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On this present day in historical past, November 25, 1963, John F. Kennedy is buried in Arlington Nationwide Cemetery

Only a handful of days after he was assassinated in an open-car motorcade on the streets of Dallas throughout a marketing campaign journey all through Texas, President John F. Kennedy was buried at Arlington Nationwide Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, on this present day in historical past, Nov. 25, 1963.

President Kennedy, in addition to two Kennedy infants, are at this time interred in Lot 45, Part 30, of Arlington Nationwide Cemetery, in accordance with the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.

“The permanent graves are located about 20 feet east of the site where the president was temporarily interred on 25 November 1963,” the library’s web site additionally says. 

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“Each is marked by a simply inscribed gray slate tablet.”

The burial of the slain president, solely 46 years outdated when he was assassinated, adopted a somber and nationally televised funeral course of.

JFK in 1960

Then-Sen. John F. Kennedy, the 1960 Democratic presidential nominee, is proven thanking the Democratic Nationwide Conference for choosing him right here, on July 13 in Los Angeles. Kennedy received the nomination with a first-ballot victory that pitted him in opposition to then-Vice President Richard M. Nixon within the November 1960 election.  (Getty)

JFK had not specified the place he wished to be buried, in accordance with Historical past.com.

“Most of his family and friends assumed he would have chosen a plot in his dwelling state of Massachusetts,” the positioning additionally notes.

JFK “qualified for a plot at Arlington National Cemetery, but he also deserved a special site befitting his presidential status.” 

As a veteran of World War II, he “qualified for a plot at Arlington National Cemetery, but he also deserved a special site befitting his presidential status.” 

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The spring earlier than he died, President Kennedy “made an unscheduled tour of Arlington and … remarked to a buddy on the view of the Potomac from the Custis-Lee Mansion, reportedly saying it was ‘so magnificent I could stay forever,'” the same site points out.

JFK Inaugural Address

On Jan. 20, 1961, President John F. Kennedy addressed the nation in his Inaugural Address: “And so my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” (AP1961)

After Kennedy was killed on Nov. 22, 1963, the friend who accompanied JFK to Arlington that day “relayed the comment to the president’s brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, who advised the positioning to Jacqueline Kennedy, the president’s widow,” Historical past.com additionally studies.

“Jackie, who was responsible for the final decision, toured the site on November 24 and agreed. ‘He belongs to the people,’ she said,” the positioning additionally notes.

Jackie Kennedy “lit the first eternal flame and, a few days later, the grave site was enclosed with a white picket fence.” 

The then-first woman additionally reportedly requested if employees on the cemetery might erect “some sort of eternal flame at the grave site,” says Historical past.com.

President John F. Kennedy posing for a picture at his desk with a US flag in the backdrop.

President John F. Kennedy whereas posing for an image at his desk with a U.S. flag within the background.  (Alfred Eisenstaedt/Pix Inc./The LIFE Image Assortment through Getty Photographs)

“Cemetery officials scrambled to put together a makeshift Hawaiian torch under a wire dome, covered by dirt and evergreen boughs. The flame was fed by copper tubing from a propane tank situated 300 feet away.”

Then, after the graveside navy ceremony on November 25, Jackie Kennedy “lit the first eternal flame and, a few days later, the grave site was enclosed with a white picket fence.” 

The everlasting flame now “burns from the center of a 5-foot circular flat granite stone located at the head of the president’s grave.”

The subsequent month, in December 1963, “Jackie Kennedy returned to the grave and was photographed kneeling in prayer amongst a sea of wreaths and bouquets left by current guests.”

The everlasting flame at this time “burns from the center of a 5-foot circular flat granite stone located at the head of the president’s grave,” the JFK Library web site notes. 

“The burner, a specially designed apparatus, which was created by the Institute of Gas Technology of Chicago, consists of a nozzle and electric ignition system.”

Arlington eternal flame

The John F. Kennedy Everlasting Flame burns on the grave web site of former President John F. Kennedy and his spouse, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, at Arlington Nationwide Cemetery in Virginia, close to Washington, D.C. (Robert Alexander/Getty Photographs)

The library additionally notes, “A constantly flashing electric spark near the tip of the nozzle relights the gas if the flame is extinguished by rain, wind or accidents. The fuel is natural gas mixed with proper quantities of air to control the color and shape of the flame.”

The library says as effectively, “The entire site, with a total area of about 3.2 acres, was set aside by the Secretary of the Army with the approval of the Secretary of Defense to honor the memory of the president.”

Eternal Flame

Individuals might be seen within the background visiting the Everlasting Flame on the grave of former President John F. Kennedy close to the a hundredth anniversary of his beginning at Arlington Nationwide Cemetery on Could 26, 2017, in Arlington, Virginia.  (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP through Getty Photographs)

It additionally says, “The land has been retained for the nation as a whole and has not been deeded to the Kennedy family.”

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“The world now could be appropriately landscaped with new plantings mingled amongst some of the historic trees.”

“While magnolias predominate, there are crab apple, willow oak, hawthorn, yellow wood, American holly and cherry trees interspersed among flowering plants and shrubs.”

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Greater than three million individuals go to Arlington Nationwide Cemetery every year.

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