NewsUS Senator John Mccain Finally Laid To Rest

US Senator John Mccain Finally Laid To Rest

BEVERLY HILLS, August 03, (THEWILL) – A nearly weeklong celebration of the life of US Senator John McCain, war hero and two-time presidential candidate came to a solemn end on Sunday as he was laid to rest at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

McCain, who died August 25 aged 81 after a year-long struggle against brain cancer, was interred in a private ceremony in the academy’s grassy cemetery overlooking the Severn River.

McCain, the son and grandson of four-star admirals, graduated from the naval academy in 1958.

Large crowds lined the road outside the cemetery to pay their respects as the funeral cortege carrying McCain’s flag-draped casket passed by. Some saluted or held signs paying tribute.

“I watched them lay my friend to rest today. I will miss him,” Senator Jeff Flake tweeted Sunday along with a photo of him and McCain, in which the former pilot wore a Navy hat.

A day after a nationally televised memorial service at Washington’s National Cathedral brought together a remarkable gathering of luminaries from both parties — including three former presidents, but not the current one — Sunday’s ceremony was designed more as a family affair, including the military family to which McCain proudly belonged.

General David Petraeus, a McCain friend and one-time commander of the US Central Command, was to deliver a tribute.

Pallbearers included US defense secretary James Mattis; rear admiral and former naval academy superintendent Thomas Lynch; Admiral John Richardson; and two men — Everett Alvarez Jr. and Jon Fer — who were prisoners of war in Vietnam along with McCain.

The senator was buried next to his best friend from Annapolis days, Chuck Larson, who died in 2014. Larson and McCain were roommates through navy flight school, and Larson went on to become the second-youngest admiral in navy history and an academy superintendent.

McCain, a lifelong rebel who graduated near the bottom of his class, had planned a military career. But after his fighter jet was shot down over Vietnam, leaving him with lifelong injuries, he ultimately left the military and turned to politics, representing Arizona in the US Congress for 35 years.

He ran unsuccessfully for president twice, in 2000 and 2008.

In Annapolis, Sam Smith, a 71-year-old retired federal employee, was among those saluting McCain’s cortege as it passed.

“We just feel that he’s somebody we admire,” he told the Capital Gazette of Annapolis. “He was always a champion of the people.”

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