1800s With a desperate need to bury war dead, the United States government authorized the burial of dead at Arlington Estate on June 15, 1864, effectively creating Arlington National Cemetery. But not all of the estate was used for burials. Although some burials occurred around Arlington House, most of the dead were buried in what is now sections 27, 29, 41, and 42 in the far northern part of the estate and in sections 1 and 13 (the "Field of the Dead") in the west-northwestern part of the estate. The entirety of Arlington Estate remained under the control of the
United States Department of War. About of the estate were not being used by the cemetery, In February 1867, Congress passed legislation requiring all military cemeteries to be surrounded by a fence. Construction immediately began on a fence composed of red
sandstone taken from
Seneca Quarry in
Maryland. This boundary wall was built along Arlington Ridge Road, making the street the
de facto eastern border of the cemetery. In 1887, John A. Commerford, the Superintendent of Arlington National Cemetery, asked the
Quartermaster General of the United States Army to close Freedman's Village because he believed that the Village's residents had cut down Cemetery trees for use as firewood. In addition, neighbors were complaining about crime in the Village, which they considered to have become a financial burden to the community. The Quartermaster General and the
Secretary of War approved Commerford's request shortly thereafter. However, some Village residents remained in their homes until 1900. The area then became part of the Cemetery, expanding the Cemetery's boundaries. The boundary wall having not yet been completed, it was now extended along Arlington Ridge Road south to the old estate boundary and then west toward Fort Myer. This construction occurred in fits, and was not complete until 1897. This branch of the electric railway traveled parallel to and just east of Arlington Ridge Road (also known at the time as the Georgetown & Alexandria Road) along much of its route.
Road's role in shaping The Pentagon Congress turned over the of the old Arlington Estate east of Arlington Ridge Road to the
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 1900. The USDA Arlington Experimental Farm was constructed on the site, and the lush lowlands remained under the control of USDA until 1940. By the 1930s, a middle-class black neighborhood known as Queen City had grown up west of Arlington Ridge Road and south of
Columbia Pike. In September 1940, as part of the American mobilization effort prior to
World War II, the War Department proposed construction of a massive new headquarters on the site of the USDA Experimental Farm. The original site of the structure was bounded by Arlington Ridge Road and Memorial Drive. This dictated that, for the building to occupy as much land as possible, the new structure should be pentagonal.
Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes and
United States Commission of Fine Arts chairman
Gilmore David Clarke both considered the site inappropriate, and convinced President
Franklin D. Roosevelt to not only halve the size of the proposed building but also shift the site to that of the inadequate and dangerous
Washington-Hoover Airport (which the government was trying to close anyway). The construction of the Pentagon led to the razing of Queen City. With the large influx of workers at the Arlington Cantonment and
The Pentagon, Congress enacted legislation creating a warren of roads, known as the
Pentagon road network, to greatly expand commuter access to and from the area. While Arlington Ridge Road remained connected to Glebe Road, the street was severed from its southern segment by Shirley Memorial Highway. This created North and South Arlington Ridge Road.
Elimination of North Arlington Ridge Road The construction of the Pentagon road network drew most of the traffic away from North Arlington Ridge Road. Additional changes came after 1947, when Congress appropriated money to purchase the Nevius Tract (now
Arlington Ridge Park). This triangular area, bounded today by North Marshall Drive, North Meade Street, and Arlington Boulevard, had been purchased by private individuals in the 1930s to keep developers from building high-rise structures on it. They sold it to the federal government in 1947. Arlington Ridge Road cut off the eastern third of the tract. In the booming Rosslyn business district, three office buildings were built on the road in the mid-1960s. But it wasn't the integral street it used to be. The road was not removed from Arlington Ridge Park until 1971. Most of North Arlington Ridge Road was eliminated in the early 1960s when interchanges and connections for the
Theodore Roosevelt Bridge were constructed. A short segment of the road just north of North Marshall Drive was turned into an access road for the park. The road was closed June 1, 1971, and demolition began shortly thereafter. The closure of that portion of the street north of North Marshall Drive meant that little reason existed for keeping the rest of North Arlington Ridge open. Most drivers no longer used the road to access
Arlington Memorial Bridge, preferring to use the highways to the east. A plan to close the road was first raised in early 1966. Arlington County officials were outraged, and pledged to go to court to stop it. The rationale for closing the road was that Arlington National Cemetery was running out of burial space. It needed to expand into the former experimental farm/cantonment area east of the road, but officials worried that traffic on the road would interrupt the dignity of military funerals and endanger pedestrians. The Army suggested keeping the road open only during
rush hour, but later backed off this plan. Since the road was on federal property, Arlington County officials had little say over its closure. The
National Capital Planning Commission approved the closure on July 22, and scheduled it for October 1, 1966. Although closed, the road continued to exist at least into 1968. On February 6 of that year,
Martin Luther King Jr.,
Roman Catholic Bishop
James P. Shannon, Reverend
Ralph Abernathy,
Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath, and Rabbi
Abraham Joshua Heschel led 2,000 people down Arlington Ridge Road in a protest against the
Vietnam War. As of 2013, the cemetery's winding Eisenhower Avenue largely follows the path of the straight Arlington Ridge Road. ==South Arlington Ridge Road==