Don't intend for this to be political, which is why it's on History, not Politics Board.
So RBG is being buried at Arlington. I understand her husband is already interred in their plot. It made me wonder about how many SCOTUS are buried there, and if others who were not veterans were there.
Short answer is that Ginsburg will be the 13th Justice buried there. The 10th to be buried in Section 5, near JFK's grave. (Even in death, Dems pack the Court...okay, maybe one political joke)
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/supremec.htm
Of the 13 (including RBG) 5 are not veterans, though Ginsburg is unique in being the spouse of a veteran. Her husband was a reservist who served briefly at Fort Sill.
Of the 8 that are considered veterans, William O. Douglas is an 'interesting' case. He claimed veteran status, despite only serving briefly (10 weeks) as a private in the Students' Army Training Corps (SATC) toward the end of WWI. I'd never heard of this group, they weren't ROTC. If anything, it appears to have been a more intense type of ROTC, with students living in barracks and taking more intense military training.
Personally, I don't think a government official with no military experience belongs at Arlington. But the ever-changing rules seem to allow it.
Trivia: Only two U.S. Presidents are buried at Arlington. One is obvious, JFK. Do you know the other?
Hint: related to this discussion
So RBG is being buried at Arlington. I understand her husband is already interred in their plot. It made me wonder about how many SCOTUS are buried there, and if others who were not veterans were there.
Short answer is that Ginsburg will be the 13th Justice buried there. The 10th to be buried in Section 5, near JFK's grave. (Even in death, Dems pack the Court...okay, maybe one political joke)
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/supremec.htm
Of the 13 (including RBG) 5 are not veterans, though Ginsburg is unique in being the spouse of a veteran. Her husband was a reservist who served briefly at Fort Sill.
Of the 8 that are considered veterans, William O. Douglas is an 'interesting' case. He claimed veteran status, despite only serving briefly (10 weeks) as a private in the Students' Army Training Corps (SATC) toward the end of WWI. I'd never heard of this group, they weren't ROTC. If anything, it appears to have been a more intense type of ROTC, with students living in barracks and taking more intense military training.
Personally, I don't think a government official with no military experience belongs at Arlington. But the ever-changing rules seem to allow it.
Trivia: Only two U.S. Presidents are buried at Arlington. One is obvious, JFK. Do you know the other?
Hint: related to this discussion