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The website for Arlington National Cemetery "unpublished" links to lists of notable graves, walking tours and educational material pertaining to Black, Hispanic and women veterans, as well as some ...
A photo of Section 43 of Arlington National Cemetery, Va., in 2017. The cemetery’s 651 acres is the final resting place for more than 400,000 service members, veterans and their families.
From George Washington to Robert E. Lee, Arlington's history is as complicated as our own. Here's how it became the hallowed ground it is today.
As part of the DEI directive brought on by the White House, Arlington National Cemetery scrubbed the familes of Black, Hispanic and women service members - even mine.
The Arlington National Cemetery website has removed links to information on prominent Black, Hispanic and female service members as part of Trump’s anti-DEI efforts.
The caisson teams, one of Arlington’s most hallowed traditions for laying veterans to rest, were pulled from duty in 2023, after a scathing Army report on the health of horses in the program and ...
Two Jewish World War I veterans, Pvt. David Moser and Pfc. Adolph Hanf, were buried under tombstones with Christian crosses until now. The new tombstones with the Star of David were unveiled in a ...