Washington D.C. is a perfect city to be on Memorial Day when you want to honor the veterans who fought for our country. A few days before the holiday weekend, members of the U.S. 3rd Infantry Regiment, also known as The Old Guard, perform the "flags-in" annual ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery, where one flag is planted in front of each grave marker - a ritual that has been performed for the past 40 years.


Just down the hill from the mansion is the popular grave site of the Kennedy Family: John F. Kennedy with the Eternal Flame behind him, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and two of their children - Patrick, who died early in his infancy and a stillborn girl. Located nearby are the graves of his two brothers - Senators Robert F. Kennedy and Edward (Ted) Kennedy. As part of the Kennedy memorial, several quotes from his famous Inaugural Address are etched in a long stretch of granite.


Members of The Old Guard are volunteers and have passed a very rigorous process that includes memorizing and reciting, verbatim, seven pages of Arlington Cemetery history, physical height and proportion restrictions, lengthy interviews, a two week trial, and a training period culminating in a Tomb Guard Identification Badge test. Training, weapon and uniform cleaning, and continued studies of cemetery facts are ongoing activities during their service in The Old Guard. On Memorial Day weekend, it is not uncommon to also see a wreath laying ceremony with a bugler playing taps.
Memorial Day in D.C. also means that it is the annual pilgrimage to our Nation's capitol of Harley-Davidson motorcycle riders, called "Rolling Thunder" - hands down the loudest weekend of the year!

Fortunately the remaining war memorials in D.C. are not quite as emotional as what I observed at the Vietnam War Memorial. The newest addition to the National Mall is the World War II memorial, dedicated in 2004. Situated directly in between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument, at the end of the reflecting pool, the design of the memorial is a large fountain flanked by two semi-circles of columns - one for each state, the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Also in between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument, south of the reflecting pool, is the Korean War Memorial. In my opinion, this is my least favorite and the creepiest war memorial in the U.S, if not the world. The 19 stainless steel statues of men on patrol, with their hollowed out eyes, just look haunted - especially at night. And on the granite reflection wall, the sandblasted photographic faces appear as if they are ghosts of the fallen.
Finally, one of Washington D.C.'s best vantage points for capturing a fantastic photo of the National Mall is at the Iwo Jima/Marine Corps War Memorial across the river in Arlington. From this spot, one can get the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, and U.S. Capitol at a diagonal in the camera frame. Then, just turn 90 degrees and get a photo of the giant bronze rendering of the iconic "Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima" Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph by Joe Rosenthal, taken on February 23, 1945, that depicts five U.S. Marine and one U.S. Navy corpsmen planting the U.S. Flag on the top of Mount Suribachi for a second time. There's an interesting story behind the first and the second flags, and I would suggest a quick Google search if you want to learn more
I wanted to finish this entry with another quote from JFK's Inaugural Address to sum up my pride in and my appreciation for those who have patriotically sacrificed their lives for our country - whether they were killed while fighting, wounded, or simply had their personal lives and those of their families disrupted by war:
"Let every nation know - whether it wishes us well or ill - that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty."
So cool julie! Wish i was in DC this weekend...proud pappa romano did the vietnam sidewalk!
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