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In this image provided by the family of John McCain, Jimmy McCain hugs his brother Jack McCain, touching the casket, as Cindy McCain, watches during a burial service for John McCain at the cemetery at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, on Sunday. Photo: AP

As his widow weeps, John McCain’s long journey ends on a grassy hill, near where it all began

McCain has been buried at the US Naval Academy next to his classmate and friend, Admiral Chuck Larson

US Politics

John McCain’s final journey ended Sunday on a grassy hill at the US Naval Academy within view of the Severn River and earshot of midshipmen present and future, and alongside a lifelong friend.

A horse-drawn caisson carrying the senator’s casket led a procession of mourners from the academy’s chapel to its cemetery following a private service. The senator’s widow, Cindy, and his children were among those who walked behind the caisson. Joining them were family and friends as well as members of McCain’s Class of 1958, military leaders and academy midshipmen.

About 4pm a flyover of military aircraft honoured the Navy pilot who was shot down over Vietnam and held more than five years as a prisoner of war. The burial was private as per the wishes of McCain, the Arizona Republican and 2008 presidential nominee died August 25 from brain cancer at age 81. Photos were released to the media, showing Cindy McCain weeping over the casket.

Vehicles that had carried mourners began leaving the area between 4.30 and 5pm.

Cindy McCain weeps on the casket of husband John McCain during a burial service at the cemetery at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, on Sunday. Photo: AP

One scheduled speaker at the service, Senator Lindsey Graham, said before the service that he would tell the audience that “nobody loved a soldier more than John McCain, that I bear witness to his commitment to have their back, travel where they go, never let them be forgotten.” Also expected to pay tribute were David Petraeus, a retired general and former CIA director, and McCain’s son Jack.

As the hearse carrying McCain passed through a gate and into the academy, there was loud applause from the several hundred people lining the street outside on the hot and muggy summer day. Many held their hands over their hearts and waved American flags. Some shouted, “God bless you.”

People in the crowd held signs that read “Senator John McCain Thanks For Serving! Godspeed” and “Rest In Peace Maverick.”

For his final resting place, McCain picked the historic site overlooking the Severn River, not Arlington National Cemetery, where his father and grandfather, both admirals, were buried.

The family follows as the casket of John McCain is moved from the Chapel on the grounds of the United States Navel Academy after a service on Sunday, in Annapolis, Maryland. Photo: Agence France-Presse
The horse-drawn caisson bearing the body of John McCain moves through the grounds of the United States Naval Academy toward the cemetery after a service in the Chapel in Annapolis, Maryland. Photo: EPA

Years ago Chuck Larson, an admiral himself and an ally throughout McCain’s life, reserved four plots at the cemetery – two for McCain and himself, and two for their wives, now widows. Larson died in 2014, and McCain wrote in a recent memoir that he wanted to be buried next to his friend, “near where it began.”

Among the pallbearers on a list provided by McCain’s office were Frank Gamboa, his academy roommate; Defence Secretary James Mattis; and two men who were POWs with McCain in Vietnam, John Fer and Everett Alvarez Jnr.

Tributes to McCain began Wednesday in Arizona and continued for the remainder of the week. On Saturday, speeches by his daughter Meghan and two former presidents – Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Barack Obama – remembered McCain as a patriot who could bridge painful rivalries. While their remarks made clear their admiration for him, they also represented a repudiation of President Donald Trump’s brand of tough-talking, divisive politics. Trump and McCain were at odds during the 2016 campaign and for much of Trump’s presidency.
Spectators watch a hearse containing the body of the late Senator John McCain arrive for a private memorial service and burial at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis. Photo: Reuters

“There’s a lesson to be learned this week about John McCain,” said Graham.

“No 1, Americans appreciate military service. … If you work hard and do your homework and know what you’re talking about, people will listen to you. That if you pick big causes bigger than yourself, you’ll be remembered,” he told Fox News Sunday.

“He tried to drain the swamp before it was cool, that you can fight hard and still be respected. If you forgive, people appreciate it, and if you admit to mistakes, you look good as a stronger man. That’s the formula, John McCain. This was a civics lesson for anybody who wanted to listen. Why do we remember this man? Because of the way he conducted his public life.”

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