The Old Post Chapel at Fort Myer before a service at Arlington National Cemetery as captured by our @arlingtonmedia team. “The Quartermaster Corps of the Army designed and constructed this chapel at Fort Myer and also built the new entrance gateway to the National Cemetery, completed in 1935. The chapel is used for religious services at the post and also for rites in the cemetery. It is a brick building with wood cornice, an entrance porch of four stone columns, and a wood spire which rises to a height of 97 feet. A 1998 Technical Report by the US Army Corps of Engineers notes that this construction project was part of a host of “New Deal programs [that]…resulted in a construction boom on Army installations. Installations increased in size as training areas expanded. The Historic Fort Myer website explains that “over time,…this one building would become the iconic representation when one thought about Fort Myer. It was the focal point proudly occupying the center of the garrison’s insignia. In addition to providing a place for worship for the Fort Myer Military community, it hosted many weddings and also provided the starting place for many of the final honors which would end in adjacent Arlington National Cemetery.” Today, this Old Post Chapel is still a site for worship, weddings, and many funerals that honor fallen veterans being buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

[igp-video src=”” poster=”https://www.arlington.media/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/the-old-post-chapel-at-fort-myer-before-a-service-at-arlington-national-cemetery-as-captured-by-our-.jpg” size=”large”]The Old Post Chapel at Fort Myer before a service at Arlington National Cemetery as captured by our @arlingtonmedia team.

“The Quartermaster Corps of the Army designed and constructed this chapel at Fort Myer and also built the new entrance gateway to the National Cemetery, completed in 1935.  The chapel is used for religious services at the post and also for rites in the cemetery. It is a brick building with wood cornice, an entrance porch of four stone columns, and a wood spire which rises to a height of 97 feet.

A 1998 Technical Report by the US Army Corps of Engineers notes that this construction project was part of a host of “New Deal programs [that]…resulted in a construction boom on Army installations. Installations increased in size as training areas expanded. 

The Historic Fort Myer website explains that “over time,…this one building would become the iconic representation when one thought about Fort Myer. It was the focal point proudly occupying the center of the garrison’s insignia. In addition to providing a place for worship for the Fort Myer Military community, it hosted many weddings and also provided the starting place for many of the final honors which would end in adjacent Arlington National Cemetery."

Today, this Old Post Chapel is still a site for worship, weddings, and many funerals that honor fallen veterans being buried at Arlington National Cemetery.