The
Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va.,
was dedicated on May 15, 1920. While many ceremonies are conducted throughout
the country, many consider the services at Arlington's Memorial Amphitheater
to be the nation's official ceremonies to honor all American service
members who serve to keep the United States free.
About 5,000 visitors attend each of the three major annual
memorial services in the Amphitheater. They take place Easter, Memorial
Day and Veterans Day and are sponsored by the U.S. Army Military District
of Washington. The Easter Sunrise Service begins at 6 a.m. Memorial
Day and Veterans Day services always begin at 11 a.m. Many military
organizations also conduct annual memorial services in the amphitheater.
The Memorial Amphitheater was the dream of Judge Ivory
G. Kimball, who wished to have a place to assemble and honor the American
defenders.
Because of Kimball's campaign, Congress authorized its
construction March 4, 1913. Judge Kimball participated in the ground-breaking
ceremony March 1, 1915, but did not live to see his dream completed.
Ivory Kimball died May 15, 1916, and was buried in Section 3 of the
cemetery, near the Memorial Amphitheater he campaigned to build. President
Woodrow Wilson placed its cornerstone Oct. 15, 1915.
One
copy of the following items is sealed inside the box placed in the cornerstone
that day:
- The Bible
- The Declaration of Independence
- The U.S. Constitution
- U.S. Flag (1915)
- Designs and plans for the amphitheater
- L'Enfant's map design of the city of Washington, D.C.
- Autograph of the amphitheater commission
- One of each U.S. coin in use in 1915
- One of each U.S. postage stamp in use in 1915
- 1914 map of Washington, D.C.
- The Congressional Directory
- Boyd's City Directory for the District of Columbia
- Autographed photo of President Woodrow Wilson
- The cornerstone dedication program
- The Evening Star newspaper account of the ceremonies,
and the campaign to build the Amphitheater
The
Amphitheater is constructed mainly of Vermont-quarried Danby marble.
The marble in the Memorial Display Room is imported Botticino, a stone
mined in Italy. The Memorial Display Room, between the amphitheater
and the Tomb of the Unknowns, houses plaques and other tributes presented
in honor of the four service members interred at the Tomb of the Unknowns
(first known as the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier). A small chapel is
beneath the Amphitheater stage.
The names of 44 U.S. battles from the American Revolution
through the Spanish-American War are inscribed around the frieze above
the colonnade. The names of 14 U.S. Army generals and 14 U.S. Navy admirals
prior to World War I are inscribed on each side of the amphitheater
stage.
"When
we assumed the soldier we did not lay aside the citizen," from
then-Gen. George Washington's June 26, 1775, letter to the Provincial
Congress is inscribed inside the apse. "We here highly resolve
that these dead shall not have died in vain," from President Abraham
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address is inscribed above the stage.
"DULCE ET DECORUM EST PRO PATRIA
MORI," a quote from Horace's Ode III,
2, 13 is etched above the west entrance of the Memorial Amphitheater.
Translated from the Latin: "It is sweet and fitting to die for
one's country."
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