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Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November 7, 2011
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At center, the Tomb of the Unknowns and Memorial Amphitheater. Photo credit: Minot Air Force Base, stock image
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Photo credit: http://www.army.mil
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“It has been said that Arlington is the heart of the republic.” —Arlington: In Eternal Vigil (2006)
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Photo credit: Arlington National Cemetery, stock image
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Postcards from Cemetery Gift Shop 2008
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Mathew Brady, “Long Row of Blacks Reading from a Book Outside at Contraband School, or Freedman’s Village,” (1865). Harper’s Weekly May 7, 1864
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Spanish-American War Memorial, 1902 (left) Spanish-American War Nurses Memorial, 1905 (right)
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U.S.S. Maine Memorial, 1912 (left) Confederate Monument, 1914 (right)
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Fritz Guerin, Little Cuba (1898) Gettysburg Reunion, July 3, 1913
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Burying the Unknown Soldier of WWI, 1921 Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons
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“It has been said that Arlington is the heart of the republic.” —Arlington: In Eternal Vigil (2006)
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Heather Lynn Johnsen, Tomb Sentinel, March 22, 1996. Photo credit: Mark Wilson, Associated Press
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Unknown, Grave 449, Section 68, 2009 Photo credit: www.salon.com
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