The Guard of the Unknown Soldiers has been on duty 24/7 365 for almost a century. In blistering DC heat. In Blizzard conditions. Even during at least one major hurricane. The Guard NEVER ceases its watch. Thanks for your reverence for our unknown combat dead.
Note : Only the Sergeant of the Guard wears rank insignia. The guards do NOT. That is so that they never out rank the Unknowns from WWI, WWII, and Korea. There was a fourth unknown from Vietnam buried there, but he was later identified by DNA.
The Tomb of the unknown soldier is a very small section of the Arlington National Cemetery. President Kennedy and family are buried in another part. Its huge! Over 400,000 US vets and eligible family are buried there. Worth a visit!
It's a beautiful cemetery. One of the most pristine I've see. I grew up in the area, and have such an appreciation for the monuments, museums, architecture, and history.
If you have ever been to Arlington National Cemetery you would totally get the reverence shown here. It's beautiful. It's inspiring and heartbreaking at the same time. Rows upon rows of white headstones literally as far as you can see. It takes your breath away and brings tears to your eyes. So happy I got to see it in person. Thank you to all of our United States military. 🇺🇸
Yes, I've been there for the ceremony. My father took us when we lived in the area. It's very solemn, serious, and amazing. Thank you for reacting to this.
There is a video about how difficult it is to be picked for this duty. It shows what they go through prior to taking their place guarding the tomb. It is one of the highest honors to guard the tomb. There is another about the history behind the tomb. Both are very moving and worth seeing. I, myself, have been to Washington many, many times, both on business and pleasure, and i never get tired of any of the monuments and honors there. Standing and reading the words on the walls of Abraham Lincoln to the Viet Nam, Korean, and Ww2 memorals and the Washington monument. I did a great trip of the historical areas in Philadelphia and then down to Washington. It is only a 2-3 hr train ride between the 2.
Not sure if you’ll see this Ryan, but there are a couple other videos you should check out if you enjoyed this - one is the story of the tomb, and another is why you shouldn’t mess with the Sentinels. There’s also a short documentary about the Sentinels that goes more into their training… I’m 99% sure I’ve seen it on RUclips but when I look all I can find are those two. ⬆️ I first saw it while watching movies on an airplane though so it’s not a RUclips RUclips video You should also watch the USMC Silent Drill Platoon… there’s lots of videos of them. The Sentinels’ precision is amazing, but theirs is absolutely unreal
I've been to Arlington National Cemetery. I watched the Guard ceremony, and visited the graves of John and Robert Kennedy. FYI, the clock chiming the hour is in the Netherlands Carillon which was a gift to the American People in gratitude for the American participation in the Liberation of the Netherlands during WWII.
I get emotional, each time I see this. I wonder, if the mom of a missing soldier, from one of those wars, found a bit of comfort, thinking this could be her son. I hope so.
I've been to DC 3 times and I've made sure not only to visit the Arlington National Cemetery each time, but also to see this display of professionalism, respect and patriotism by these elite soldiers of the Old Guard; it never gets old. After the first visit, I read former 'sentinel' Tom Cotton's book: "Sacred Duty: A Soldier's Tour at Arlington National Cemetery" - he explains in detail what the few who have made tomb guard go through as well as the reasons and history of the tomb. It is no wonder the 'Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Identification Badge' is the second least-awarded badge in the US Army; second only to the Astronaut Badge. I couldn't put it down, reading the entire book in one sitting - a first for me! The Cemetery itself, however, is an awe inspiring sight and after three trips having spent a full day there each time, I still have yet to cover the entire grounds - it is huge. Arlington is by far, one of the most peaceful, quiet (except for the flights in and out of Reagan National) and most beautiful places I have ever seen in all of my 57 years.
To clarify - the Senator was never a Sentinel and made no such claim. He was in the 3d Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) as are the Sentinels and other specialty units.
The ceremony is, well, ceremonial. But the soldiers who qualify to guard are elite, among the best of the best. It's a real honor to be chosen, and they have to work very hard for the honor, and take it very seriously as well they should. I think there's a RUclips video about that. Country singer Trace Adkins has a music video for his song "Arlington". It's a very sobering tribute for the fighting men laid to rest there. I highly recommend it. I'm gonna go now, and watch it again for the umpteenth time and shed a tear or ten out of sorrow and pride.
it is such a huge honor to chosen for this duty. If I am correct, its more or less a lifetime appointment. You may not be serving at the tomb for more than a few years but you are not allowed to do anything to dishonor the uniform or you will have your status revoked.
A good program to see is the National Geographic Special "Arlington" about the history and how they do things there. But the most interesting part is how the tomb guard prepare to go out for their shift. It is so exacting that the uniform is absolutely perfect. There is a ton of work that goes on behind the scenes for every burial performed. It's well worth the watch.
The soldiers who guard the tomb are some of the youngest in the Army. The training they go through to be a tomb soldier is so intense. You should check out the program.
Thank you for showing such respect to our unknown soldiers. As a subscriber of yours, I would love to help you get over that 5,000 mark. Best if luck on your channel.
Every time I go to visit the grave of my parents, I always make it a point to visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and witness the changing of the guard.
Arlington National Cemetery is for ANY member of the American armed forces, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is inside the cemetery. The changing of the guard is amazing to watch in person
I was honored to accompany my father on his Honor Flight to see his memorials in DC. We also got to witness the changing of the guards at the Tomb. I've seen the ceremony 2x. Once for a high school trip (from Houston) and then even more memorable and humbling as my father's Honor Flight guardian.
There is a really well done video here in youtube all about the guard, who they are, what they have to do to become a guard. In that video they show and talk about a time where the guard dropped his service weapon and the bayonet pierced his foot. He did not wince, he said nothing, he kept his composure even though blood was oozing from his shoe. These guys are beyond dedicated to the terrible responsibility placed upon them to protect with dignity and honor. Interesting fact, the tomb of the unknown from the Vietnam war is empty! The remains, after they were interred were later identified by DNA to be Michael Joseph Blassie. His remains were returned to his family and they buried him in a private plot in Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, Missouri.
I visited Arlington several times and on two occasions I have visited the Tomb with a friend of mine. We both were members of The D. C. Police Ceremonial Honor Guard. It is a very emotional sight to witness.
Minor correction the whole cemetery is not all unknown soldiers. This monument is dedicated to those that have never been identified. In the large crypt is a soldier from WW1 and in front of it on the plaza floor are soldiers from WW2, Korea, and Vietnam
You should do a video on the Gaurd they explain the whole process of being assigned as a tomb gaurd to their uniform, which not one thread can be out of place. Pretty cool
I really enjoyed your commentary. I've seen this video about 50 times From 50 different reactors and it just now dawned on me I wonder who choreographed, for lack of a better word, this Memoriam Routine and if it is the same as it was on day 1. This is a link to the United States marine corp silent drill team At gatlin high school. This is the best video to react to because it's done in a gymnasium and you really get the weight of the guns when they hit the floor
Nice reaction. You should check out the short video when one of the guards gets stabbed in the foot with the bayonet. He barely flinches, or the video called, “Why you never mess with the guards of the Unknown Soldier”.
Arlington Cemetry is the highest cemetery. There are regional cemeteries with simpler, which any veteran eligible. Most choose to be buried with family at home. There are corps of vet who come, march, do a gun salute. They take the flag that was draped on the coffin, and do the flag folding ceremony, and gift it to the closest relative.
@@ronm2023 - No, you are wrong! It did happen, and was preserved on film. You can see it on another of these videos regarding the guards of the Tomb of the Unknowns.
Great video. Something else you may want to check out is some Kentucky Ballistics material. The four bore rifle v/s body armor and the punt gun v/s car. He also has a video of his 50 cal exploding with him. Crazy stuff....
Depending on other events taking place at the time, the entirety of the ceremony can be conducted without a single verbal command. Only the Commander of the Relief's instructions to the audience are spoken aloud.
There is a context to this that I think is missed by non-US people, and that is the fact that the Tomb has its origin in the First World War, the "War to End All Wars". We did not directly have an interest in the conflict; it was a European massacre. But, as the unstated belief goes, we sacrificed our soldiers to fight for others, to save a righteous cause, even though we were not threatened. And we won. So there is more than just the pathos of an unknown(s) soldier in an meaningless fight, but rather a selfless, noble sacrifice with no tangible reward other than doing a "great good", the fight for world peace and security for all. Same with World War II, and Cold War conflicts. Whether based in reality or not, pretty much all Americans who have relatives who lived through these times feel that inside, and makes the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier a sacred place beyond the memory of one "unknown but to God".
Well, actually the cemetery was already there before the tomb was. The cemetery also has President Kennedy burial site, The shuttle challenger crew. The cemetery is on the property of General Robert E Lee.
The sergeant of the guard is the only one that can display rank. The guards themselves display no rank at all regardless of their actual military rank so as to not "out rank" the unknown soldiers there entombed.
While your enthusiasm is absolutely genuine, some of your facts need tweeking. Arlington National Cemetery is NOT a cemetery for AN unknown soldier. The particular TOMB where this ceremony takes place is the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (sometimes known as the Tomb of the Unknowns (below)). The cemetery itself also houses the remains of our former president John F. Kennedy, assassinated in Dallas, Texas, USA in 1963, at whose gravesite is the Eternal Flame - a flame of remembrance never allowed to dim. Arlington, a city directly west across the Potomac River from Washington, DC, was originally part of the then-newly constituted Federal District, known as the District of Columbia (the "DC" in Washington, DC). Both of the states of Maryland and Virginia, divided in this region by the Potomac, ceded (1790) land to the newly formed (1789) federal government on which to build a new capital for a new nation. In 1847 the federal government returned the Virginia cessation to its original sovereignty, which is to say, it was returned to Virginia. Robert E. Lee, leader of the Army of Northern Virginia during our Civil War, and the premier general of the Confederate States of America (CSA - those states which seceded from the Union in order to prosecute their Civil War (1861-1865) against the federal government), lived at a plantation in Arlington. Though routed at almost every turn during the first two years of the war, the Federals took Arlington (then just a town), just across the Potomac, within the first month of hostilities. It is the land of that plantation, the estate of the rebel general Lee, which comprises the outline of today's Arlington National Cemetery, having been confiscated in the year prior to the war's conclusion and ultimately - or, I should say, originally - intended to be the last resting place of fallen Union (that is to say, victorious Northern (Union) servicemen (though there were so many dead soldiers that of necessity they were buried all over God's green acre)). Arlington is without a doubt the most prestigious of all American military cemeteries. Today there are still about a score and a half of weekly burials there. Real estate is at a premium, and I don't know the criteria for being allocated space, but there's little doubt that the running for space is in earnest. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, as those of us of a certain elder age are still wont to call it, is sometimes referred to as the Tomb of the Unknowns, though I believe its official name includes the word "Soldier" and is entirely in the grammatical singular. In 1921, I think it was, an unknown soldier from World War I was interred at the monument. In 1958, an unknown from each of World War II and the Korean War joined that hapless individual from a generation of more earlier, who had previously joined his fallen brother from perhaps two or three generations prior. Who else might have been buried there - Vietnam? Iraq? Afghanistan? - I know not. Anyhow, this is a more fulsome story of this impressive cemetery than you've heretofore been led to believe. Arlington National Cemetery today houses the remains of some 400k fallen American heroes, and though I have no knowledge of my supposition, I would not be surprised to learn if the remains of fallen Unknowns from the Revolution (1775-1783), the War of 1812 (1812-1815), the Mexican-American War (1846-1848), or the Spanish-American War (1898) have been disinterred and reinterred within these coveted acres.
And some of your facts need tweaking. 😀 Arlington is not a city, it is Arlington County, and the smallest self-governed county in the country. Robert E. Lee lived at the estate but never owned it. It belonged to his father-in-law who left it to his daughter (Lee's wife) and son. That was a big part of the Supreme Court argument which eventually returned it to the Lee family. There are three Unknowns - WWI, WWII and Korean War. The Vietnam Unknown joined them in 1984 but was identified and removed in 1998. That crypt will forever remain empty as there are relatively few Unknowns from that conflict. There are no Unknowns from subsequent wars. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is correct and always will be. We know it was a Soldier and there is only one Tomb. The service branch of the WWII and Korean War Unknowns is not known, and they are in crypts. Strongly recommend anyone with your interest in ANC visit its website.
I feel like it shouldn't be open to the public and only for the families of the respected members of our armed forces . My family is military and I have so much respect for the people who fought and continue to fight for our freedom ❤❤❤❤. The government takes this place very seriously and i ask everyone who visits to please show respect .
Vast majority of visitors are respectful and follow the rules and regulations. Ridiculous to say it should be closed to everyone but military families.
I like you Ryan but don't enjoy your 'reactions' when you have already seen the videos. In your introductions you talk about details that you have already seen in the videos.
Hi Anne :) My reactions are always live. Any details I speak about before the reaction isn’t based on videos I’ve seen, but rather on info I know about the topic.
The Guard of the Unknown Soldiers has been on duty 24/7 365 for almost a century. In blistering DC heat. In Blizzard conditions. Even during at least one major hurricane. The Guard NEVER ceases its watch. Thanks for your reverence for our unknown combat dead.
Quite a few hurricanes and blizzards. And even a derecho.
The 24 hour guard started in 1948.
I've watched this ceremony in person. It is quite moving. You can hear a pin drop.
I like how quiet it is!!
Note : Only the Sergeant of the Guard wears rank insignia. The guards do NOT. That is so that they never out rank the Unknowns from WWI, WWII, and Korea. There was a fourth unknown from Vietnam buried there, but he was later identified by DNA.
The Tomb of the unknown soldier is a very small section of the Arlington National Cemetery. President Kennedy and family are buried in another part. Its huge!
Over 400,000 US vets and eligible family are buried there. Worth a visit!
I really want to visit it one day!!!
It's a beautiful cemetery. One of the most pristine I've see. I grew up in the area, and have such an appreciation for the monuments, museums, architecture, and history.
You are correct, there are now 639 acres.
If you have ever been to Arlington National Cemetery you would totally get the reverence shown here. It's beautiful. It's inspiring and heartbreaking at the same time. Rows upon rows of white headstones literally as far as you can see. It takes your breath away and brings tears to your eyes. So happy I got to see it in person. Thank you to all of our United States military. 🇺🇸
Yes, I've been there for the ceremony. My father took us when we lived in the area. It's very solemn, serious, and amazing. Thank you for reacting to this.
No problem! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
I live in Arlington now and it’s amazing to be a 20 min jog from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier & Iwo Jima memorial. Such history!
There is a video about how difficult it is to be picked for this duty. It shows what they go through prior to taking their place guarding the tomb. It is one of the highest honors to guard the tomb. There is another about the history behind the tomb. Both are very moving and worth seeing. I, myself, have been to Washington many, many times, both on business and pleasure, and i never get tired of any of the monuments and honors there. Standing and reading the words on the walls of Abraham Lincoln to the Viet Nam, Korean, and Ww2 memorals and the Washington monument. I did a great trip of the historical areas in Philadelphia and then down to Washington. It is only a 2-3 hr train ride between the 2.
Beautiful movements I don't think an average person could ever replicate.
Absolutely! I mean just look at the attrition rate… If I’m not mistaken, only 20% of soldiers who apply are even selected to begin training
Not sure if you’ll see this Ryan, but there are a couple other videos you should check out if you enjoyed this - one is the story of the tomb, and another is why you shouldn’t mess with the Sentinels. There’s also a short documentary about the Sentinels that goes more into their training… I’m 99% sure I’ve seen it on RUclips but when I look all I can find are those two. ⬆️ I first saw it while watching movies on an airplane though so it’s not a RUclips RUclips video
You should also watch the USMC Silent Drill Platoon… there’s lots of videos of them. The Sentinels’ precision is amazing, but theirs is absolutely unreal
I've been to Arlington National Cemetery. I watched the Guard ceremony, and visited the graves of John and Robert Kennedy. FYI, the clock chiming the hour is in the Netherlands Carillon which was a gift to the American People in gratitude for the American participation in the Liberation of the Netherlands during WWII.
Um...no. It's the amphitheater at the Tomb.
I get emotional, each time I see this. I wonder, if the mom of a missing soldier, from one of those wars, found a bit of comfort, thinking this could be her son. I hope so.
I've been to DC 3 times and I've made sure not only to visit the Arlington National Cemetery each time, but also to see this display of professionalism, respect and patriotism by these elite soldiers of the Old Guard; it never gets old. After the first visit, I read former 'sentinel' Tom Cotton's book: "Sacred Duty: A Soldier's Tour at Arlington National Cemetery" - he explains in detail what the few who have made tomb guard go through as well as the reasons and history of the tomb. It is no wonder the 'Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Identification Badge' is the second least-awarded badge in the US Army; second only to the Astronaut Badge. I couldn't put it down, reading the entire book in one sitting - a first for me! The Cemetery itself, however, is an awe inspiring sight and after three trips having spent a full day there each time, I still have yet to cover the entire grounds - it is huge. Arlington is by far, one of the most peaceful, quiet (except for the flights in and out of Reagan National) and most beautiful places I have ever seen in all of my 57 years.
To clarify - the Senator was never a Sentinel and made no such claim. He was in the 3d Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) as are the Sentinels and other specialty units.
The ceremony is, well, ceremonial. But the soldiers who qualify to guard are elite, among the best of the best. It's a real honor to be chosen, and they have to work very hard for the honor, and take it very seriously as well they should. I think there's a RUclips video about that.
Country singer Trace Adkins has a music video for his song "Arlington". It's a very sobering tribute for the fighting men laid to rest there. I highly recommend it. I'm gonna go now, and watch it again for the umpteenth time and shed a tear or ten out of sorrow and pride.
it is such a huge honor to chosen for this duty. If I am correct, its more or less a lifetime appointment. You may not be serving at the tomb for more than a few years but you are not allowed to do anything to dishonor the uniform or you will have your status revoked.
A good program to see is the National Geographic Special "Arlington" about the history and how they do things there. But the most interesting part is how the tomb guard prepare to go out for their shift. It is so exacting that the uniform is absolutely perfect. There is a ton of work that goes on behind the scenes for every burial performed. It's well worth the watch.
Yes, it is one of the best documentaries about ANC.
Please check out the USAF Honor Guard if you haven't already! MARVELOUS reaction!
The soldiers who guard the tomb are some of the youngest in the Army. The training they go through to be a tomb soldier is so intense. You should check out the program.
Sitting here at my computer I remained silent, it's called respect.
Thank you for showing such respect to our unknown soldiers. As a subscriber of yours, I would love to help you get over that 5,000 mark. Best if luck on your channel.
Every time I go to visit the grave of my parents, I always make it a point to visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and witness the changing of the guard.
Arlington National Cemetery is for ANY member of the American armed forces, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is inside the cemetery. The changing of the guard is amazing to watch in person
I was honored to accompany my father on his Honor Flight to see his memorials in DC. We also got to witness the changing of the guards at the Tomb. I've seen the ceremony 2x. Once for a high school trip (from Houston) and then even more memorable and humbling as my father's Honor Flight guardian.
There is a really well done video here in youtube all about the guard, who they are, what they have to do to become a guard. In that video they show and talk about a time where the guard dropped his service weapon and the bayonet pierced his foot. He did not wince, he said nothing, he kept his composure even though blood was oozing from his shoe. These guys are beyond dedicated to the terrible responsibility placed upon them to protect with dignity and honor. Interesting fact, the tomb of the unknown from the Vietnam war is empty! The remains, after they were interred were later identified by DNA to be Michael Joseph Blassie. His remains were returned to his family and they buried him in a private plot in Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, Missouri.
As a former Army attack helicopter pilot with combat experience, I really liked how you remained silent during the entire video. Thank you!
I went on the 4th of July some years back and they had a laying of the wreathe ceremony. It’s was so touching and beautiful.
I visited Arlington several times and on two occasions I have visited the Tomb with a friend of mine. We both were members of The D. C. Police Ceremonial Honor Guard. It is a very emotional sight to witness.
Thank you for your such respect you gave thank you so much
The most difficult medal to get is astronaut, after Sentinel.
Minor correction the whole cemetery is not all unknown soldiers. This monument is dedicated to those that have never been identified. In the large crypt is a soldier from WW1 and in front of it on the plaza floor are soldiers from WW2, Korea, and Vietnam
The Vietnam Unknown is no longer there. He was identified some years after internment. His family wanted him reinterned in the family plot.
@@graceskerpLt. Michael Vlassie, USAF, KIA Vietnam. Re interred Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, St. Louis County, Missouri.
@@jimreilly917 He made it home. CAVU Airman.
@@graceskerp Internment was 1984, identified and removed in 1998. It wasn't a family decision - he was no longer unknown.
You should check out how the tomb came into existence and how some of the entombed were chosen.
That’s definitely an excellent video. Good recommendation!
As I understand it. 3/4 of the world's countries have a Tomb Of the Unknowns. Some just aren't called that, but it's the same thing.
Thank you 🙏 very impressive ☝️respect for the unknown ceremony ❤👏👏👏🙏🇺🇸👍🎥👋☮️
You should do a video on the Gaurd they explain the whole process of being assigned as a tomb gaurd to their uniform, which not one thread can be out of place. Pretty cool
I just saw the ceremony today.
Very interesting and sad.
Highly recommend seeing!! ❤
I've seen it twice and it is a humbling experience. You see the graves stretch as far as the eye can see. It's quite a sight🙏🏼👍🏼
Great reaction!
I really enjoyed your commentary. I've seen this video about 50 times From 50 different reactors and it just now dawned on me I wonder who choreographed, for lack of a better word, this Memoriam Routine and if it is the same as it was on day 1. This is a link to the United States marine corp silent drill team At gatlin high school. This is the best video to react to because it's done in a gymnasium and you really get the weight of the guns when they hit the floor
Nice reaction. You should check out the short video when one of the guards gets stabbed in the foot with the bayonet. He barely flinches, or the video called, “Why you never mess with the guards of the Unknown Soldier”.
Thank you for your respect. I want to go and see that ceremony so much it hurts. Someday❤
Cheers to the good people of SA
I was there in my junior year of high school.
It is the tomb of the unknown soldier. Part of the larger cemetery
Arlington Cemetry is the highest cemetery. There are regional cemeteries with simpler, which any veteran eligible. Most choose to be buried with family at home. There are corps of vet who come, march, do a gun salute. They take the flag that was draped on the coffin, and do the flag folding ceremony, and gift it to the closest relative.
Also please don’t apologize for being silent… sometimes silence IS THE APPROPRIATE reaction. Thank you so much for your respect
I read that once a guard lost control of his rifle during the ceremony and the bayonet ran into his foot .. and he continued as if nothing happened.
That is a crazy display of toughness!
I imagine that is one of many untrue myths about the guards
@@ronm2023True story with video on RUclips and articles to back it up.
I've seen the video, you can see the blood squeezing out of the hole in his shoe as he marches like nothing happened
@@ronm2023 - No, you are wrong! It did happen, and was preserved on film. You can see it on another of these videos regarding the guards of the Tomb of the Unknowns.
Great video. Something else you may want to check out is some Kentucky Ballistics material. The four bore rifle v/s body armor and the punt gun v/s car. He also has a video of his 50 cal exploding with him. Crazy stuff....
Thanks! I will check those suggestions out for sure 👌
Those rifles are heavy.
great react
Now young fella, you should react to the Military Drill teams from each branch.
Whenever I'm at Arlington visiting my Granddad, I try to nip over and watch the changing of the guard.
Depending on other events taking place at the time, the entirety of the ceremony can be conducted without a single verbal command. Only the Commander of the Relief's instructions to the audience are spoken aloud.
I’ve seen the changing of the guard 💂
In case you didn't know the belt is made foe a 32 inch waist line
Cross the line or be disrespectful and see what happens there is a video on that.
I’m going to go search a video on that😂
look up who owned, the land 1st. and 2 owners.
There is a context to this that I think is missed by non-US people, and that is the fact that the Tomb has its origin in the First World War, the "War to End All Wars". We did not directly have an interest in the conflict; it was a European massacre. But, as the unstated belief goes, we sacrificed our soldiers to fight for others, to save a righteous cause, even though we were not threatened. And we won. So there is more than just the pathos of an unknown(s) soldier in an meaningless fight, but rather a selfless, noble sacrifice with no tangible reward other than doing a "great good", the fight for world peace and security for all. Same with World War II, and Cold War conflicts. Whether based in reality or not, pretty much all Americans who have relatives who lived through these times feel that inside, and makes the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier a sacred place beyond the memory of one "unknown but to God".
Well, actually the cemetery was already there before the tomb was. The cemetery also has President Kennedy burial site, The shuttle challenger crew. The cemetery is on the property of General Robert E Lee.
Lee lived on the Arlington estate but never owned it.
The sergeant of the guard is the only one that can display rank. The guards themselves display no rank at all regardless of their actual military rank so as to not "out rank" the unknown soldiers there entombed.
7:25 terrible timing for leaf-blower guy..
😄👍🔥🇺🇸
Dude, is it good enough?
Thank you for not speaking.
While your enthusiasm is absolutely genuine, some of your facts need tweeking. Arlington National Cemetery is NOT a cemetery for AN unknown soldier. The particular TOMB where this ceremony takes place is the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (sometimes known as the Tomb of the Unknowns (below)). The cemetery itself also houses the remains of our former president John F. Kennedy, assassinated in Dallas, Texas, USA in 1963, at whose gravesite is the Eternal Flame - a flame of remembrance never allowed to dim.
Arlington, a city directly west across the Potomac River from Washington, DC, was originally part of the then-newly constituted Federal District, known as the District of Columbia (the "DC" in Washington, DC). Both of the states of Maryland and Virginia, divided in this region by the Potomac, ceded (1790) land to the newly formed (1789) federal government on which to build a new capital for a new nation. In 1847 the federal government returned the Virginia cessation to its original sovereignty, which is to say, it was returned to Virginia.
Robert E. Lee, leader of the Army of Northern Virginia during our Civil War, and the premier general of the Confederate States of America (CSA - those states which seceded from the Union in order to prosecute their Civil War (1861-1865) against the federal government), lived at a plantation in Arlington. Though routed at almost every turn during the first two years of the war, the Federals took Arlington (then just a town), just across the Potomac, within the first month of hostilities. It is the land of that plantation, the estate of the rebel general Lee, which comprises the outline of today's Arlington National Cemetery, having been confiscated in the year prior to the war's conclusion and ultimately - or, I should say, originally - intended to be the last resting place of fallen Union (that is to say, victorious Northern (Union) servicemen (though there were so many dead soldiers that of necessity they were buried all over God's green acre)).
Arlington is without a doubt the most prestigious of all American military cemeteries. Today there are still about a score and a half of weekly burials there. Real estate is at a premium, and I don't know the criteria for being allocated space, but there's little doubt that the running for space is in earnest.
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, as those of us of a certain elder age are still wont to call it, is sometimes referred to as the Tomb of the Unknowns, though I believe its official name includes the word "Soldier" and is entirely in the grammatical singular.
In 1921, I think it was, an unknown soldier from World War I was interred at the monument. In 1958, an unknown from each of World War II and the Korean War joined that hapless individual from a generation of more earlier, who had previously joined his fallen brother from perhaps two or three generations prior. Who else might have been buried there - Vietnam? Iraq? Afghanistan? - I know not.
Anyhow, this is a more fulsome story of this impressive cemetery than you've heretofore been led to believe. Arlington National Cemetery today houses the remains of some 400k fallen American heroes, and though I have no knowledge of my supposition, I would not be surprised to learn if the remains of fallen Unknowns from the Revolution (1775-1783), the War of 1812 (1812-1815), the Mexican-American War (1846-1848), or the Spanish-American War (1898) have been disinterred and reinterred within these coveted acres.
And some of your facts need tweaking. 😀 Arlington is not a city, it is Arlington County, and the smallest self-governed county in the country. Robert E. Lee lived at the estate but never owned it. It belonged to his father-in-law who left it to his daughter (Lee's wife) and son. That was a big part of the Supreme Court argument which eventually returned it to the Lee family.
There are three Unknowns - WWI, WWII and Korean War. The Vietnam Unknown joined them in 1984 but was identified and removed in 1998. That crypt will forever remain empty as there are relatively few Unknowns from that conflict. There are no Unknowns from subsequent wars.
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is correct and always will be. We know it was a Soldier and there is only one Tomb. The service branch of the WWII and Korean War Unknowns is not known, and they are in crypts.
Strongly recommend anyone with your interest in ANC visit its website.
I feel like it shouldn't be open to the public and only for the families of the respected members of our armed forces . My family is military and I have so much respect for the people who fought and continue to fight for our freedom ❤❤❤❤. The government takes this place very seriously and i ask everyone who visits to please show respect .
Vast majority of visitors are respectful and follow the rules and regulations. Ridiculous to say it should be closed to everyone but military families.
I like you Ryan but don't enjoy your 'reactions' when you have already seen the videos. In your introductions you talk about details that you have already seen in the videos.
Hi Anne :) My reactions are always live. Any details I speak about before the reaction isn’t based on videos I’ve seen, but rather on info I know about the topic.