Fine Arts

Honoring US Veterans: Monuments of Valor, Victory, and Peace

BY Lorraine Ferrier TIMENovember 9, 2025 PRINT

Lest we forget, America’s liberty comes from immense sacrifice.

In July 1952, Retired U.S. Army Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower addressed an 82nd Airborne Division luncheon in Chicago:

“My old comrades, ladies and gentlemen, I have been frightened in my time and never as much as right now—and I’ll tell you why. It’s not because of the old comrades in arms that are here, but because of others. … There is every possibility that I will break down.”

Eisenhower then paused to compose himself. “Those soldiers will understand. There is no glory, no place that any man can reach in this world, no honor that can ever hide in his heart, the sacrifices that American soldiers pay to retain our freedom.”

Eisenhower spoke from experience.

As the Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe, he commanded the Allies’ Normandy landings, which led to the liberation of most of northwestern Europe. The 82nd Airborne Division paratroopers were there in that Allied force. They, too, understood the Soldier’s Creed and sacrifices made.

Two years later, as the U.S. president, Eisenhower signed legislation that replaced Armistice Day, which memorialized those who perished in World War I, with Veterans Day in a bid to recognize all veterans—those living and those resting in eternal peace. Americans have honored the country’s veterans on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month as they did for Armistice Day from 1918, but since 1954 on Veterans Day.

Epoch Times Photo
Aerial photograph of Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Amphitheater and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, in Arlington County, Va., April 20, 2022. U.S. Army photo by Elizabeth Fraser/Arlington National Cemetery. (Public Domain)

Every Veterans Day, the U.S. president or the president’s designee lays a remembrance wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and addresses the nation from Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Amphitheater, in Arlington County, Virginia.

These solemn ceremonies and memorials represent the nation’s sorrow, strength, and hope.

America’s Memorial Amphitheater

In 1873, U.S. Army Quartermaster Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs designed a simple memorial amphitheater near the Tomb of the Civil War Unknowns. He constructed the amphitheater in less than a month, ready for Memorial Day that year.

Meigs’s amphitheater consists of an elliptical, brick pergola surrounding a sunken grass bowl. Twelve Ionic columns form the rostrum on the north side of the bowl. Young plantings of  grapes, wisteria, and the like, would cover the pergola in the years to come.

Epoch Times Photo
The original Memorial Amphitheater consists of an ellipse brick pergola with 12 Ionic columns forming a rostrum on the edge of a sunken grass bowl. It was renamed the James R. Tanner Amphitheater on May 30, 2014, as part of Arlington National Cemetery’s 150th anniversary celebrations. (Public Domain

The amphitheater was renamed the James R. Tanner Memorial Amphitheater, as part of Arlington National Cemetery’s 150th Anniversary celebrations, on May 30, 2014. Tanner was a Civil War veteran who served in the 87th New York Volunteer Infantry. He suffered catastrophic injuries in the Second Battle of Bull Run in 1862 and lost both legs. Tanner served as Abraham Lincoln’s stenographer, and later as the Commissioner of Pensions and the commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Republic. He’s buried just yards from the amphitheater named in his honor.

The James Tanner Amphitheater was restored between 2015 and 2019. Restorers colored the rostrum base and ambulatory piers yellow and the capitals and bases of the 12 Ionic columns metallic bronze.

America’s Grand Memorial Amphitheater

By the early 1900s, Arlington National Cemetery required a larger and grander memorial amphitheater. According to Arlington Cemetery: “While a simple, pastoral pergola had fit American ideas of death and honor in the nineteenth century, a new century and a new world power required something grander.”

Thomas Hastings (1860–1929) of the Carrère & Hastings architectural firm designed the amphitheater, which also contains a Memorial Chapel and Memorial Display Room. The amphitheater echoes the elliptical plan of the original amphitheater, featuring a colonnade with a rostrum on one side.

On Oct. 13, 1915, President Woodrow Wilson laid the Memorial Amphitheater cornerstone, which contained a copper time capsule. Along with a plan of the amphitheater, the capsule included the American flag, copies of the Bible, U.S. currency and postage stamps from 1915, and documents of national significance such as the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and a map of Pierre Charles L’Enfant’s design for Washington.

The Memorial Amphitheater was dedicated on May 15, 1920.

Arlington National Cemetery Memorial Amphitheater 1921
A high-angle view of Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington County, Va., November 1921. The Amphitheater is pictured before the dedication ceremony of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, dedicated to deceased U.S. service members whose remains have not been identified. (Keystone View Company/FPG/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

Every inch of the amphitheater’s stone was designed for remembrance. On the frieze above the Vermont Danby marble colonnade, 44 U.S. military battles—from the American Revolution through the Spanish-American War—are listed. The names of the 14 U.S. Army generals and 14 Navy admirals who fought in those battles are inscribed on the sides of the stage.

Arlington National Cemetery inscriptions on colonnade of Memorial Amphitheater
Forty-four U.S. battles are inscribed on a frieze above the colonnade of Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Amphitheater. (Jonathan Manjeot/Shutterstock)

A Latin inscription over the west entrance reads: “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.”  The quote, from Horace’s “Odes III,” translates to “It is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country.”

Poignant memorial quotes from leading Americans run throughout the amphitheater’s marble. In the apse, a 1775 quote by George Washington reads: “When we assumed the soldier, we did not lay aside the citizen.” Above the stage, words from Abraham Lincoln’s 1863 Gettysburg Address reads: “We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain.”

Doric pilasters of Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial
Doric pilasters of Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington County, Va. (Michael Shake/Shutterstock)

Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

In front of the Memorial Amphitheater lies the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. England and France had instigated the national memorial dedicated to unidentified war dead in 1920. England’s unknown soldier rests in Westminster Abbey, London, and France’s in the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. America followed its Allies’ tradition and interred its unknown soldier on Nov. 11, 1921.

A white marble sarcophagus now covers the crypt of America’s unknown soldier. Three crypts in front of the sarcophagus commemorate unknown soldiers who died in World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. The Vietnam War crypt is empty, after the unknown soldier’s remains were identified and disinterred in 1998.

World War I veterans, architect Lorimer Rich (1891–1978), and sculptor Thomas Hudson Jones (1892–1969) designed the 11-foot-high by 9-foot-wide marble sarcophagus. Both had studied at the American Academy in Rome. The Colorado Yule marble tomb incorporates the beaux arts style with neoclassical elements. Marble carvers, the Piccirilli Brothers created the Doric pilasters at each corner of the sarcophagus. They also roughed out the carvings on the marble panels that Hudson Jones completed onsite. Hudson Jones carved low-relief sculptures of wreaths on the north and south panels, and personifications of peace, valor, and victory on the east panel.

east panel of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Personifications of Peace, Valor, and Victory on the east panel of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, at the Arlington National Cemetery’s Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington County, Va. (Salahuddin Rafiquddin/Shutterstock)

Ancient Romans honored warriors with wreaths of laurel, and today funeral wreaths adorn graves. The wreath’s circular design symbolizes the circle of life.

The Piccirilli Brothers also carved the inscription onsite on the east panel that faces the amphitheater. It reads: “Here Rests in Honored Glory an American Soldier Known but to God.”

The sarcophagus of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier was unveiled, without ceremony, on April 9, 1932.

Guarding the Tomb

For nearly 100 years, sentinels from the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment have guarded the tomb. Since 1937, they have maintained a vigil for 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

According to Arlington Cemetery: “The Tomb Guard marches exactly 21 steps down the black mat behind the Tomb, turns, faces east for 21 seconds, turns and faces north for 21 seconds, then takes 21 steps down the mat and repeats the process.” Twenty-one represents the highest military honor. The 21-gun salute originates from naval warfare. Firing 21 shots signaled to nearby ships that there was no hostile intent, and indicated that all ammunition was spent.

Epoch Times Photo
Come rain or shine, sentinels from the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment guard the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Va. U.S. Army photo by Elizabeth Fraser/ Arlington National Cemetery. (Public Domain)

Part of The Sentinel’s Creed states:

“Through the years of diligence and praise and the discomfort of the elements, I will walk my tour in humble reverence to the best of my ability. It is he who commands the respect I protect, his bravery that made us so proud. Surrounded by well meaning crowds by day, alone in the thoughtful peace of night, this soldier will in honored glory rest under my eternal vigilance.”

Lest we forget, America’s liberty comes from immense sacrifice and unimaginable suffering. American veterans’ continual sacrifices retain the country’s freedom and the American way of life.

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Lorraine Ferrier writes about fine arts and craftsmanship for The Epoch Times. She focuses on artists and artisans, primarily in North America and Europe, who imbue their works with beauty and traditional values. She's especially interested in giving a voice to the rare and lesser-known arts and crafts, in the hope that we can preserve our traditional art heritage. She lives and writes in a London suburb, in England.
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