Arlington National Cemetery The topography of the Arlington National Cemetery is full of sadness when birds sing sweet melodies. The light of the sun was large and passed through the big beast, but the air was full of cold. While watching the mourners, their feelings of sorrow are too realistic. In the distance thousands of tombstones have created a magnificent maze on the horizon. The vast land has almost no space because it is filled with heroic soldiers' tombs.
Arlington County: Robert Lee's house during the Civil War overlooking the house before the war, Arlington House, Arlington National Cemetery overlooking. The land became a memorial hall of the National Park Service (NPS) and became the home of the Arlington National Cemetery in order to prevent Li Yong from returning to his hometown. NPS explained this asset as "the monument of Robert Lee country." Including his role of promoting peace and reunion after the civil war, he respects specific reasons. Some of the most difficult aspects of American history mean military service, sacrifice, civil rights, responsibility, loyalty, slavery, freedom.
Arlington National Cemetery is an American military cemetery in Virginia. Since 1868, the Arlington Cemetery is the center of the National Day memorial day. It covers 253 hectares of land and has 400,000 graves. There are an average of 5,000 burials annually in the National Cemetery. Also, the Arlington Cemetery is the last resting place of President John F. Kennedy and President William Howard Taft. In the National Cemetery there is a corpse of all the soldiers who lost their lives in the war since the American Revolutionary War. The Arlington Cemetery hosts the National Memorial Day Memorial Hall since 1864. American soldiers plant small American flags in front of each tombstone in the Arlington cemetery annually on an anniversary.
In January 2013, the magistrate of the County of Arlington County, Virginia and the head of the Army National Military Cemetery (Arlington National Cemetery and American soldiers and the National Cemetery of the Pilot's Home) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). The Lynton County Council and the Army Bureau also expanded the cemeteries. According to the interim plan, Arlington County abandons the removal site of Nanmen Road (between the naval property and the cemetery borderline of 2012) and acquires a narrow servitude at the southwestern boundary of the Navy attachment for the following purposes . In exchange for the new South Gate Road, the Ministry of Defense hands over the navy owned parking lot to the county.