REAL ID Requirements

Beginning May 7, 2025, all individuals over the age of 18 who are authorized to drive onto Arlington National Cemetery should be prepared to present a REAL ID at the security checkpoint.

Published on: Tuesday, April 29, 2025 read more ...

AUTHORS

JENIFER LEIGH VAN VLECK

Gold Star Mothers and Families Honor the Fallen

By Kevin M. Hymel on 10/3/2024

Retired U.S. Army Sgt. Maj. Ivory Hinton had to pause several times to compose himself while addressing a group of Gold Star Mothers, civilians and U.S. military service members gathered in Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Chapel on Sept. 29, 2024, for the annual Gold Star Mother’s and Family’s Day. He paused the first time after listing three soldiers who were killed in Iraq under his command. “While I hold memories of each of them close to my heart,” he said before pausing, “it was Spc. Lucas Elliott who was the most recent KIA under my leadership in Basra, Iraq, on July 15, 2011.” He paused again, this time longer, before explaining how losing men under his command had tested his resolve.

“For the Last Time, Post:” Tomb Guard Bids Farewell to ANC

By Kevin M. Hymel on 10/1/2024

During the Changing of the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on the morning of Friday, Sept. 20, 2024, Spc. Jonathan Radabaugh said something unique to the relief guard: “Spc. Adam Platt, for the last time, post.” Platt spent the next half hour guarding the Tomb until Radabaugh came out again to replace him with another guard, at which point he stated: “Spc. Adam Platt, for the last time, fall out.”

Lt. Gen. Arthur J. Gregg, Namesake of Fort Gregg-Adams, Laid to Rest

By Kevin M. Hymel on 9/24/2024

Lt. Gen. Arthur J. Gregg achieved two firsts in U.S. Army history: He was the first Black Army officer to reach the rank of lieutenant general and the first living person to have an Army post named for him. He attended the renaming ceremony at Fort Gregg-Adams, Virginia, formerly Fort Lee, on April 27, 2023.

Belgian Officials Honor Those Who Died in World War I

By Kevin M. Hymel on 9/23/2024

A group of Belgian officials came to Arlington National Cemetery on Sept. 16, 2024, to honor the fallen from World War I. They included Defense Attaché to the Embassy of Belgium Brig. Gen. Bart Verbist; Director of the Ypres Last Post Association Carl Denys; and two Belgian Army buglers, Cpl. Tonny Desodt and Adjutant Christophe Wils. The Doughboy Foundation, which has an exchange program with Belgium, hosted the group—most of whom were in Washington, D.C., for the unveiling of a new sculpture at the World War I Memorial. Doughboy Foundation Director Jari Villanueva gave his guests a tour of the Memorial Amphitheater Display Room, which features exhibits on the history of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and its origins during World War I.

“His Patriotic Spirit Gave Him No Rest”: The Life of Major David F. Cole, 107th USCT

Every day, visitors to Arlington House, a National Park Service site located within Arlington National Cemetery, pass a row of 50 headstones lining the path around the flower garden. Located within the boundaries of Arlington National Cemetery, these are the graves of U.S. Army officers who died during the Civil War. Most of the headstones are uniform in size and shape, all made of white marble. One however, stands much taller than any other. This privately purchased headstone often catches visitors’ attention. Those who stop to read it will find a short inscription: “D. F. Cole, Major of the 107th Col’d Infy. Died at Point of Rocks, Va., Jan. 7, 1865, aged 27 years – FLORENCE.” This is much more information than most Civil War grave markers provide. Yet it raises more questions than it answers. Who was Major D. F. Cole, and why was he buried so close to Arlington House with a privately furnished marker instead of a government-issued headstone?

"Selfless": Honoring Air Force Pioneer Col. Joseph Kittinger, Jr.

By Kevin M. Hymel on 9/17/2024

On Sept. 9, 2024, four U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons roared over Arlington National Cemetery, and one soared out in the “missing man” formation as a final salute to Col. Joseph Kittinger, Jr., a wing commander during the Vietnam War. As the honor guard carried Kittinger’s urn to Section 36A, a lone airman held high an MIA/POW flag, honoring Kittinger’s eleven months in a North Vietnamese prison camp.

Pearl Harbor Sailor from USS California Laid to Rest

By Kevin M. Hymel on 9/10/2024

Cheryle Stone did not even know she had a second cousin—much less one who had been killed at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941—until the U.S. Navy contacted her in 2021, asking for a DNA sample. The sample matched, and Stone was suddenly connected to history.

Chaplain Fox of World War II’s “Famous Four Chaplains” Memorialized

By Kevin M. Hymel on 9/10/2024

U.S. Army Chaplain (Lt.) George Fox personified the ideals of a military chaplain: love, leadership and sacrifice. On the night of Feb. 3, 1943, a German torpedo struck the U.S. Army Transport Ship Dorchester. Fox, and three other chaplains onboard, calmed panicked men, gave their life vests to men without them, helped men into the lifeboats and then remained on the sinking ship, praying for their fellow soldiers’ safety.

How Tomb Guards Beat the Heat

By Kevin M. Hymel on 8/28/2024

During the searing summer heat of 2024, visitors to Arlington National Cemetery fanned themselves and sought shade. The Tomb Guards, meanwhile, were undeterred by the high temperatures. They conducted their 24/7 duty to guard the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, walking smartly in front of the Tomb wearing their black shoes, long slacks, white gloves, wool blouses and service caps.

Veterans Drop into ANC to Honor Airborne Day

By Kevin M. Hymel on 8/21/2024

American paratroopers, past and present, descended into Arlington National Cemetery on National Airborne Day, Aug.16, 2024, to honor those who pioneered the airborne concept and others who jumped into battle. Two separate groups came to lay wreaths at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier: the 82nd Airborne Division Association and the Round Canopy Parachuting Team-USA.

Ninety-six-year-old World War II veteran Harry Miller led the wreath layers for the 82nd Airborne Division Association. Although never a paratrooper himself, Miller serv