arlington cemetery amphitheater was designed by Meigs who in addition to being Quartermaster General was also an excellent engineer and architect 41 34 The enclosing structure was a pergola a popular structure in American gardens in the 1800s 42 Why Meigs chose a pergola is not clear According to the Historic American Buildings Survey HABS There is no substantial evidence as to Meigs intentions regarding the amphitheater 43 Nonetheless HABS argues Meigs undoubtedly was influenced by garden cemetery movement and the pergola fit with this design aesthetic 44 Rushed into construction 45 a work group consisting of 23 carpenters 12 bricklayers and 30 general laborers built the amphitheater in just 28 days 34 A Colonel Curtis oversaw the work under the supervision of General William Myers the quartermaster in charge of the Washington D C quartermaster s depot 34 46 A bowl was dug in the earth and the removed soil used to create a 4 foot 1 2 m high berm on which the pergola was erected 34 Excavation work was accomplished by contractor Harvey Bell Bricklaying was done by the firm of Carroll amp Shaw and the carpentry work by contractor D J McCarty Plastering stuccoing and painting of the pergola columns was done by contractor Joseph Beckert while painting of the wooden trellis was accomplished by James Hudson Sod was provided by Harvey Bell 46 At the time of its completion no shrubs trees or vines had yet been planted at the amphitheater 34 A dais in the northern side of the amphitheater provided a platform for speakers and guests The dais supported 12 round smooth columns To reinforce the dais and the trellis above it the A Schneider firm made and affixed metal braces 46 The dais columns were topped by Ionic capitals The double base consisted of a two stepped round base with egg and dart decoration below which was a simple square plinth The capitals and bases were made of cast iron and manufactured by James Hudson 47 History of the amphitheater editThe amphitheater was first used on May 30 1873 for Decoration Day ceremonies 34 Present for the amphitheater s inauguration were President Grant Secretary of State Hamilton Fish Secretary of War William W Belknap Secretary of the Treasury William Adams Richardson Attorney General George Henry Williams and Frederick Douglass The Reverend Thomas De Witt Talmage D D one of the great public orators of the day addressed the crowd 34 That same year Meigs hired trained landscape gardener David H Rhodes to oversee the beautification of the cemetery with plants 48 Rhodes quickly planted wisteria vines and leafy green shrubs around the columns of the pergola and wisteria below the columns of the dais 49 By May 1876 the wisteria covered almost the entire structure 50 nbsp The face of the Rostrum Meigs intended for an awning of sorts to cover the amphitheater bowl to provide protection from hot sun or rain Canvas awnings whose description method of erection and use are not known were employed on Decoration Day in 1874 but came loose in the wind and were greatly disliked by people attending the ceremonies 51 52 A second set of awnings were constructed for use in time for the 1875 Decoration Day Manufactured by M G Copeland who both cut and fit them to the pergola 46 these blue and white striped awnings made of an unidentified material were attached to the trellis above the dais and sections of the trellis around the amphitheater But these too proved difficult to control in wind which blew them around when not properly tied down 53 The striped awnings were replaced in 1877 by a tent like canopy Manufactured by sailmaker Charles Lawrence of Philadelphia 47 the new covering was made of duck canvas and covered both the dais and the amphitheater s grassy bowl Designed by Meigs this tent like structure was supported by two poles erected inside the ellipse Long ropes passed over and through the trellises and were attached to stakes driven into the earth outside the amphitheater Lawrence supplied the tent while the federal government supplied the rope stakes and poles The canopy was first used on Decoration Day 1878 and on many occasions thereafter 51 A marble speaker s podium known as the Rostrum and sometimes as the Altar was added to the dais in 1880 47 The Rostrum was designed by prominent D C architect John L Smithmeyer who later co designed the main building of the Library of Congress Just 5 3 feet 1 6 m in length and 4 3 feet 1 3 m high 54 the ends featured a modified blank Swiss escutcheon surrounded by a wreath while the front was emblazoned with palm fronds and the Latin phrase E Pluribus Unum from many one 43 The Rostrum was physically sculpted by the firm of William Struthers amp Sons of Philadelphia Pennsylvania 47 and was delivered just before Decoration Day in May 1880 43 nbsp James Tanner Civil War veteran and veterans activistReplacement structure edit Main article Arlington Memorial Amphitheater By 1900 crowds at events at Arlington National Cemetery were too large to be accommodated by the amphitheater 55 A larger structure was clearly needed Judge Ivory Kimball Commander of the Department of the Potomac chapter of the Grand Army of the Republic believed that not only should a new and larger facility be built but also that the new amphitheater memorialize the dead of all wars in which the nation had fought 55 Kimball and the GAR began their push for a new amphitheater in 1903 but legislation failed to pass for the next five years 56 57 Legislation authorizing the establishment of a memorial was finally enacted in 1908 but almost no funding was provided for the amphitheater s design and none for its construction 58 In 1912 legislation was introduced by Senator George Sutherland to authorize construction of a 5 000 seat memorial amphitheater 59 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 The successful push for new memorials helped supporters win passage of legislation authorizing construction of Memorial Amphitheater 60 President William Howard Taft in one of his last acts as president signed the legislation into law on March 4 1913 61 Construction proceeded swiftly despite the pressure on funding and resources imposed by World War I and Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated on May 15 1920 62 Renaming edit nbsp Unveiling of the plaque at the renamed Tanner Amphitheater on May 30 2014 With the construction of Memorial Amphitheater the older structure came to be known informally as the Old Amphitheater 63 In 2014 Arlington National Cemetery officials dedicated the Old Amphitheater as the James Tanner Amphitheater James R Tanner a Union Army veteran lost both legs during the American Civil War He became a stenographer and clerk with the United States Department of War and took down most of the eyewitness testimony during the early hours of the investigation into the assassination of Abraham Lincoln Tanner is buried a few yards from the amphitheater which now bears his name 63 The amphitheater s new name was unveiled at a ceremony on May 29 2014 64 About Tanner Amphitheater editNo architectural plans or drawings for the 1873 structure exist The earliest plans for Tanner Amphitheater are those drawn by General Meigs in 1877 apparently for the use of canopy maker Charles Lawrence 47 Tanner Amphitheater consists of an elliptical wooden colonnade built on a 4 foot 1 2 m high berm with a bowl shaped depression in the middle The amphitheater is oriented to the north where a dais and speaker s rostrum are placed 51 The exterior dimensions of the amphitheater are 118 by 139 feet 36 by 42 m while the interior dimensions are 68 by 96 feet 21 by 29 m The north south intercolumnation d is 12 7 feet 3 9 m while the east west intercolumnation is 10 4 feet 3 2 m The width of the middle bay on each side of the ellipse is 17 4 feet 5 3 m The dais is rectangular in shape and 41 5 by 28 5 feet 12 6 by 8 7 m in size 65 nbsp Detail of the trellis above the dais showing the cast iron Ionic capitals double girder bolted beams and cross braces The amphitheater s colonnade is formed by three concentric rings 66 of 46 square brick columns 54 Each column is approximately 2 feet 0 61 m on a side The base of each column is a brick square slightly larger than the column A wooden Doric capital tops each brick column 50 The top of each capital is protected by zinc and tin flashing 54 The colonnade is topped by a 25 foot 7 6 m wide trellis The trellis consists of beams made of 2 by 6 inch 5 1 by 15 2 cm wooden planks set upright on their short ends 50 Joists made of 2 by 6es are set perpendicular to the planks The joists are connected to the planks by halved joints The joists project about 1 foot 0 30 m beyond the beams on both ends The bottom of each projection is carved into a dentil decorative shape There are roughly 12 joists between each column Running parallel and between each beam is a second 2 by 6 joist attached with halved joints to the top of the beam perpendicular joists The floor of the colonnade between the outer and middle trellis columns consists of grey granite rectangular slabs set into the soil 50 Tanner Amphitheater is oriented toward the dais on the north side of the structure The dais is 41 5 feet 12 6 m wide and 28 5 feet 8 7 m deep 65 and is large enough to seat 300 people 51 The dais is constructed of brick with decorative blind corbel arches on all four sides A four tread set of stone steps provides access on the east and west sides 51 Twelve smooth round columns 51 made of brick 54 support a trellis overhead Each column is topped by an Ionic capital Each column has a two stepped round base with egg and dart decoration below which is a simple square plinth 47 The capitals and bases are made of cast iron and the brick columns clad in smooth stucco 54 The trellis above the dais is formed by beams which are made of two 2 by 12 inch 5 1 by 30 5 cm planks bolted together Two beams form a girder Girders run east and west and north and south connecting all the columns together Joists made of 2 by 12 inch 5 1 by 30 5 cm planks connected to the top of the girders with halved joints These joists form most of the trellis structure on which plants climb There are six joists between each east west column and one between each north south column 54 The deck of the dais consists of stone pavers over fill earth A low simple wrought iron railing surrounds the dais on the east west and north sides 51 All the wood brick stucco and iron which make up Tanner Amphitheater are painted white 54 nbsp Landscaping below the colonnade trellis Tanner Amphitheater is extensively landscaped Sod surrounds the amphitheater and lines the bowl 50 46 Originally wisteria and various kinds of grape and other vines were planted at the base of the columns These covered the trellis thickly Although most of the vines have been removed the wisteria remains 51 Between the inner and middle trellis columns are planted low boxwood hedges Planting beds of flowers and flowering shrubs ring the amphitheater 50 Tanner Amphitheater has a seating capacity of 1 500 when tightly packed wooden folding chairs are used 50 As of 1995 Tanner Amphitheater was in good but slightly deteriorated condition Settling of the dais caused the north edge to bow out and the century old brickwork was deteriorating in several places Pieces had fallen from some of the cast iron capitals and not been replaced 66 Some parts of Tanner Amphitheater have required replacement over the years Three columns in the colonnade were severely damaged when a tree fell against them and had to be replaced with new brick columns Their cast iron capitals were too damaged to reuse and were replaced with cast concrete capitals 54 The wood in the trellis has also been replaced through the years as needed 54 Aesthetic assessment edit The Historic American Buildings Survey has a positive aesthetic assessment of Tanner Amphitheater Its pergola design fits well with and enhances the setting in which it is situated the organization says while the Neoclassical style of the columns and Rostrum bring to mind the values of strength simplicity and democracy 44 Tanner Amphitheater fit well with and reinforced the bucolic pastoral nature of Arlington National Cemetery in the 1800s The new amphitheater however signaled a reorientation of the cemetery toward a monumental dominating style 42 As historian Peter Andrews put it Arlington ceased to be a pastoral semiprivate resting ground for the career military and instead became a national shrine 67 Tanner Amphitheater has also proved influential The Historic American Buildings Survey in their architectural study of the old amphitheater points out that Memorial Amphitheater clearly mimics Tanner Amphitheater with its elliptical design colonnade and dais with rostrum 66 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tanner Amphitheater Arlington National Cemetery Notes Arlington would not become a national cemetery until 1874 Peters mistakenly locates the amphitheater in the Arlington House garden Peters does not say which garden the kitchen garden north of the house or the flower garden south of it Tanner Amphitheater is not located in either place and Peters appears to be inaccurate regarding the amphitheater s site A number of sources such as the Cultural Landscape Program of the National Park Service the United States Commission of Fine Arts and historians Owen Andrews Philip Bigler David Miller Cynthia Parzych and Robert Poole all assert that the date of completion was 1874 But primary source documents such as construction records cited by the Historic American Buildings Survey and the 1873 article in The Evening Star clearly show the date of completion to be May 29 1873 Historian James Edward Peters claims the amphitheater was completed in 1868 in time for the first Decoration Day but that is clearly in error Intercolumnation is the space between the columns Citations Cultural Landscape Program 2001 pp 22 23 27 28 52 55 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 54 a b Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 59 Eicher 2002 pp 13 16 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 60 Corfield 2009 p 77 Chase 1930 p 173 McCaslin 2004 pp 79 80 Atkinson 2007 p 25 Chase 1930 p 176 a b c Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 84 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 88 a b c Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 86 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 85 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 87 Peters 2000 p 142 Poole Robert M November 2009a How Arlington National Cemetery Came to Be Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved April 29 2012 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 96 Loth 1999 p 40 Jabbour amp Jabbour 2010 p 125 Cohen amp Coffin 1991 p 215 Parzych 2009 pp 32 33 a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 6 Decoration of the Soldiers Graves at Arlington The Evening Star May 30 1868 p 1 a b Memorial Day The Evening Star May 30 1871 p 1 In Memoriam The Evening Star May 29 1869 p 1 In Memoriam The Evening Star May 30 1870 p 1 Memorial Day The Evening Star May 30 1872 p 1 a b c Cultural Landscape Program 2001 pp 107 108 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 7 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995a Old Amphitheater Arlington National Cemetery Sheet 1 of 10 Sheets Old Amphitheater Documentation Project HABS VA 7 ARL 11A Report National Park Service p 1 Retrieved September 20 2014 a b Peters 2000 p 254 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 1 a b c d e f g h Memorial Day 1873 The Evening Star May 30 1873 p 1 a b United States Commission of Fine Arts 1965 p 46 Andrews 1994 p 60 Bigler 1986 p 27 Miller 2000 p 260 Parzych 2009 p 33 Poole 2009 p 324 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 pp 1 3 a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 12 a b c Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 9 a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 11 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 pp 7 9 a b c d e Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 2 a b c d e f Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 3 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 106 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 pp 3 11 a b c d e f g Cultural Landscape Program 2001 p 108 a b c d e f g h Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 8 Decoration Day 1874 The Evening Star May 30 1874 p 1 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 pp 8 9 a b c d e f g h i Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 14 a b Peters 2000 pp 243 244 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission 1923 pp 8 22 Plan New Memorial The Washington Post February 11 1908 p 5 Urges Arlington Building The Washington Post March 21 1908 p 4 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission 1923 p 9 10 Favor Big Memorial The Washington Post March 30 1912 p 4 Corfield 2009 p 80 District Saves Bill The Washington Post March 5 1913 p 10 Army and Navy Chiefs and Veterans Representatives Dedicate Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington Cemetery The Washington Post May 16 1920 p 2 a b Ruane Michael E May 16 2014 Arlington Cemetery to Rename Old Amphitheater for Civil War Double Amputee James Tanner The Washington Post Retrieved May 29 2014 Carr Jette June 2 2014 Old Amphitheater Renaming Connects Arlington National Cemetery to Past Air Force News Service Retrieved September 18 2014 a b Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 pp 13 14 a b c Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 p 13 Andrews 1966 p 98 Bibliography editAndrews Owen 1994 A Moment of Silence Arlington National Cemetery Indianapolis Ind Wiley ISBN 9780891332237 Andrews Peter 1966 In Honored Glory The Story of Arlington New York G P Putnams Sons Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission 1923 Final Report of the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission Washington D C Government Printing Office hdl 2027 mdp 39015020241660 Atkinson Rick 2007 Where Valor Rests Arlington National Cemetery Washington D C National Geographic Society ISBN 9781426200892 Bigler Philip 1986 In Honored Glory Arlington National Cemetery the Final Post Arlington Va Vandamere Press ISBN 0918339057 Byrne Karen October 2002 Our Little Sanctuary in the Woods Spiritual Life at Arlington Chapel Arlington Historical Magazine 38 44 Chase Enoch Aquila 1930 The Arlington Case George Washington Custis Lee Against the United States of America Records of the Columbia Historical Society 175 207 Cohen Hennig Coffin Tristram Potter 1991 The Folklore of American Holidays Detroit Gale Research ISBN 0810376024 Corfield Justin 2009 Arlington National Cemetery In Pencak William ed Encyclopedia of the Veteran in America Volume 1 Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313340093 Cultural Landscape Program 2001 Arlington House The Robert E Lee Memorial Cultural Landscape Report PDF Report Washington D C National Capital Region National Park Service Eicher David J 2002 1997 Robert E Lee A Life Portrait Dallas Taylor Publishing Co ISBN 0878339507 Historic American Buildings Survey 1995 Arlington National Cemetery Old Amphitheater Lee and Sherman Drives Arlington National Cemetery Arlington County Virginia HABS No VA 1348 A PDF Report Washington D C National Park Service Retrieved September 20 2014 Jabbour Alan Jabbour Karen Singer 2010 Decoration Day in the Mountains Traditions of Cemetery Decoration in the Southern Appalachians Chapel Hill N C University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807833971 Loth Calder 1999 The Virginia Landmarks Register Charlottesville Va University Press of Virginia ISBN 0813918626 McCaslin Richard B 2004 Lee in the Shadow of Washington Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0807126969 Miller David W 2000 Second Only to Grant Quartermaster General Montgomery C Meigs Shippensburg Pa White Maine Books ISBN 1572492120 Parzych Cynthia 2009 Arlington National Cemetery Guilford Conn GPP Travel ISBN 9780762753291 Peters James Edward 2000 Arlington National Cemetery Shrine to America s Heroes Bethesda Md Woodbine House ISBN 1890627143 Poole Robert M 2009 On Hallowed Ground The Story of Arlington National Cemetery New York Walker amp Co ISBN 9780802715487 United States Commission of Fine Arts 1965 Report of the Commission of Fine Arts 1 July 1958 to 30 June 1963 Washington D C U S Government Printing Office External links editOfficial Web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tanner Amphitheater amp oldid 1196067468, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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