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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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Page 1: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Grave Affairs:Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor

Micki McElyaAssistant Professor of HistoryUniversity of ConnecticutNovember 7, 2011

Page 2: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

At center, the Tomb of the Unknowns and Memorial Amphitheater. Photo credit: Minot Air Force Base, stock image

Page 3: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Photo credit: http://www.army.mil

Page 4: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

“It has been said that Arlington is the heart of the republic.”

—Arlington: In Eternal Vigil (2006)

Page 5: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Photo credit: Arlington National Cemetery, stock image

Page 6: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November
Page 7: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Postcards from Cemetery Gift Shop 2008

Page 8: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November
Page 9: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Mathew Brady, “Long Row of Blacks Reading from a Book

Outside at Contraband School, or Freedman’s

Village,” (1865).

Harper’s WeeklyMay 7, 1864

Page 10: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November
Page 11: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Spanish-American War Memorial, 1902 (left)

Spanish-American War Nurses Memorial,1905 (right)

Page 12: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

U.S.S. Maine Memorial, 1912 (left)

Confederate Monument, 1914 (right)

Page 13: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Fritz Guerin, Little Cuba (1898) Gettysburg Reunion, July 3, 1913

Page 14: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Burying the Unknown Soldier of WWI, 1921

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

Page 15: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

“It has been said that Arlington is the heart of the republic.”

—Arlington: In Eternal Vigil (2006)

Page 16: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Heather Lynn Johnsen, Tomb Sentinel, March 22, 1996.Photo credit: Mark Wilson, Associated Press

Page 17: Grave Affairs: Arlington National Cemetery and the Politics of Death and Honor Micki McElya Assistant Professor of History University of Connecticut November

Unknown, Grave 449, Section 68, 2009Photo credit: www.salon.com