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          | Confederate Memorial |   
          | In June 
            of 1900, the U.S. Congress authorized a section of Arlington National Cemetery to be set aside for the burial of Confederate 
            soldiers. Cemetery officials gathered 482 known Confederate casualties 
            from the grounds of Arlington and had the bodies re-interred in the 
            approved section.
 
 Among the buried were: 46 officers, 351 soldiers, 58 wives, 15 southern 
            civilians, and 12 unknowns. The graves form concentric circles around 
            the Confederate Memorial. The headstones are unique because they are 
            all pointed. It is Confederate legend that the headstones were created 
            in such a way so that northerners could not sit on them.
 
 The United Daughters of the Confederacy petitioned the War Department 
            for the construction of the Confederate Memorial. On March 3, 1906, 
            President Taft granted their request. The cornerstone was laid on 
            November 12, 1912 and the monument was finally dedicated on June 
            4, 1914. The date of the opening ceremony marked the 106th anniversary 
            of President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis's birthday. President 
            Woodrow Wilson gave the principal address to an audience that
 included 
            veterans from both the Union and the Confederacy.
 
 The bronze 32-foot monument was sculpted by Confederate veteran Moses 
            Ezekial. He served as Sergeant of Company C of the Cadets at Virginia 
            Military Institute. Throughout his successful career, Moses Ezekial 
            created more than 50 bronze and marble statues in Europe and the United 
            States. He was knighted by Emperor William I of Germany, King Humbert 
            I of Italy, and King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy for outstanding achievements 
            in sculpture for those countries.
 
 Moses always considered the Confederate Memorial his greatest piece 
            ever sculpted and his dying wish was to be buried at its base. Because 
            he died in Italy during WWI on March 27, 1917, his body could not 
            be immediately sent to the United States. Finally, in 1921, Moses 
            Ezekial received the first ever funeral service to be held at the 
            Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery and he was laid 
            to rest
 at the base of the Confederate Memorial.
 
 Back to page one: 
            Confederate Soldier
 
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