Lying in state is a term used to describe the tradition in which a coffin is placed on
view to allow the public at large to pay their respects to the deceased. It traditionally takes place in the principal government
building of a country or city. While the practice differs among countries, a viewing in a location that is not the principal
government building is referred to as lying in repose.
Canada
In Canada, lying in state takes place on Parliament
Hill in the capital, Ottawa, in the Hall of Honour (for prime ministers) or the Senate Chamber (for governors general). Guards are from the Canadian
Forces and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. When prime ministers
lie in state, guards are also from Parliamentary security forces—Commons Police, as well as Senate Police. When governors general have their funerals held, guards are also from the Governor General's Foot Guards. Like in the United Kingdom, the guards stand at each
corner with heads bowed and weapons inverted ("resting on Arms reversed") and their backs are turned towards the casket.
Recent figures to have lain in state include former prime minister Pierre Trudeau and
Canada's Unknown Soldier, both of them in 2000, former governor general Ray Hnatyshyn in 2002 and Ernest "Smokey" Smith, the last living Canadian recipient of the
Victoria Cross, in 2005. In addition, Canada's last
surviving veteran of World War I will also lie in state upon his death.
United Kingdom
In state and ceremonial funerals in the United
Kingdom, the lying-in-state takes place in Westminster Hall. The coffin is
placed on a catafalque and is guarded, around the clock, by detachments each of four men from
the following units:
Each unit mans the guard for a total of six hours, with each detachment standing post for twenty minutes. The four men stand
at each corner with heads bowed and weapons inverted and their backs are turned towards the coffin.
On two occasions, the guard has been mounted by four male members of the
Royal Family. At the lying in state of King George V in 1936, the guard was mounted by his four sons King Edward VIII, the Duke of
York, the Duke of Gloucester and the Duke of Kent. For Queen Elizabeth the Queen
Mother's lying-in-state in 2002, the guard was mounted by her four grandsons the
Prince of Wales, the Duke of
York, the Earl of Wessex and Viscount Linley. [1]
United States
For most federal officeholders, lying in state is the rare honor granted by the United
States to a deceased official wherein his or her remains are placed in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol
Building in Washington, D.C., for a public viewing. The casket is guarded by
members of the Armed Forces. By regulation and custom, only Presidents (current and former), military commanders, and members of
Congress are granted the honor of lying in state. Except for Presidents and former Presidents, the honor is not automatic. Not
all those entitled to the honor accept it, however. The first leader to receive this honor was former Speaker of the House of Representatives Henry Clay when he died in 1852. Since then, the honor has been extended to 28
men, including eleven U.S. Presidents. Since the first rotunda was not
completed until 1824, no one who died before 1824 could have lain in state without being reinterred.
The United States Congress has recently created a similar—though not identical—privilege for distinguished Americans who do
not quite qualify for a "lying in state" designation. Congress may permit an individual to lie in honor in the Rotunda and
has done so for three individuals to date. In 1998, Russell Eugene Weston
Jr. stormed the U.S. Capitol Building and shot and killed two members of the United States Capitol Police, Officer Jacob Chestnut and Detective John Gibson. In response, the U.S. Congress
provided for their remains to lie in honor in the Rotunda. In 2005, upon the death of civil rights activist Rosa Parks, Congress permitted her remains to lie in honor at the Rotunda as well. Parks became the second
African-American (after Officer Chestnut), and the first woman to lie in state or in
honor in the Capitol Rotunda.
Whether lying in state or in honor at the Capitol, the process is very similar. The coffin or
casket is usually placed on a catafalque, usually the Lincoln catafalque, so named as
it was constructed upon the death of Abraham Lincoln, from when he lay in state
following his assassination in 1865. For those who lie in state, the
casket is guarded at each of its corners by servicemen from each of the four major branches of the United States Armed Forces for its duration at the Capitol. For those who lie in honor,
another suitable honor guard is provided. In all cases, and in contrast to the practice in United Kingdom and countries in the
Commonwealth Realm, guards at the Capitol face the casket, hold their rifles with
their right hand, and keep the rifle butt resting on the floor. After the viewing and ceremony at the Capitol, the remains are
taken to the burial location.
Those who have lain in state (those lain in honor are italicized):
- 1852 - Henry Clay, long serving Senator and Representative.
Former Secretary of State, Speaker of the House, and presidential candidate
- 1865 - President Abraham Lincoln, assassinated
while in office
- 1868 - Thaddeus Stevens, Representative from
Pennsylvania
- 1874 - Charles Sumner, Senator from Massachusetts
- 1875 - Vice President Henry Wilson, served under
Grant, died in office
- 1881 - President James Garfield, assassinated
while in office
- 1886 - John A. Logan, Senator from Illinois
- 1901 - President William McKinley,
assassinated while in office
- 1909 - Pierre L'Enfant - although he died in
1825, he was disinterred, laid in state upon reinterment at Arlington National Cemetery
- 1917 - Admiral George Dewey, Admiral of the Navy
- 1921 - The Unknown Soldier for World War I
- 1923 - President Warren Harding
- 1930 - Former President William Howard
Taft, also a former Chief Justice
- 1948 - General John J. Pershing, General of the Armies of the United States
- 1953 - Robert Taft, U.S. Senator and Majority Leader
- 1958 - The Unknown Soldiers for World War II and the
Korean War
- 1963 - President John F.
Kennedy, assassinated while in office
- 1964 - General Douglas MacArthur, a 5-star
General
- 1964 - Former President Herbert Hoover
- 1969 - Former President Dwight
Eisenhower
- 1969 - Everett Dirksen, Senator from Illinois and
Senate Minority Leader from 1959-1969
- 1972 - J. Edgar Hoover, FBI Director 1929-1972
- 1973 - Former President Lyndon Johnson
- 1978 - Former Vice President Hubert Humphrey, served
under Lyndon Johnson and as Senator
- 1984 - The Unknown Soldier for the Vietnam
War
- 1989 - Claude Pepper, long Serving Senator and
Representative
- 1998 - Private Jacob Chestnut and Detective John Gibson, United States Capitol
Police
- 2004 - Former President Ronald Reagan
- 2005 - Rosa Parks, Civil Rights Pioneer
- 2006-07 - Former President Gerald Ford
Supreme Court Justices are laid in state
in the Supreme Court Building. Justices who have been awarded this
honor include:
References
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