Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Tombs of the Unknown Soldiers
Episode Date: December 19, 2022After the horrors of the first world war, many of the nations in the conflict sought to build memorials to honor their dead. While there were many memorials built, often large and grandiose, the mos...t important memorial in many countries is that of a tomb, oftentimes simple, dedicated to a soldier whose remains could not be identified. These tombs are often guarded with great pomp and ceremony and have been for over 100 years. Learn more about the tombs of the unknown soldiers on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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After the horrors of the First World War, many of the nations in the conflict sought to build memorials to honor their dead.
While there were many memorials built, often large and grandiose, the most important memorial in many countries is that of a tomb,
oftentimes simple, dedicated to a soldier whose remains could not be identified.
These tombs are often guarded with great pomp and ceremony and have been for over 100 years.
Learn more about the tombs of the unknown soldiers on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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I've discussed many subjects on this podcast that had their origins in the ancient world.
The ancient world had war memorials, but they were usually memorials dedicated to victories,
and usually to the general or emperor who was responsible for the victory.
For example, in Rome today, you can still see the Arch of Titus, the Arch of Constantine,
and Trajan's column.
These memorials served as propaganda for the leader who erected them.
What they were most emphatically not were memorials to the fallen who died during the conflict.
Individual soldiers may have had tombs, but that was assuming bodies could be found, identified,
and transported back, which almost never happened.
Bodies would usually be buried in a mass grave, cremated on giant pyres and mass, or sometimes
even left to rot in a field.
The earliest known memorial dedicated to war dead may have been the 4,500-year-old white monument
in Syria.
It's basically just a large white mound, about 70 feet high, which has the remains of 20
people inside who were soldiers.
These types of memorials, however, were quite uncommon.
There is a memorial at All Souls College in Oxford, which dates back to 1438, that memorializes
former students who died in wars in France.
In 1592, Jinju, Korea created a memorial for all those who fell in defense of the city.
Special permission was received to conduct sacrifices in honor of all those who died, not just
those whose remains could be identified.
Memorials to war dead rose in prominence in the later half of the 19th century.
The conclusions of the American Civil War saw the creation of many war memorials,
and dedicated war cemeteries.
After the Franco-Prussian War,
there were memorials erected around Europe,
which had the unique innovation of listing the names
of the fallen soldiers individually.
The First World War changed the nature of war memorials.
There had never been a war that was so devastating.
Almost every city and town in countries which fought
establish war memorials to honor the local men who were killed.
The idea of honoring an unknown soldier
came from a British military chaplain
named Reverend David Raelton.
He was serving on the Western Front in 1916 when he came across a makeshift grave marker
that had written in pencil an unknown British soldier.
He came up with the idea of burying an unknown warrior in Westminster Abbey alongside the
Kings and Queens who were also interred there.
In addition, there would be a full state funeral for the soldier, which, again, is something
usually only reserved for Kings and Queens.
This idea received support from the Prime Minister, David Lloyd George.
While this proposal was being debated in Britain, the same discussion was being held in France.
There, the idea was to intern an unknown French soldier in the Pantheon, which was later moved to the Arc de Triomph.
The British Tomb of the Unknown Warrior is located right at the entrance of Westminster Abbey.
It's covered with a slab of black marble from Belgium, and underneath it is soil from all the battlegrounds of France.
There are always flowers that surround the grave, and it's the one part of Westminster Abbey where no one is allowed to walk.
If you watch the recent funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, her pallbearers had to walk around the
tomb of the unknown warrior.
The entire point of creating a tomb for an unknown soldier and giving this tomb the highest of honors
was a way to personalize the war.
A large monument dedicated to hundreds of thousands of soldiers is a very different thing
than a grave for a single person.
The unknown warrior was awarded the British Victoria Cross, the American Congressional
Medal of Honor, the French Legion of Honor, and the highest military.
award for valor from almost every allied country. In France, the Tomb of the Unknown is located under
the Arc to Triumph, and it has an eternal flame. Shortly after the British and French tombs of
the unknowns were established, the United States decided that it would honor one of its unknown
soldiers in a similar way. On Memorial Day 1921, four unknown American servicemen were exhumed
from four different war cemeteries. They were placed in four identical caskets, and the task of
selecting one of the bodies was given to Sergeant Edward F. Younger, who had been wounded in the war
and had won the Distinguished Service Cross. On October 24th, he randomly selected one of the coffins
by placing a bouquet of white roses upon it. The selected remains were then returned to the United
States with full military honors. The unknown soldier lay in state under the Capitol Rotunda
until he was interred at the Memorial Amphitheater at the Arlington National Cemetery.
As with the British Unknown Warrior, the American Unknown Soldier has been awarded the Congressional
Medal of Honor, the Victoria Cross, and almost every other Medal of Valor from allied countries.
Unlike other countries, which created a tomb of the unknown after the First World War,
the United States also created tombs for unknown soldiers from the Second World War, as well as the
Korean War. This decision was made in 1956 by President Dwight Eisenhower. In 1958, an unknown
soldier from the Korean War and one from World War II were selected. The Korean War soldier came from
the National Cemetery of the Pacific in Hawaii.
Four unknown soldiers from World War II were selected from cemeteries in Europe, Africa, Hawaii, and the Philippines.
One from the European Theater and one from the Pacific Theater were then brought aboard the USS Canberra.
Naval Hospital Corerman first-classed William R. Charette, the Navy's only living Medal of Honor recipient at the time,
placed a wreath upon one of the caskets, and the other was given a burial at sea.
Both bodies from World War II and the Korean War were taken in Washington, and they were interred on Memorial Day, 1958.
A fourth unknown soldier from the Vietnam War was also selected and interred alongside the three
unknown soldiers in 1984.
However, in 1994, Ted Sampley, who was an advocate for POWMIA issues, came to the conclusion
that the unknown soldier from Vietnam was most probably First Lieutenant Michael Joseph Blassie,
an Air Force pilot who was shot down over South Vietnam in 1972.
In 1998, after pressure from the family, the body was exhumed and DNA testing was performed.
formed, which confirmed the identity as Michael Blassie. His remains were returned to his family
and was reburied at a National Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri. The stone over the tomb of the
unknown from Vietnam was later changed to read, quote, honoring and keeping faith with America's
missing servicemen 1958 to 1975, end quote. Given the prevalence of DNA testing, it's highly unlikely
that there will be unknown soldiers in any future wars. In fact, if there was a real desire,
to do so, it might be entirely possible to identify the current unknown soldiers from World War I,
World War II, and Korea by comparing their DNA with their living relatives. However, there has been
absolutely no desire to do that. The tomb of the American unknown soldiers is unique from the tombs
found in most other countries. What sets it apart is a permanent military honor guard. And by permanent,
I do mean permanent.
24 hours a day, 365 days a year, rain or shine, hot or cold, there are guards at the Tomb of the Unknown.
During the entire duration of the pandemic, even though Arlington National Cemetery was close to the public, there were still guards on duty.
The unit assigned to guard the Tomb of the Unknown soldier is the Army's third infantry regiment known as the Old Guard.
The Old Guard is the oldest active military unit in the United States.
The old guard has been guarding the Tomb of the Unknown every minute of every day since April 6, 1948,
continuing a permanent presence that started in 1937.
Being selected as a sentinel for the Tomb of the Unknown is one of the rarest distinctions in the U.S. military.
Only a tiny percentage of those who apply are selected, and despite being a ceremonial unit,
in terms of selectiveness, it's more elite than any of the special forces.
The badge awarded to the guards of the Tomb of the Unknown is the second rarest badge issued in the U.S. military, second only to the astronaut badge.
Sentinel duty usually consists of what's known as Walking the Mat, ceremonially walking in front of the tomb on a large rubber mat.
During the summer, guards are changed every half hour and every hour the rest of the year, with a two-hour changing guards after the cemetery is closed.
The act of walking the mat is very precise and rigorous. It consists of a bit of.
exactly the following. First, march 21 steps down the 63-foot-long or 19-meter black mat.
Second, you turn and face the tomb for exactly 21 seconds. Third, you turn and face north,
changing your weapon to your outside shoulder and wait 21 seconds. And then finally,
you march 21 steps back down to the other end of the mat. You continue this over and over
until you are relieved. The sentinels can and do in force,
behavior of visitors to the tomb. Anyone stepping over the chains, keeping the public away, or talking
too loud, will reface reprimand from the sentinels. The sentinels do not wear a uniform showing rank
while on guard duty, as they don't know the rank of the soldiers who are interred, and they don't wish
to outrank them. And again, I really want to stress when I say, when they're on guard duty 24-7,
it's 24-7. In 2012, when Hurricane Sandy hit Washington, there were sentinels on duty
throughout the entire storm. One severe weather hits, they will stand on guard in a small tent off to the
side rather than walk the mat, but it's a tent and it only has three walls. In the event that wind speed
should hit a hundred miles per hour, the sentinels have permission to retreat to a nearby building
in the amphitheater that overlooks the tomb. However, this has never happened. I should note that Arlington
National Cemetery is not the only location of a tomb of the unknown in the United States. The tomb of the
unknown from the Revolutionary War is located in Washington Square in central Philadelphia.
It was finished in 1957, and the body was taken from a grave located at the site.
However, there is no way to know if the soldier who was interred was American or British.
The idea of selecting an unidentified soldier to represent all soldiers spread to dozens of countries
after the tradition was started by Britain and France.
Each country has its own traditions regarding its tomb of the unknown.
Some countries like Italy and Russia have permanent guards on duty, like the old guard.
Others, like Spain and India, have eternal flames at the tomb.
Some are huge monuments like you can find in Iraq, and some are just simple graves like they have in Canada's Confederation Square.
Selecting an anonymous, unidentified soldier to represent all soldiers is a way to take something vague and perhaps abstract and personalize it.
As British Prime Minister David Lloyd George noted in 1920 when the British Unknown War,
was laid to rest. Quote, the cenotaph is the token of our mourning as a nation.
The grave of the unknown warrior is the token of our mourning as individuals.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
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