News

Arlington National Cemetery will reintroduce caisson horses to some military funerals in June, after a two-year pause to ...
The Army will soon begin limited use of horse-drawn caissons for funerals at Arlington National Cemetery, phasing in the long ...
The program, long an Arlington tradition, was suspended after several equine deaths and reports of neglectful treatment of ...
Arlington National Cemetery, the final resting place of presidents, generals, Medal of Honor recipients and more than 400,000 service members and their families, has purged its website of material ...
The report found that between December 2024 and March 2025, several links to pages relating to Black, Hispanic and female veterans disappeared from Arlington National Cemetery's website.
A visitor to Arlington National Cemetery's website earlier this year would have seen links to information about a wide range of notable African Americans, Hispanic Americans and women buried there.
Tombstone of Humbert Roque Versace at Arlington National Cemetery, a Special Forces officer and Medal of Honor recipient killed in action in Vietnam. The cemetery recently removed links and ...
The Arlington National Cemetery has removed key information from its website about prominent Black, Hispanic, and female service members as well as historical topics like the Civil War.
Arlington National Cemetery has begun wiping from its website histories highlighting Black, Hispanic and women veterans. The change is in line with President Trump's directive to remove references ...
Arlington National Cemetery is the most regarded final resting ground in the United States, but it has scrubbed the history of Black veterans and more. Arlington National Cemetery is the most ...
Arlington National Cemetery has begun removing web pages that highlight the contributions of Black, Hispanic and women veterans. The removals, first reported by Civil War historian Kevin M.
The cemetery, which is operated by the Army, said it was working to restore the content. Among the obscured pages was material about civil rights. By Tim Balk Materials on the Arlington National ...