Showing posts with label Joe Louis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Louis. Show all posts

10.12.2014

OUR NATION'S MOST HALLOWED GROUND

We ended the day at Arlington National Cemetery, our nation's most hallowed ground. If you have ever visited here, you know it is huge: over 600 acres. You need to be in great physical shape if you plan to walk through it. Note the cemetery is located on very hilly terrain so if you decide to walk, beware of walking uphill and downhill a lot.

I knew we would not be able to walk through the cemetery so I booked two tickets for the bus tour of the cemetery through ANC Tours. The tour is a hop-on, hop-off tour and makes stops at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Kennedy graves and Arlington House. Tickets are $9.00, worth the price for all the area covered.

Our first stop was the Kennedy graves...of course, there is the grave of President Kennedy...
and Jackie Kennedy. The graves of their children, 2-day-old Patrick and an unnamed stillborn daughter, are on either side of their parents.
Down a sidewalk, several yards to the left are the graves of Robert Kennedy...























 



Edward Kennedy...(that is Arlington House at the top of the hill which is the Robert E. Lee Memorial.)

























and Joseph Kennedy, Jr., a navy pilot and elder brother of President Kennedy, who died during a secret WWII mission.
Our next stop was the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier...
How moving to witness the Changing of the Guard ceremony...we got there five minutes before it began. You can see my video of the ceremony by clicking here. The ceremony takes place on the half hour between April and September, once an hour the remainder of the year.

You also get a spectacular view of the monuments across the river...you can see the Capitol Building and the Jefferson Memorial in the distance.
We had the special opportunity to see two members of the elite 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, the volunteer sentinels who guard the tomb, walking down the sidewalk holding a folded American flag. I wondered where they had just come from...















































 



Of course there are many notable people buried in Arlington Cemetery besides presidents and senators...

Joe Louis may have been a famous boxer, but many people don't realize he was a Sergeant in the Army...























 



There are many memorials to astronauts...Colonel Roosa was the pilot of the Apollo 14 moon mission.























 



The remains of the seven astronauts who died aboard the 1986 Challenger Space Shuttle disaster are buried here...























 



And there is a memorial to the astronauts who died aboard the 2003 Columbia Space Shuttle disaster...























 



Arlington National Cemetery is huge...it is amazing, and beautiful in a way, to see the rows of white gravestones in perfect straight lines, covering the rolling hills.
Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place of too many who gave the ultimate sacrifice fighting for the United States, all the way back to the Civil War. Remember silence and respect while you are there.


The easiest way to get to Arlington National Cemetery is with the Metro. Exiting the Arlington Cemetery Metro stop will put you just steps from the entrance.

Arlington Cemetery is open every day:
April 1 through October 30:  8:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Nov. 1 through March 31:     8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

For more information, click here.

All photos in this blog post were taken by my husband and me during our visit in September, 2013.

12.18.2013

CELEBRITIES AT THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

Today, sports figures and celebrities leave their mark on American society as much as the industrialists, explorers, politicians and writers did in the 19th and 20th centuries.

The National Portrait Gallery displays many portraits of those persons who have inspired us in the sports arena or on the silver screen.

Muhammad Ali: a silkscreen by Andy Warhol





































Muhammad Ali: oil painting by Henry C. Casselli, Jr.

Michael Jackson: synthetic polymer and silkscreen by Andy Warhol

























Joe Louis: oil painting by Betsy Graves Reyneau





































Oscar Robinson: February 16, 1961 Time Magazine cover by Russell Hoban





































Bobby Hull: March 1, 1968 Time Magazine cover by Leroy Neiman





































Arthur Ashe: acrylic on canvas by Louis Briel





































L.L. Cool J: oil painting by Kehinde Wiley





































Katherine Hepburn: oil painting by Everett Raymond Kinstler


































In addition to this portrait of Katherine Hepburn, her unprecedented four Best Actress Academy Awards are now part of the National Portrait Gallery's permanent exhibition...
























From left to right are her Academy Award for Morning Glory in 1933. Interestingly, that particular statue was the very first to be referred to by a Hollywood reporter as an Oscar. She also won in 1967 for Guess Who's Coming Dinner, the very next year for 1968's The Lion in Winter and 1981's On Golden Pond. Nearly 50 years went by between her first and last award. Note how different each statue is from the others.

The National Portrait Gallery presents the wonderful diversity of individuals who have left, and are leaving, their mark on our country and our culture. As a Smithsonian Museum, admission is always FREE at the National Portrait Gallery. Click here to visit the National Portrait Gallery's website. 

All photos in this blog post were taken by my husband and me during our visit in September, 2013.