National Cemetery Administration
Long Island National Cemetery

Visitation Hours: Open daily from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Office Hours: Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Closed federal holidays except Memorial Day and Veterans Day. Open Memorial Day 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
This cemetery has space available for cremated remains in a columbarium. We can accommodate casketed remains of subsequent eligible family members in the same gravesite of previously interred family members.
Burial in a national cemetery is open to all members of the armed forces who have met a minimum active duty service requirement and were discharged under conditions other than dishonorable.
A Veteran's spouse, widow or widower, minor dependent children, and under certain conditions, unmarried adult children with disabilities may also be eligible for burial. Eligible spouses and children may be buried even if they predecease the Veteran.
Members of the reserve components of the armed forces who die while on active duty or who die while on training duty, or were eligible for retired pay, may also be eligible for burial.
Fax all discharge documentation to the National Cemetery Scheduling Office at 1-866-900-6417 and follow-up with a phone call to 1-800-535-1117.
For information on scheduled burials in our national cemeteries, please go to the Daily Burial Schedule.
Military funeral honors as organized under the Department of Defense military funeral honors program "Honoring Those Who Served," can be arranged by the family or through the funeral home. Your local funeral director can assist you with arranging for these honors. If you are not utilizing a funeral home, please wait until after you have scheduled with the National Cemetery Scheduling Office (see "Schedule a Burial" above), and you have a date and time for burial to request military honors from the Branch of Service of the Veteran.
Military Funeral Honors:
Local numbers for Military Funeral Honors:
U.S. Air Force: 800-531-5803; Fax: 609-562-6346
U.S. Army: 631-962-1625; Alternate: 646-424-2707; Fax: 631-962-1639
U.S. Coast Guard: 617-990-6249; Alternate: 617-519-7607; Fax: 631-395-4485
U.S. Marine Corps: 866-826-3628; Fax: 703-395-4485
U.S. Navy: 860-694-3475; Fax 631-694-3699
Grave Location:
The grave location of your loved one is furnished on the map included in the burial document folder. There is a grave locator inside the Administration Building to assist weekend visitors who may not know the location of the gravesite.
Grave Marker:
A temporary grave marker is used to mark the grave following the interment. A permanent grave marker will be furnished free of charge by the Government without application from the family. Every effort is made to have the grave marker delivered and set within 60 days from the day of interment.
Flags:
The United States flag is flown over national cemeteries every day. The flag is flown at half-staff on the morning of Memorial Day and during interment services. Graves are decorated with small United States flags the day before Memorial Day and are removed immediately after the holiday.
Flag Placement for Memorial Day:
Will take place the Saturday before Memorial Day from 8:00am to completion.
Memorial Day Ceremony at the Memorial Garden:
Will take place the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend at 2:00pm.
All organizations interested in having a Color Guard at this ceremony, please contact Morris Miller at 516-798-3710.
Flag Pick-up:
Will take place the Saturday after Memorial Day from 8:00am to completion.
Veterans Day:
Ceremony will take place the Sunday prior to Veterans Day.
Please contact cemetery for more information.
For educational materials and additional information on this cemetery, please visit the Education section, located below.
For educational materials and additional information on this cemetery, please visit the Education section, located below.
Our cemetery floral regulations exist only to reflect the honor and respect we hold for our Nation's Veterans, by preserving the dignity and solemnity of their final resting place.
We welcome and encourage fresh-cut flowers throughout the year for your loved one's gravesite. No permanent plantings are permitted.
Items left at grave side must be floral in nature and may not stand taller than the headstone. Unauthorized items include hazardous materials, glass, metal, toys, candles, balloons and non-US flags. No item may be attached to a headstone. Unauthorized items will be removed immediately. Removed items will be held for 30 days.
Floral pick up will be conducted per week, per section as follows:
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1st Wednesday of Each Month: Sections: A through O, 2L, 2M, 2K, 3E, MA and DSS.
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2nd Wednesday of Each Month: Sections: Columbarium, S, 2G, 2J, 2N, 2T, 2U, 2X, 2Y, 3A, and 3C.
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3rd Wednesday of Each Month: Sections: 2D, 2E, 2H, 2P, 2Q, 2R, 2S, 2W, 3B, 3D and 3F.
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4th Wednesday of Each Month: Sections: Q, P, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z, 2A, 2B, 2C, 2V and MB.
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Interment florals will be picked up by cemetery staff every other Wednesday on a bi-weekly pick date.
During the winter holiday season, (Thanksgiving through January 10th) potted plants, artificial flowers, wreaths (less than 18 inches in diameter) and grave blankets (less than 2 x 3 feet) are permitted. It may be placed on graves the weekend after Thanksgiving and remain on the grave until January 20th. A general clean-up will begin on or about January 20th each year, weather permitting and will continue until all seasons decorations have been removed from the graves. Please note Christmas trees and decorations taller than 26 inches or the height of the headstone are not permitted.
During Memorial Day and other mowing season holidays; articles may be placed on gravesites on the Friday before the holiday. Items will be removed by cemetery staff one week later on the following Thursday.
Fresh cut flowers: May be placed on graves at any time through the year.
Artificial and potted floral items: May be placed on graves during the period of October 10th through April 15th only. All floral items will be removed by cemetery labor on a regular basis as noted on all posted floral collections signs. You may contact the office at 631-454-4949 for further details
In order to preserve the dignity and honor of our Veteran's final resting place, please observe the following rules of behavior while visiting the cemetery grounds:
- Pets are not allowed on the cemetery grounds at any time.
- No soliciting.
- Sports or recreational activities of any kind are prohibited. No picnicking.
- Public gatherings of a partisan nature are prohibited, no unauthorized gatherings are permitted.
- Committal shelters are for services only, no loitering.
- Do not litter, please use one of the many receptacles provided.
- Smoking is not allowed on the grounds, in any building or the committal shelter. Please smoke only at the designated receptacles.
- No cutting, digging or otherwise damaging the landscape.
- Boisterous activity, including the playing of loud music, is prohibited.
- Altering a headstone in any manner is prohibited. (i.e., marking, sitting on, placing objects upon, attaching photographs or keepsakes to, etc.)
Long Island National Cemetery is located in the community of Farmingdale in central Long Island, NY. It was one of seven national cemeteries created between world wars, 1934–1939. It was the Army's first major expansion since the Civil War directed at serving a growing Veteran population and the rapidly depleting burial space at existing national cemeteries. Unlike previous new cemeteries, locations were based on veterans' places of residence, especially in or near large cities. The other interwar national cemeteries are Baltimore, Maryland; Fort Bliss and Fort Sam Houston, Texas; Fort Snelling, Minnesota; Fort Rosecrans and Golden Gate, California.
Long Island National Cemetery occupies land that once belonged to the adjacent Pinelawn Cemetery, a large private lawn-park style cemetery. It was created to supplant the Civil War-era Cypress Hills National Cemetery in Brooklyn, two sections of which are embedded in the private Cypress Hills Cemetery. Cypress Hills National Cemetery grew from 3 acres to 18 acres. Twentieth-century wars and the expansion of veterans' burial benefits in 1920 created a dramatic increase in the civilian population eligible for burial were among the factors that led the government to estimate the cemetery would be full by 1938. Congress authorized the War Department to purchase land for a new cemetery in the vicinity of New York City in 1936. Two locations were considered — the Camp Upton National Military Reservation, 60 miles east of Manhattan on Long Island, and Pinelawn. The federal government purchased 175 acres of Pinelawn in January 1937 for $200,000.
The first burials in Long Island National Cemetery took place in March 1937 and the volume of interments quickly increased to an average of fifty-three per month. Beautification of the grounds and construction of permanent roads and buildings took place at the same time. Major construction projects completed in the first year included a superintendent's lodge, administration office, receiving vault and chapel, garage and comfort station all near the main entrance gate and iron fence, and a U.S. flagpole and circle, and temporary rostrum. The Office of the Quartermaster General and Quartermaster Corps designed the Colonial Revival red brick buildings with slate-shingle roofs. The cemetery was designed in formal geometric pattern with roads organizing burial sections; with a flagpole in a prominent location. A "mall" area near the flagpole serves as a Distinguished Service Section, which primarily consists of Medal of Honor recipients. The standard plaques installed here are the General Orders No. 80, National Cemetery Act, Memorial Day Order, and Gettysburg Address.
Development of burial space steadily expanded in the first years of the cemetery along with the increase in interment rates. The New Deal Works Progress Administration (WPA) supplied some of the labor for early road and building construction. A little more than three years after the first burials at Long Island National Cemetery it hosted a formal dedication on May 26, 1940, a ceremony that included a parade of 3,000 veterans and auxiliaries.
By December 31, 1947, there were more than 10,000 interments in the Long Island National Cemetery. The repatriation program for World War II (1941–45) dead that ran from 1947–1951 brought a large increase of burials at Long Island. To meet the increasing demand for burial space, the federal government purchased 72 additional acres to the north in 1951, bringing the cemetery to its current size of approximately 365 acres. In the 1950s, the cemetery cleared the newly acquired lands. The War Department considered the need for a second chapel to allow storage for up to 100 caskets, but it was not realized; meanwhile, the existing chapel was repurposed as enlarged administration building.
Improvements at the cemetery and the addition of more acreage attempted to keep up with demand, which rose with the Korean and Vietnam conflicts, rapidly increased the rate of interments at mid-century. By November 1963, the cemetery noted its 100,000th interment; the 200,000th interment occurred less than ten years later in February 1973. Land-locked Long Island National Cemetery closed to new interments in 1978. To ensure veterans have interment options, the first large columbaria were erected ca. 2002 where original roads had existed. In 2020 it ranked as one of the five busiest national cemeteries for cremated remains.
Long Island is one of more than eighty VA national cemeteries that use upright headstones and flat grave markers in separate burial sections. The cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.
Monuments and Memorials
A granite monument affixed with bronze emblems representing Nassau and Suffolk county veteran organizations, "in memory of their departed comrades," was erected in May 1940 as part of the cemetery's official dedication.
AMVETS, All Veterans Monument, 1996.
Chosin Few Monument (Korea), 2001.
Vietnam War Monument, May 2015.