General Information:
Full Honor funerals at Arlington National Cemetery may
include the following elements:
- A casket team
- A color guard
- A firing party
- A bugler
- An escort platoon (size varies according to the rank
of the deceased)
- A military band
- A military chaplain
The Columbarium is designed for cremated
remains only, with niches in the walls of the various courts to hold
the cremated and inurned remains.
Specific
Information:
The Full Honors funeral begins at a designated
point, called a transfer point, in ANC. The religious leader conducting
the service should go to the Administration Building at least 30 minutes
prior to the funeral, which gives you time to meet with the family and
with the Cemetery Representative from Arlington National Cemetery (ANC).
There you will find out where the transfer point is. A military
chaplain may also be requested at no additional cost to the family.
For civilian leaders, a military chaplain may serve as your escort.
For specific information, contact the Cemetery Representative upon arrival.
Transfer point:
-
Look for the Cemetery Representative,
who can help you regarding protocol. Another helpful person is the
Officer in Charge (OIC), who will be near the horse drawn caisson.
-
You will stand next to the OIC
when the family arrives and the transfer ceremony begins. This ceremony
will formally transfer the inurned remains to the caisson. For an
urn, ANC uses a special casket, already placed on the caisson, to
hold the urn.
-
Prepare to salute (Civilian dress:
place your right hand over your heart) when the OIC does. As long
as the OIC is standing next to where you are, you can follow his
lead.
-
Stand where you are when the OIC
moves and continue to hold the salute (Civilian dress: place your
right hand over your heart). When you hear the command "Order
Arms", drop your hand along with the military.
-
When the OIC salutes and begins
to move along the caisson to the front, salute (Civilian dress:
hand over heart) and move past the caisson to the front as well,
dropping the salute when in front of the flag draped coffin.
Then move to a point well in front of the caisson, along the side
of the road, in order to take your place in the funeral procession.
Funeral
procession:
-
Wait there by the side of the road
until the marching units, including the band and marching platoon,
go past.
-
Salute (Civilian dress: hand over
heart) when the flag goes past.
-
Walk, not march, about 24 steps
behind the last marching unit. The caisson with the remains will
follow you at about the same spacing.
-
Follow the marching unit to the
place of burial. See Processional
Diagram and the Symbol
Chart for more information.
-
Be careful to look for the OIC.
The marching units may turn or go in a different direction shortly
before they get to the OIC. If this happens, do not follow the marching
units but rather walk to the OIC and stand alongside him.
-
Salute (Civilian dress: hand over
heart) when the OIC does, and follow his lead on when to drop your
hand.
At the Columbarium:
-
The pall bearers will remove the
urn from the caisson and prepare to march to the courtyard, where
military honors will be rendered. This may be in a central courtyard,
with a short walk, or it may be in a small temporary courtyard right
next to the road, on the side of the columbarium. The Cemetery Representative
can tell you the route that the pallbearers will use to carry the
urn to the courtyard site. See diagram
for more information.
-
Start to drop your salute and lead
the procession, after the pallbearers have retrieved the remains
and are standing with the other pallbearers, when you hear the command
"ready - step".
-
Lead the processional to the courtyard
site, saluting (Civilian dress: hand over heart) after you stop
and face the remains. Turn to continue facing the remains if appropriate
to do so. Drop the salute (Civilian dress: hand over heart) along
with the OIC.
Back to top
At the Columbarium: the courtyard
-
Stand to the side, allowing enough
room for the pall bearers and OIC to move past you. You should stand
so that you will be near the OIC when they come into position to
place the urn on its stand. (Center courtyard only: The pallbearers
will normally enter the courtyard from the right side. They will
then go behind the green chairs and place the urn on the stand.)
-
The pallbearers will position the
remains over the grave and unfold the flag, holding it taut over
the remains. Your cue to begin the religious services at the
grave is when the pallbearers stop moving.
-
Please conduct your courtside services
according to your religious tradition. Also, please remember that
time is our enemy at ANC, with an average of 23 funerals each day.
We therefore request that these services be kept under ten minutes
in length.
-
The OIC and the pallbearers will
look for you to step back at the end of your service to indicate
that you are finished.
-
Please Note:
If the funeral is for a General officer, please step back just before
the last prayer or final few words. There will then be a cannon
fire salute. Then, please complete your courtside services.
-
Military honors will then be rendered.
Chaplains will position next to the OIC to receive the flag to present
to the Next of Kin (NOK). Civilian leaders will stand to the side.
Follow the OIC's lead in saluting (Civilian dress: hand over heart).
-
Military honors will consist of
three rifle volleys by seven riflemen, Taps by a military bugler,
and the formal folding of the flag.
-
The pallbearer holding the folded
flag will then march to your front.
-
The presentation of the flag: (See
Diagram
for more information.)
-
Note: The Coast Guard and the
Marine Corps will provide a military representative to present
the flag.
-
Chaplains: The bearer will
turn and present you the folded flag. Salute the bearer with
the flag and take the flag with your left hand on top and your
right hand on the bottom, and stand while the bearer salutes
the flag. When the bearer drops his salute, wait until the bearers
are dismissed and then go to the NOK (normally seated on the
left front seat) and present the flag. When you present
the flag, use these or similar words: "On behalf
of the President of the United States, a grateful nation, and
a proud Navy, this flag is presented as a token of our appreciation
for the honorable and faithful service rendered by your loved
one to his / her country and Navy". After presenting
the flag, salute the flag and move to the side.
-
Note:
If the funeral is for a Flag officer or Navy Captain, a special
representative will present the flag.
- Civilian leaders: The OIC or designated
military representative will present the flag
- The Arlington lady will offer condolences. This
concludes the military honors.
At the Columbarium: the niche
-
The Cemetery Representative
will invite the family to follow you and the Cemetery Representative
to the niche (place in the wall where the urn is placed) for inurnment.
The Cemetery Representative will show you where the niche is as
you walk.
-
When all have arrived at the niche,
the Cemetery Representative will invite a family member to place
the remains in the niche.
-
At this point, the Cemetery Representative
will look to you to do the committal service or its equivalent.
Please do this very short service according to the dictates of your
faith. This may be as simple as a short committal prayer and a benediction.
At the end of this service, you are welcome to offer condolences
to the family.
-
The Cemetery Representative will
announce that services have ended, and invite people to go to their
cars.
Last updated:
Thursday, December 06, 2001
POC: Navy Chaplain section at 703-695-6796
Back to top
Return
to A Clergy Guide for Burials home page.
|