Story Published:
Jun 7, 2004 at 4:51 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:30 AM PDT
SANTA MONICA, CALIF. - Nancy Reagan touched her cheek to the
flag-covered casket, then made way for Americans by the thousands
to pay respects Monday to Ronald Reagan at the start of a five-day
journey that will include a state funeral in Washington and a
hilltop burial back in California.
A steady, near-silent stream of people - some saluting, some
praying - circled through the rotunda of the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library, where the body of the nation's 40th president
will lie in repose through Tuesday before traveling to
Washington.
A Marine Corps band played "Hail to the Chief" as eight armed
forces members carried the casket into the library, past a
10-foot-tall sculpture titled "After the Ride" depicting Reagan
as a smiling cowboy with a Stetson in his hand.
The journey began at a Santa Monica funeral home, where the
mahogany casket was placed aboard a hearse for a 40-mile drive to
the library in Simi Valley.
Clusters of people watched from overpasses and roadsides as the
motorcade headed north, then west on the Ronald Reagan Freeway, its
path cleared by motorcycle officers. One banner hung along the
route declared, "God bless you Ronald & Nancy." Another
proclaimed, "God bless the Gipper."
Flags at half-staff fluttered under an overcast sky as the
casket was placed in the library rotunda before a brief family
service.
"As we were in procession, I couldn't help but think of the
love and the outpouring that has begun in the nation for a great
president, a great world leader and a faithful servant of almighty
God," said the Rev. Michael Wenning, retired senior pastor at Bel
Air Presbyterian Church, where Reagan had worshipped.
When the service ended, Mrs. Reagan, dressed in a black suit and
pearls, walked to the casket, placing her left cheek against the
flag's field of stars. Her daughter, Patti Davis, hugged her
tightly and other family members joined them, placing hands on the
casket.
Soon after the family departed, the first of many chartered
buses arrived, bringing members of the public who had been waiting
- in some cases for hours - for a chance to pay respects to Reagan,
who died on Saturday after a 10-year struggle with Alzheimer's
disease.
The library was prepared to have 2,000 people an hour move past
the casket for 30 hours. Twenty-seven buses shuttled mourners about
five miles from a college, which was shut down to provide parking.
Mourners, including many children, stood quietly in line as they
waited to enter the library, then moved rapidly past the casket
flanked by an honor guard representing all branches of the
military.
Among the early arrivals were Arnold Schwarzenegger, like Reagan
an actor-turned-governor, and California's first lady, Maria
Shriver, a member of the Kennedy clan. Both crossed themselves.
The casket was placed on a black velvet-shrouded bier. A blue
carpet was placed over the Spanish red tiles in the lobby and a
blue drapery covered the west side windows of the lobby.
Mrs. Reagan, accompanied by Patti and son Ron, had paused
earlier on her way into the funeral home as she passed a display of
impromptu remembrances. American flags, flowers and jars of jelly
beans - Reagan's favorite treat - were left along with notes,
stuffed animals and candles in the spontaneous shrine.
Mrs. Reagan, 82, read some of the messages.
"Thank you for changing the world," said one handwritten note.
Roxanne Kubicek, 42, gave officers guarding the mortuary a card
for Mrs. Reagan.
"I just wished her lots and lots of love," she said. "I
admired the beautiful love that they have. I told her that their
love will last for all eternity."
Peggy Sheffey, 85, said she drove to the funeral home from the
nearby Mar Vista area to "just feel closer" to the man she had
never seen in person.
"He's a wonderful man," she said, choking back tears. "He was
so real, absolutely real. Down to earth. He didn't just think of
himself. He thought of everybody else."
On Wednesday, the former president's body is to be flown to
Washington, D.C. Following a ceremony Wednesday night in the
Capitol Rotunda, the body will lie in state there.
Friday will be a national day of mourning, with all federal
offices and major financial markets closed. The state funeral will
be held at Washington National Cathedral; President Bush will
deliver a eulogy and former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will be
among the mourners.
The body will then be returned to Reagan's library in Simi
Valley for a private burial service Friday evening. Reagan will be
buried in a crypt beneath a memorial site at the library some 45
miles north of Los Angeles.
Praise for Reagan, and condolences to his family, streamed in
from across the world. In a jarring contrast, a Cuban government
radio station assailed Reagan's policies and said he "never should
have been born."
At the United Nations, Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Reagan
"will be remembered for his leadership and resolve during a period
of momentous change in world affairs, as well as for the warmth,
grace and humor with which he conducted affairs of state."
For More Information:
Ronald Reagan Memorial -- www.ronaldreaganmemorial.com