From The Associated Press:
HOUSTON (AP) — The Latest on events honoring former President George H.W. Bush (all times local):
5:25 p.m.
Texas A&M says the private, graveside service for George H.W. Bush’s family members has ended and the former president has been buried.
Thursday evening’s ceremony concludes days of funeral activities honoring the 41st president.
After lying in state at the U.S. Capitol and a funeral at Washington’s National Cathedral, Bush had a funeral at the Houston church where his family worshipped.
His remains then rode on a special funeral train to College Station, where he was buried at his presidential library at Texas A&M University. Prior to the closed service, about 2,100 cadets in dress uniforms lined the road to the graveside and saluted as the motorcade passed.
Family spokesman Jim McGrath says President George W. Bush has left the library and other relatives have, too.
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4:40 p.m.
President Donald Trump says the memorial service in Washington this week for former President George H.W. Bush was a “beautiful tribute” to an extraordinary life.
Trump on Thursday noted Bush’s passing at the start of a Hanukkah reception at the White House. He and first lady Melania Trump attended Bush’s state funeral service on Wednesday sitting next to the other living former presidents.
Trump called Bush a “wonderful man” and a “beloved American patriot.” He made the remarks as a special funeral train carrying Bush’s casket approached its final stop near Bush’s presidential library in Texas.
Bush will be buried on the library grounds.
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4:30 p.m.
The Navy has honored former President George H.W. Bush with a 21-plane flyover in a missing man formation before he’s laid to rest alongside his wife and daughter.
The 41st president will be buried Thursday at a private service on the grounds of his presidential library in College Station, Texas.
Bush will also be honored with a 21-cannon salute and the sounding of “Taps.”
The flyover was performed as an honor guard, close friends and relatives accompanied Bush’s casket to his family’s burial plot.
The flag draped over the casket will be presented to Bush’s daughter, Doro Bush Koch.
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4:15 p.m.
Former President George H.W. Bush’s casket has arrived for burial in his family’s plot on the grounds of his presidential library in Texas.
Bush will be buried during a private service Thursday, ending nearly a week of services honoring the life of the 41st president. He will be laid to rest alongside his wife, Barbara Bush, and their daughter Robin, who died at age 3 of leukemia in 1953.
Bush died last week at age 94. Nearly 1,200 people attended a funeral service for him earlier Thursday in Houston before his body was transported by a special funeral train to College Station, where the presidential library is located on the grounds of Texas A&M University.
Large crowds lined the roughly 70-mile (115-kilometer) train route to pay tribute to Bush.
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4:05 p.m.
More than 1,000 student cadets have lined the route of the motorcade carrying former President George H.W. Bush to his final resting place.
An honor guard Thursday carried Bush’s casket down the steps of a special funeral train that arrived in College Station after a roughly 70-mile (115-kilometer) trip from suburban Houston.
Former President George W. Bush and other family members stood on the Texas A&M University campus as a band played the school’s “Aggie War Hymn” fight song.
The casket was loaded into a hearse bound for his nearby presidential library, where Bush will be buried following a private graveside ceremony.
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3:45 p.m.
A special funeral train carrying the casket of former President George H.W. Bush has rolled to a final stop near his burial site in Texas.
The blue-and-gray locomotive painted to resemble Air Force One arrived Thursday in College Station after a roughly 70-mile (115-kilometer) trip from suburban Houston. Thousands of people lined the train route to pay their respects to the 41st president.
The 12-car train also carried Bush’s close friends and family, including former President George W. Bush.
They will now head to the grounds of the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum at Texas A&M University for a private burial service. Bush will be laid to rest alongside his wife, Barbara Bush, and their daughter Robin, who died at age 3 of leukemia in 1953.
It was the eighth funeral train in U.S. history and the first since Dwight D. Eisenhower’s death nearly a half-century ago.
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2:30 p.m.
People who turned out to pay tribute to former President George H.W. Bush as a special funeral train carries his body to the city where he’ll be buried are leaving coins on the tracks to be flattened into keepsakes.
Fifty-five-year-old Doug Allen of Cypress left eight coins on the tracks before the train passed through the small town of Pinehurst. The train left his three quarters, three dimes and two pennies flattened and slightly discolored.
He says he only thought of the idea a few moments before the train passed and his wife and her friend found the coins in their bags. He says, “It’s something we’ll always keep.”
Officials have been warning the excited crowds to stay off the tracks as the train approaches. At one point, a Texas Department of Public Safety helicopter flew overhead and told people to get off the tracks.
Bush will be buried later Thursday during a private service on the grounds of his presidential library in College Station.
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2:05 p.m.
A 54-year-old Texan who served in the U.S. Air Force during “Operation Desert Storm” is among the many people who turned out to watch the special funeral train carry former President George H.W. Bush to his final resting place.
Kevin Gulley, who lives in Cypress, traveled to nearby Pinehurst on Thursday to see the train carrying the casket of his former commander-in-chief. It is taking Bush’s body for burial in the family plot at his presidential library in College Station.
Gulley wore a blue jacket with “U.S. Air Force” embroidered in gold lettering on the back and had a button reading “Looking Great for ’88” on his lapel. He said he wanted to pay his respects to Bush.
Gulley stood waiting next to his son’s former football coach, 56-year-old Bill Powers. The two ran into each other here waiting for the train.
Powers says, “It’s what he wanted because he wanted everybody to be together.”
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1:45 p.m.
Crowds have lined the route of the special funeral train that is taking former President George H.W. Bush to the city where he’ll be laid to rest.
People waved American flags and cheered as the number “4141” train passed by on its roughly 70-mile (115-kilometer) journey from the Houston suburb of Spring to College Station.
The casket of the 41st president is visible through large windows on the side of the train car.
Among those paying tribute to Bush was 38-year-old Andy Gordon, of Magnolia, who took his two young daughters to see the train as it passed through nearby Pinehurst.
He says, “Hopefully, my children will remember the significance and the meaning of today.”
Bush will be buried later Thursday during a private service in the family’s plot on the grounds of his presidential library.
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12:50 p.m.
A special funeral train carrying the casket of former President George H.W. Bush has begun its journey to College Station, where he will be buried during a private service in the family plot on the grounds of his presidential library.
The number “4141” train that left the Houston suburb of Spring during a light rain Thursday afternoon was painted to resemble Air Force One. It will take 41st president’s casket, family and close friends about 70 miles (115 kilometers) through five small towns on a journey that’s expected to take about two-and-a-half hours.
About 1,200 people attended a funeral service for the 41st president earlier Thursday at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston, which is where the family worships.
Bush will be laid to rest alongside his wife, Barbara Bush, and their daughter Robin, who died of leukemia at age 3 in 1953.
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12:40 p.m.
The hearse carrying the body of former President George H.W. Bush has arrived at a Union Pacific facility north of Houston, where his casket will be placed on a special train that will take him to the city where he’ll be laid to rest.
People lined the route from St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston to the train facility in Spring to pay tribute to the 41st president, who died last week at age 94.
Bush was remembered during a funeral service Thursday morning as a deeply religious family man.
The train will take his casket, family and closest friends about 70 miles (115 kilometers) to College Station, where Bush will be buried later Thursday during a private service at his presidential library.
Bush will be laid to rest alongside his wife, Barbara Bush, and their daughter Robin, who died of leukemia at age 3 in 1953.
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12:25 p.m.
A procession carrying the body of former President H.W. Bush is slowly making its way through Houston following a funeral at his family’s church.
As the motorcade made its way through Houston early Thursday afternoon, police officers on horseback saluted, construction workers paused and truckers honked as the hearse drove by.
The motorcade is headed to a Union Pacific facility north of Houston, where a special funeral train will take Bush’s casket, family and close friends to College Station for a private burial service at his presidential library.
The journey through five small Texas towns was expected to take about two-and-a-half hours.
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12:15 p.m.
A Secret Service detail is accompanying the hearse that’s carrying former President George H.W. Bush to his burial site.
Jim McGrath, a spokesman for the Bush family, says a Secret Service car is following the hearse as it travels from Houston to the city of Spring, where the casket will be placed on a special funeral train that’s headed to Bush’s presidential library at Texas A&M University in College Station.
McGrath says Bush’s Secret Service detail will remain with him until 6 a.m. Friday.
The train is expected to arrive in College Station by mid-afternoon, and a private burial ceremony will follow.
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11:45 a.m.
The family of George H.W. Bush is headed to a Union Pacific facility to join a special train that will carry the former president’s casket to his final resting place.
Bush’s relatives, including son George W. Bush and his family, left St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston following a funeral that was attended by about 1,200 mourners.
The family is headed to a facility in Spring, Texas, where a special funeral train will depart with a final destination of College Station.
It will be the eighth presidential funeral train in U.S. history and the first since Dwight D. Eisenhower’s body traveled from the National Cathedral in Washington through seven states to his Kansas hometown of Abilene 49 years ago. Abraham Lincoln’s funeral train was the first, in 1865.
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11:35 a.m.
Country music star Reba McEntire has sung “The Lord’s Prayer” at the Houston funeral service of former President George H.W. Bush.
The Grammy winner on Thursday followed the Oak Ridge Boys, who were one of the president’s favorite musical acts and who sang “Amazing Grace” during the service at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston.
The church where the Bush family worships was filled with celebrities for the final public farewell to the 41st president.
Bush will be buried during a private service later Thursday at his family plot on the Bush presidential library grounds at Texas A&M University in College Station.
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11:10 a.m.
George H.W. Bush is being remembered at his longtime church as a man of faith who taught Sunday School, served coffee and watched his children perform in a Christmas pageant.
The Rev. Russell Levenson, Jr. told mourners Thursday that Bush had a “resolute faith” and once asked what heaven would be like. He told those gathered at St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church that he imagined Bush was greeted in heaven by his wife, Barbara Bush, “with her hands on her hips, saying ‘What took you so long?'”
Levenson said it was OK to cry because George H.W. Bush was never afraid to shed tears himself.
Bush’s longtime pastor ended the homily with the same prayer used at the president’s 1989 inauguration.
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10:45 a.m.
The only member of the Bush dynasty still in public office says he and former President George H.W. Bush’s 16 other grandchildren grew up in awe of the man they knew as “gampy.”
George P. Bush told mourners Thursday that the former president would challenge his grandkids to games like “the first to sleep award.” The line drew laughs at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston, where the Bush family worshipped.
The 42-year-old George P. Bush holds the office of Texas land commissioner. He joined former Secretary of State James Baker in eulogizing the 41st president, who died last week at age 94.
George P. Bush is the son of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. He was easily re-elected in November to a second four-year term in Texas.
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10:40 a.m.
Former Secretary of State James Baker remembered his longtime friend George H.W. Bush as having “had the courage of a warrior but the greater courage of a peacemaker” during an emotional eulogy at Bush’s funeral in Houston.
Baker began the eulogy Thursday with an apology. Using the nickname “Jefe,” which is Spanish for “boss,” Baker said he was going to brag about Bush, even though the former president hated boasting.
He called Bush the “best one-term president” in the nation’s history. He also praised Bush’s grace after the fall of the Berlin Wall, saying that Bush understood that humility toward a fallen adversary “is the very best path.”
Bush will be buried during a private ceremony later Thursday at his presidential library in College Station.
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10:25 a.m.
An honor guard has escorted the flag-draped casket of George H.W. Bush to the altar of the church where his funeral is being held in Texas.
After the casket reached the altar , attendees stood and sang “The Star-Spangled Banner” during the Thursday morning funeral for Bush in Houston.
The funeral at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church is also expected to include music from country music’s Reba McEntire and the Oak Ridge Boys.
Following the service, Bush’s casket will be escorted by train to his presidential library in College Station for burial.
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10:15 a.m.
The Houston funeral for George H.W. Bush has opened with an anthem sung at his inauguration.
The St. Martin’s Parish Choir performed “This is My Country” at Thursday’s funeral, which is the last public remembrance for the 41st president before his burial later Thursday during a private service at his presidential library in College Station.
The funeral at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church also included the hymn “O Beautiful for Spacious Skies.”
Bush’s longtime friend and secretary of state, James Baker, is set to give a eulogy, along with Bush’s grandson, George P. Bush.
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10 a.m.
Funeral services have begun at a Houston church for George H.W. Bush, the last public remembrance for the former president who will be laid to rest Thursday.
About 1,200 mourners were expected at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church for the service, which will include eulogies from Bush’s secretary of state, James Baker, and his grandson, George P. Bush.
The funeral follows three days of events in Washington honoring the 41st president.
After the Houston funeral, a special train painted to resemble Air Force One will carry Bush’s casket, family and close friends about 70 miles (115 kilometers) to College Station, where he will be buried in a private service alongside his late wife, Barbara Bush, and their daughter Robin, who died of leukemia in 1953 at age 3.
From The Associated Press:
COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Thousands waved and cheered along the route as funeral train No. 4141 — for the 41st president — carried George H.W. Bush’s remains to their final resting place on Thursday, his last journey as a week of national remembrance took on a decidedly personal feel in an emotional home state farewell.
Some people laid coins along the tracks that wound through small town Texas so a 420,000-pound locomotive pulling the nation’s first funeral train in nearly half a century could crunch them into souvenirs. Others snapped pictures or crowded for views so close that police helicopters overhead had to warn them back. Elementary students hoisted a banner simply reading “THANK YOU.”
The scenes reminiscent of a bygone era followed the more somber tone of a funeral service at a Houston church, where Bush’s former secretary of state and confidant for decades, James Baker, addressed him as “jefe,” Spanish for “boss.” At times choking back tears, Baker praised Bush as “a beautiful human being” who had “the courage of a warrior. But when the time came for prudence, he maintained the greater courage of a peacemaker.”
Baker also offered Bush as a contrast to today’s divisive, sometimes vitriolic politics, saying that his “wish for a kinder, gentler nation was not a cynical political slogan. It came honest and unguarded from his soul.”
“The world became a better place because George Bush occupied the White House for four years,” said Baker.
As the post-funeral motorcade carrying Bush’s remains later sped down a closed highway from the church to the train station, construction workers on all levels of an unfinished building paused to watch. A man sitting on a Ferris wheel near the aquarium waved.
Bush’s body was later loaded onto a special train fitted with clear sides so people could catch a glimpse of the casket as it rumbled by. The train traveled about 70 miles — the first presidential funeral train journey since Dwight D. Eisenhower’s remains went from Washington to his native Kansas 49 years ago — to the family plot on the grounds of Bush’s presidential library at Texas A&M University. Bush’s final resting place is alongside his wife, Barbara, and Robin Bush, the daughter they lost to leukemia at age 3.
In the town of Pinehurst, 55-year-old Doug Allen left eight coins on the tracks before the train passed — three quarters, three dimes and two pennies. The train left the coins flattened and slightly discolored.
“It’s something we’ll always keep,” Allen said.
Andy Gordon, 38, took his 6-year-old daughter, Addison, out of school so she and her 3-year-old sister, Ashtyn, could see the train pass.
“Hopefully, my children will remember the significance and the meaning of today,” Gordon said. Addison was carrying two small American flags in her hand.
The train arrived in College Station in the late afternoon with a military band playing “Hail to the Chief” and then Texas A&M’s “Aggie War Hymn.”
About 2,100 cadets in their tan dress uniforms with jackets and ties and knee-high boots waited for hours on a cold, gray day to line the road —known as Barbara Bush Drive— to the Bush library’s front doors. The U.S. Navy conducted a 21 strike fighter flyover, a salute to the World War II Navy pilot, followed by a 21-gun cannon salute on the ground.
At the earlier service at Houston’s St. Martin’s Episcopal Church, where Bush and his family regularly worshipped, the choir sang “This is My Country,” which was also sung at Bush’s presidential inauguration in 1989. Those gathered heard a prayer stressing the importance of service and selflessness that the president himself offered for the country at the start of his term.
There were rousing renditions of the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” and “Onward Christian Soldiers,” and also performances from some of Bush’s country favorites. The Oak Ridge Boys recalled playing for him for decades — sometimes at the White House — and joked that Bush “fancied himself to be a good bass singer. He was not.” They then sang “Amazing Grace,” and Reba McEntire offered a musical version of “The Lord’s Prayer.”
Thursday’s flavor was distinctly Texan, unlike three days of Washington celebrations that had more of a national feel. In place of most federal dignitaries were top Houston athletes including the NFL Texans’ defensive end J.J. Watt — showing Bush’s love for sports — and Chuck Norris, who played TV’s “Walker, Texas Ranger.”
Grandson George P. Bush, the only member of the political dynasty still holding elected office, as Texas land commissioner, used his eulogy to praise the man the younger generations called “gampy.”
“He left a simple, yet profound legacy to his children, to his grandchildren and to his country: service,” George P. Bush said.
The church’s pastor, the Rev. Russell Levenson Jr., recalled the Bushes often attending services and offering to give up their seats to others on days when the church was particularly crowded.
“He was ready for heaven, and heaven was ready for him,” Levenson said of Bush who was in declining health in recent years. The minister suggested that when the former president died, he met his wife of 73 years in heaven and Barbara Bush playfully demanded, “What took you so long?”
Indeed, the funeral occurred at the same church where services were held in April for Barbara Bush. Those are remembered for an emotional scene when the former president gazed from his wheelchair up at her casket, then shook hands with well-wishers.
Wednesday night, more than 11,000 people paid their respects as Bush lay in repose at the church all night.
Earlier Wednesday, at Washington National Cathedral in the nation’s capital, there was high praise for the last of the presidents to have fought in World War II — and a hefty dose of humor about a man whose speaking delivery was once described as a cross between Mister Rogers and John Wayne. Three other former presidents and Donald Trump watched as George W. Bush eulogized his father as “the brightest of a thousand points of light.”
President Trump, who once mocked the late president’s “points of light” call to volunteerism, had nothing but favorable words Thursday.
“He was a wonderful man. We will always remember this great statesman and beloved American patriot,” Trump said. “He really was very special.”
The cathedral service in Washington was a tribute to the patriarch of one of the nation’s most powerful political families — they occupied the White House for a dozen years — and to a faded political era that prized military service and public responsibility. Like Baker’s address Thursday, it included indirect comparisons to Trump but was not consumed by them, as speakers focused on Bush’s public life and character — with plenty of cracks about his goofy side, too.
“He was a man of such great humility,” said Alan Simpson, former Republican senator from Wyoming. Those who travel “the high road of humility in Washington, D.C.,” he added pointedly, “are not bothered by heavy traffic.”
Trump sat Wednesday with his wife, the trio of ex-presidents and their wives, several of them sharp critics of his presidency and one of them, Hillary Clinton, his 2016 Democratic foe. Apart from courteous nods and some handshakes, there was little interaction between Trump and the others.
George W. Bush broke down briefly at the end of his eulogy while invoking the daughter his parents lost and his mother. He took comfort in knowing “Dad is hugging Robin and holding Mom’s hand again.”