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Grand Army of the Republic

The Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) was a fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army (United States Army), Union Navy (U.S. Navy), and the Marines who served in the American Civil War. It was founded in 1866 in Decatur, Illinois, and grew to include hundreds of "posts" (local community units) across the North and West. It was dissolved in 1956 at the death of its last member.

Grand Army of the Republic
AbbreviationG.A.R.
SuccessorWoman's Relief Corps and Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
FormationApril 6, 1866 (1866-04-06)
FounderBenjamin F. Stephenson
DissolvedAugust 2, 1956 (1956-08-02)
TypeVeterans' organization
PurposeSocial, literary, historical, benevolent

According to Stuart McConnell:

The Grand Army of the Republic, the largest of all Union Army veterans' organizations, was the most powerful single-issue political lobby of the late nineteenth century, securing massive pensions for veterans and helping to elect five postwar presidents from its own membership. To its members, it was also a secret fraternal order, a source of local charity, a provider of entertainment in small municipalities, and a patriotic organization.[1]

Linking men through their experience of the war, the G.A.R. became among the first organized advocacy groups in American politics, supporting voting rights for black veterans, promoting patriotic education, helping to make Memorial Day a national holiday, lobbying Congress to establish regular veterans' pensions, and supporting Republican political candidates. Its peak membership, at 410,000, was in 1890, a high point of various Civil War commemorative and monument dedication ceremonies.

History

 
G.A.R. Uniform Hat Badge from Post No. 146, "RG Shaw Post", named after Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and established by surviving members of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment in 1871 (R. Andre Stevens Civil War Collection)

After the end of American Civil War, various state and local organizations were formed for veterans to network and maintain connections with each other. Many of the veterans used their shared experiences as a basis for fellowship. Groups of men began joining, first for camaraderie and later for political power. Emerging as most influential among the various organizations during the first post-war years was the Grand Army of the Republic, founded on April 6, 1866, on the principles of "Fraternity, Charity and Loyalty," in Decatur, Illinois, by Dr. Benjamin F. Stephenson.[2]

The GAR initially grew and prospered as a de facto political arm of the Republican Party during the heated political contests of the Reconstruction Era. The commemoration of Union Army and Navy veterans, black and white, immediately became entwined with partisan politics. The GAR promoted voting rights for Black veterans, as many white veterans recognized their demonstrated patriotism and sacrifices, providing one of the first racially integrated social/fraternal organizations in America. Black veterans, who enthusiastically embraced the message of equality, shunned black veterans' organizations in preference for racially inclusive and integrated groups. But when the Republican Party's commitment to reform in the South gradually decreased, the GAR's mission became ill-defined and the organization floundered. The GAR almost disappeared in the early 1870s, and many state-centered divisions, named "departments", and local posts ceased to exist.[3]

In his General Order No. 11, dated May 5, 1868, first GAR Commander-in-Chief, General John A. Logan declared May 30 to be Memorial Day (also referred to for many years as "Decoration Day"), calling upon the GAR membership to make the May 30 observance an annual occurrence. Although not the first time war graves had been decorated, Logan's order effectively established "Memorial Day" as the day upon which Americans now pay tribute to all their war casualties, missing-in-action, and deceased veterans. As decades passed, similarly inspired commemorations also spread across the South as "Confederate Memorial Day" or "Confederate Decoration Day", usually in April, led by organizations of Southern soldiers in the parallel United Confederate Veterans.[4]

 
Reverse of the G.A.R. Badge
 
GAR marker, beside a veteran's grave in Portland Street Cemetery, South Berwick, Maine
 
Department of Massachusetts GAR Post 144, Dedham Massachusetts 1886
 
A replica of the USS Kearsarge displayed at the 1893 GAR National Convention in Indianapolis, Indiana
 
Grand Army of the Republic National Encampment bulletin in 1900
 
Department of Ohio marching in G.A.R. Parade, Toledo, Ohio, 1908
 
GAR parade during the 1914 Encampment in Detroit, Michigan
 
A.C. Shafer and Commander C.H. Haskins, standing, observed the transfer of the Departmental Headquarters of the Grand Army of the Republic from San Francisco to Los Angeles in June 1917.

In the 1880s, the Union veterans' organization revived under new leadership that provided a platform for renewed growth, by advocating Federal pensions for veterans. As the organization revived, black veterans joined in significant numbers and organized local posts. The national organization, however, failed to press the case for similar pensions for black soldiers. Most black troops never received any pension or remuneration for wounds incurred during their Civil War service.[5]

The GAR was organized into "Departments" at the state level and "Posts" at the community level, and military-style uniforms were worn by its members. There were posts in every state in the U.S., and several posts overseas.[5] The pattern of establishing departments and local posts was later used by other American military veterans' organizations, such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars (organized originally for veterans of the Spanish–American War and the Philippine Insurrection) and the later American Legion (for the First World War and later expanded to include subsequent World War II, Korean, Vietnam and Middle Eastern wars).

The G.A.R.'s political power grew during the latter part of the 19th century, and it helped elect several United States presidents, beginning with the 18th, Ulysses S. Grant, and ending with the 25th, William McKinley. Six Civil War veterans (Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur; Benjamin Harrison, and McKinley) were elected President of the United States; all were Republicans. (The sole post-war Democratic president was Grover Cleveland, the 22nd and 24th chief executive.) For a time, candidates could not get Republican presidential or congressional nominations without the endorsement of the GAR veterans voting bloc. Of the six mentioned US Presidents, at least five were members of the G.A.R.:

  • Ulysses S. Grant (Lt General of the Union Armies) Became a member of the Philadelphia PA George G. Meade Post GAR Post # 1 May 16, 1877[6][7]
  • Rutherford B. Hayes (Brevet Major General) Became a Member of the Fremont Ohio Manville Moore GAR Post[8]
  • James A. Garfield (Major General) Possibly a member of the G.A.R.-a GAR Post publication refers to the death of Comrade James Garfield, President of the United States[9]
  • Benjamin Harrison (Brevet Brigadier General) Became a member of the Indianapolis Indiana General George H. Thomas GAR Post[10]
  • William McKinley. (Brevet Major of the 23d Ohio) Became a member of the Canton Ohio GAR Post # 25 July 7, 1880 [It was later renamed McKinley GAR Post # 25][11]

With membership strictly limited to "veterans of the late unpleasantness," the GAR encouraged the formation of Allied Orders to aid them in various works. Numerous male organizations jousted for the backing of the GAR, and the political battles became quite severe until the GAR finally endorsed the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War as its heir.

The GAR, according to Stuart McConnell, promoted, "a nationalism that honored white, native-stock, middle-class males and ...affirmed a prewar ideal of a virtuous, millennial Republic, based on the independent producer, entrepreneurial capitalism, and the citizen-soldier volunteer."[12]

Female members

Although an overwhelmingly male organization, the GAR is known to have had at least two women who were members.

The first female known to be admitted to the GAR was Kady Brownell, who served in the Union Army with her husband Robert, a private in the 1st Rhode Island Infantry at the First Battle of Bull Run in Virginia and with the 5th Rhode Island Infantry at the Battle of New Berne in North Carolina. Kady was admitted as a member in 1870 to Elias Howe Jr. Post #3, in Bridgeport, Connecticut. The GAR insignia is engraved on her gravestone in the North Burial Ground in Providence, Rhode Island.[13]

In 1897 the GAR admitted Sarah Emma Edmonds, who served in the 2nd Michigan Infantry as a disguised man named Franklin Thompson from May 1861 until April 1863. In 1882, she collected affidavits from former comrades in an effort to petition for a veteran's pension which she received in July 1884. Edmonds was only a member for a brief period as she died September 5, 1898; however she was given a funeral with military honors when she was reburied in Houston in 1901.[14]

It is possible that other women were members of the GAR, as well.

Later years

The GAR reached its largest enrollment in 1890, with 410,000 members.[15] It held an annual "National Encampment" every year from 1866 to 1949. Interesting anecdotes from the war were told around the many campfires at these reunions and compiled in a book of campfire "chats", including descriptions of the festivities at the 1884-1886 encampments in Minneapolis, Portland, Maine and San Francisco.[16] At the final encampment in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1949, the few surviving attendees voted to retain the existing officers in place until the organization's dissolution. Theodore Penland of Oregon, the GAR's Commander at the time, was therefore its last.[3] At the time of the last national encampment, 16 members were still living and six were able to attend, including James Hard, the last combat veteran, who had fought at First Bull Run, Antietam, and Chancellorsville.[17] In 1956, after the death of the last member, Albert Woolson, the GAR was formally dissolved.[3]

Memorials, honors and commemorations

 
The 1948 postal stamp commemorating the GAR's final national encampment.
 
Memorial Hall Sidney, Ohio which housed the GAR Post.

There are physical memorials to the Grand Army of the Republic in numerous communities throughout the United States.

U.S. Route 6 is known as the Grand Army of the Republic Highway for its entire length.[18]

The Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps began during the conflict by both sides. In 1948, the Grand Army of the Republic was commemorated on a stamp.[19] In 1951, the U.S. Postal Service printed a virtually identical stamp for the final reunion of the United Confederate Veterans.[20]

State posts

Every state (even those of the former Confederacy) fell within a GAR "Department," and within these Departments were the "Posts" (forerunners of modern American Legion Halls or VFW Halls). The posts were made up of local veterans, many of whom participated in local civic events. As the posts were formed, they were assigned to the home Department of the National Commander-in-chief of the year that they were chartered. There was no GAR post in London, but there was a Civil War Veterans Association Group that had many GAR members belonging to it.

As Civil War veterans died or were no longer able to participate in GAR activities, posts consolidated or were disbanded.[21] Posts were assigned a sequential number based on their admission into the state's GAR organization, and most posts held informal names which honored comrades, battles, or commanders; it was not uncommon to have more than one post in a state honoring the same individual (such as Abraham Lincoln) and posts often changed their informal designation by vote of the local membership. See:

In popular culture

John Steinbeck's East of Eden features several references to the Grand Army of the Republic. Despite having very little actual battle experience during his brief military career, cut short by the loss of his leg, Adam Trask's father Cyrus joins the GAR and assumes the stature of "a great man" through his involvement with the organization. At the height of the GAR's influence in Washington, he brags to his son:

I wonder if you know how much influence I really have. I can throw the Grand Army at any candidate like a sock. Even the President likes to know what I think about public matters. I can get senators defeated and I can pick appointments like apples. I can make men and I can destroy men. Do you know that?

— Cyrus Trask (character), East of Eden

Later in the book, references are made to the graves of GAR members in California in order to emphasize the passage of time.[22]

Sinclair Lewis also refers to the GAR in his acclaimed novel Main Street[23] and in his novel It Can't Happen Here,[24] as does Charles Portis's classic novel, True Grit,[25] the GAR is briefly mentioned in William Faulkner's novel, The Sound and the Fury.[26] and Willa Cather's short story "The Sculptor's Funeral" briefly references the GAR.[27]

The GAR is mentioned in the seldom-sung second verse of the patriotic song "You're a Grand Old Flag".[28]

The GAR is referenced in John McCrae's poem He Is There! which was set to music in 1917 by Charles Ives as part of his cycle Three Songs of the War.[29]

In Ward Moore's 1953 alternate history novel Bring the Jubilee, the Confederates won the Civil War and became a major world power while the rump United States was reduced to an impoverished dependence. The Grand Army of the Republic is the name of a nationalistic organization working to restore the United States to its former glory through acts of sabotage and terrorism.[30]

The name appears in the Star Wars prequel era. Star Wars: The Clone Wars refers to the clone army as "The Grand Army of the Republic".

Notable commanders-in-chief

Women's auxiliaries

 
"Tea Tray Cadets" 1880 membership badge, an early women's auxiliary to the G.A.R.

The Woman's Relief Corps was founded in 1879 as a "secret" organization and recognized in 1883 as the "official women's auxiliary" to the G.A.R.

The Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic was also a significant organization. It was founded by Lelia P. Roby.[31] As a congressionally chartered non-profit organization, it is the oldest women's hereditary organization in the United States. The original objectives of the organization included promotion of patriotism and loyalty to the Union, and participation in community service, especially for the aid of our Veterans and their dependents."[32]

As original Union veterans of the G.A.R., organized in 1866, grew old, many women's groups formed to aid them and their widows and orphans. The Loyal Ladies League was established in 1881 as an auxiliary to the G.A.R.; in 1886 the organization went more national and changed its name to "The Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic."[33] It was incorporated by Public Law 86-47 [S.949] of the 86th Congress on June 17, 1959 [34]

In 1899, the president was Dr. Julia P. Shade of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[35]

Its president in 1922 was Mrs. Ethel M. Irish, of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin.[36]

See also

References

  1. ^ Stuart McConnell, Glorious Contentment: The Grand Army of the Republic, 1865–1900. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1997.
  2. ^ "Grand Army of the Republic History". December 13, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c Knight, Glenn B. "Brief History of the Grand Army of the Republic". suvcw.org. Retrieved January 18, 2011.
  4. ^ John E. Gilman (1910). "The Grand Army of the Republic". civilwarhome.com. Retrieved March 5, 2011.
  5. ^ a b "A Brief History of the Grand Army of the Republic". Grand Army of the Republic Museum and Library. Retrieved March 5, 2011.
  6. ^ Ward, William H. (1886). Records of Members of the Grand Army of the Republic. pp. 545–547.
  7. ^ Ward, Joseph Ripley Chandler (1889). History of the George G Meade Post No. 1... Philadelphia. p. 49.
  8. ^ Ward, p. 515.
  9. ^ What One GAR Post Has accomplished. Norwood Mass: The Norwood Press. 1913. p. 85.
  10. ^ Harrison, Benjamin; Hedges, Charles (February 20, 1892). Speeches of Benjamin Harrison, Twenty-Third President of the United States... New York: United States Book Company. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
  11. ^ Grand army memorial souvenir of Comrade Wm. McKinley Post, no. 25. Buffalo: McKinley Memorial Publishing. 1902.
  12. ^ George McJimsey, "Glorious Contentment: the Grand Army of the Republic, 1865-1900." Annals of Iowa 52.4 (1993) pp 474-476, citing Stuart McConnell, Glorious contentment: The Grand Army of the Republic, 1865-1900 (U of North Carolina Press, 1997) p 222.
  13. ^ "A female comrade of the Grand Army". New York Herald. September 16, 1870.
  14. ^ "Sarah Emma Edmonds, Private, December 1841–September 5, 1898". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
  15. ^ Rothbard, Murray N. (June 19, 2019). "Beginning the Welfare State: Civil War Veterans' Pensions". Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics. 22 (1): 68–81. doi:10.35297/qjae.010019. S2CID 197810818.
  16. ^ Davis, Washington (1888). Camp-Fire Chats. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
  17. ^ Stilwell, Blake (September 3, 2022). "The last Union combat veteran of the Civil War lived to see the Cold War". We Are The Mighty. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
  18. ^ Richard F. Weingroff (July 27, 2009). "U.S. 6-The Grand Army of the Republic Highway". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  19. ^ A. Gibson, Gary (1999). "Remembering the Grand Army of the Republic Fifty Years Later". Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War. Retrieved March 2, 2011.
    B. "G.A.R. Issue". National Postal Museum. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
  20. ^ . stampscatalog.info. Archived from the original on March 3, 2011. Retrieved March 2, 2011.
  21. ^ "List of posts and location by department". Library of Congress. 2001. Retrieved July 3, 2014.
  22. ^ "Steinbeck-East of Eden". edstephan.org. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
  23. ^ Lewis, Sinclair (April 12, 2006). "XXXV". Main Street (PDF). Project Gutenberg. Retrieved January 6, 2015.
  24. ^ Lewis, Sinclair (1935). "VII". It Can't Happen Here. Feedbooks. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
  25. ^ Portis, Charles (December 5, 2010). True Grit. New York: Overlook Press. ISBN 9781590206508. Retrieved January 16, 2015.
  26. ^ The Sound and the Fury-Glossary. University of Mississippi Press. 1996. p. 54. ISBN 0-87805-936-9. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
  27. ^ "The Sculptor's Funeral". Classic Reader. Retrieved January 16, 2015.
  28. ^ Cohan, George M. (1906). "You're a Grand Old Flag (Annotated Music)". Library of Congress Performing Arts Encyclopedia. New York: F. A. Mills. Retrieved April 24, 2013.
  29. ^ . Song of America. Archived from the original on May 10, 2011. Retrieved March 17, 2011.
  30. ^ Moore, Ward (January 1, 2009). Bring the Jubilee. Wildside Press. ISBN 978-1434478535. Retrieved January 16, 2015.
  31. ^ Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). "ROBY, Mrs. Lelia P.". A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life. Charles Wells Moulton. p. 617.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  32. ^ "Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic". Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  33. ^ "History". Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic. Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  34. ^ Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the 86th Congress. Vol. 105. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1959. p. 19861.
  35. ^ "LGAR Past National Presidents". suvcw.org. Retrieved October 12, 2019.
  36. ^ Official Register and Directory of Women's Clubs in America. Vol. XXIV. Helen M. Winslow. 1922. Retrieved August 22, 2019.

Further reading

  • Ainsworth, Scott. "Electoral Strength and the Emergence of Group Influence in the Late 1800s The Grand Army of the Republic." American Politics Research 23.3 (1995): 319–338.
  • Cimbala, Paul A. Veterans North and South: The Transition from Soldier to Civilian after the American Civil War (Santa Barbara: Praeger, 2015). xviii, 189 pp.
  • Dearing, Mary R. Veterans in Politics: The Story of the GAR (1974) online
  • Gannon, Barbara A. The Won Cause: Black and White Comradeship in the Grand Army of the Republic (2011)
  • Jordan, Brian Matthew. Marching Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War. New York: Liveright, 2015.
  • McConnell, Stuart. Glorious Contentment: The Grand Army of the Republic, 1865–1900. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1997.
  • Marten, James Alan. Sing Not War: The Lives of Union & Confederate Veterans in Gilded Age America (Univ of North Carolina Press, 2011).

External links

  • GAR page at Library of Congress
  • SUVCW official website
  • ASUVCW official website
  • DUVCW official website
  • Medals related to the GAR in the collection of the American Numismatic Society
  • Grand Army Museum, Lynn, Massachusetts at Essex National Heritage website
  • Photographs of Members of the Stevens Post, Seattle, Washington
  • Grand Army of the Republic Museum and Library, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • The Grand Army of the Republic. Philip R. Schuyler Post, No. 51 records, including membership records, constitution and by-laws, correspondence and minutes of the Philip R. Schuyler Post No. 51, are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  • Geocache on the Memorial Highway
  • Grand Army of the Republic Collection May 25, 2018, at the Wayback MachineMcLean County Museum of History archives (Illinois)
  • – Lavery Library, St. John Fisher College, Rochester NY
  • Grand Army of the Republic, Department of Kansas Encampments, 1882-1944
  • Grand Army of the Republic, Walla Walla, records at the Whitman College and Northwest Archives, Whitman College.
  • Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) George H. Thomas Post No. 17 collection, Rare Books and Manuscripts, Indiana State Library
  • Grand Army of the Republic medals and ribbons, 1888-1956. California State Library, California History Room.

grand, army, republic, this, article, about, veterans, organization, other, uses, disambiguation, fraternal, organization, composed, veterans, union, army, united, states, army, union, navy, navy, marines, served, american, civil, founded, 1866, decatur, illin. This article is about the U S veterans organization For other uses see Grand Army of the Republic disambiguation The Grand Army of the Republic GAR was a fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army United States Army Union Navy U S Navy and the Marines who served in the American Civil War It was founded in 1866 in Decatur Illinois and grew to include hundreds of posts local community units across the North and West It was dissolved in 1956 at the death of its last member Grand Army of the RepublicAbbreviationG A R SuccessorWoman s Relief Corps and Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil WarFormationApril 6 1866 1866 04 06 FounderBenjamin F StephensonDissolvedAugust 2 1956 1956 08 02 TypeVeterans organizationPurposeSocial literary historical benevolentAccording to Stuart McConnell The Grand Army of the Republic the largest of all Union Army veterans organizations was the most powerful single issue political lobby of the late nineteenth century securing massive pensions for veterans and helping to elect five postwar presidents from its own membership To its members it was also a secret fraternal order a source of local charity a provider of entertainment in small municipalities and a patriotic organization 1 Linking men through their experience of the war the G A R became among the first organized advocacy groups in American politics supporting voting rights for black veterans promoting patriotic education helping to make Memorial Day a national holiday lobbying Congress to establish regular veterans pensions and supporting Republican political candidates Its peak membership at 410 000 was in 1890 a high point of various Civil War commemorative and monument dedication ceremonies Contents 1 History 1 1 Female members 1 2 Later years 2 Memorials honors and commemorations 3 State posts 4 In popular culture 5 Notable commanders in chief 6 Women s auxiliaries 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory Edit G A R Uniform Hat Badge from Post No 146 RG Shaw Post named after Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and established by surviving members of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment in 1871 R Andre Stevens Civil War Collection After the end of American Civil War various state and local organizations were formed for veterans to network and maintain connections with each other Many of the veterans used their shared experiences as a basis for fellowship Groups of men began joining first for camaraderie and later for political power Emerging as most influential among the various organizations during the first post war years was the Grand Army of the Republic founded on April 6 1866 on the principles of Fraternity Charity and Loyalty in Decatur Illinois by Dr Benjamin F Stephenson 2 The GAR initially grew and prospered as a de facto political arm of the Republican Party during the heated political contests of the Reconstruction Era The commemoration of Union Army and Navy veterans black and white immediately became entwined with partisan politics The GAR promoted voting rights for Black veterans as many white veterans recognized their demonstrated patriotism and sacrifices providing one of the first racially integrated social fraternal organizations in America Black veterans who enthusiastically embraced the message of equality shunned black veterans organizations in preference for racially inclusive and integrated groups But when the Republican Party s commitment to reform in the South gradually decreased the GAR s mission became ill defined and the organization floundered The GAR almost disappeared in the early 1870s and many state centered divisions named departments and local posts ceased to exist 3 In his General Order No 11 dated May 5 1868 first GAR Commander in Chief General John A Logan declared May 30 to be Memorial Day also referred to for many years as Decoration Day calling upon the GAR membership to make the May 30 observance an annual occurrence Although not the first time war graves had been decorated Logan s order effectively established Memorial Day as the day upon which Americans now pay tribute to all their war casualties missing in action and deceased veterans As decades passed similarly inspired commemorations also spread across the South as Confederate Memorial Day or Confederate Decoration Day usually in April led by organizations of Southern soldiers in the parallel United Confederate Veterans 4 Reverse of the G A R Badge GAR marker beside a veteran s grave in Portland Street Cemetery South Berwick Maine Department of Massachusetts GAR Post 144 Dedham Massachusetts 1886 A replica of the USS Kearsarge displayed at the 1893 GAR National Convention in Indianapolis Indiana Grand Army of the Republic National Encampment bulletin in 1900 Department of Ohio marching in G A R Parade Toledo Ohio 1908 GAR parade during the 1914 Encampment in Detroit Michigan A C Shafer and Commander C H Haskins standing observed the transfer of the Departmental Headquarters of the Grand Army of the Republic from San Francisco to Los Angeles in June 1917 In the 1880s the Union veterans organization revived under new leadership that provided a platform for renewed growth by advocating Federal pensions for veterans As the organization revived black veterans joined in significant numbers and organized local posts The national organization however failed to press the case for similar pensions for black soldiers Most black troops never received any pension or remuneration for wounds incurred during their Civil War service 5 The GAR was organized into Departments at the state level and Posts at the community level and military style uniforms were worn by its members There were posts in every state in the U S and several posts overseas 5 The pattern of establishing departments and local posts was later used by other American military veterans organizations such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars organized originally for veterans of the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection and the later American Legion for the First World War and later expanded to include subsequent World War II Korean Vietnam and Middle Eastern wars The G A R s political power grew during the latter part of the 19th century and it helped elect several United States presidents beginning with the 18th Ulysses S Grant and ending with the 25th William McKinley Six Civil War veterans Grant Rutherford B Hayes James A Garfield Chester A Arthur Benjamin Harrison and McKinley were elected President of the United States all were Republicans The sole post war Democratic president was Grover Cleveland the 22nd and 24th chief executive For a time candidates could not get Republican presidential or congressional nominations without the endorsement of the GAR veterans voting bloc Of the six mentioned US Presidents at least five were members of the G A R Ulysses S Grant Lt General of the Union Armies Became a member of the Philadelphia PA George G Meade Post GAR Post 1 May 16 1877 6 7 Rutherford B Hayes Brevet Major General Became a Member of the Fremont Ohio Manville Moore GAR Post 8 James A Garfield Major General Possibly a member of the G A R a GAR Post publication refers to the death of Comrade James Garfield President of the United States 9 Benjamin Harrison Brevet Brigadier General Became a member of the Indianapolis Indiana General George H Thomas GAR Post 10 William McKinley Brevet Major of the 23d Ohio Became a member of the Canton Ohio GAR Post 25 July 7 1880 It was later renamed McKinley GAR Post 25 11 With membership strictly limited to veterans of the late unpleasantness the GAR encouraged the formation of Allied Orders to aid them in various works Numerous male organizations jousted for the backing of the GAR and the political battles became quite severe until the GAR finally endorsed the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War as its heir The GAR according to Stuart McConnell promoted a nationalism that honored white native stock middle class males and affirmed a prewar ideal of a virtuous millennial Republic based on the independent producer entrepreneurial capitalism and the citizen soldier volunteer 12 Female members Edit Although an overwhelmingly male organization the GAR is known to have had at least two women who were members The first female known to be admitted to the GAR was Kady Brownell who served in the Union Army with her husband Robert a private in the 1st Rhode Island Infantry at the First Battle of Bull Run in Virginia and with the 5th Rhode Island Infantry at the Battle of New Berne in North Carolina Kady was admitted as a member in 1870 to Elias Howe Jr Post 3 in Bridgeport Connecticut The GAR insignia is engraved on her gravestone in the North Burial Ground in Providence Rhode Island 13 In 1897 the GAR admitted Sarah Emma Edmonds who served in the 2nd Michigan Infantry as a disguised man named Franklin Thompson from May 1861 until April 1863 In 1882 she collected affidavits from former comrades in an effort to petition for a veteran s pension which she received in July 1884 Edmonds was only a member for a brief period as she died September 5 1898 however she was given a funeral with military honors when she was reburied in Houston in 1901 14 It is possible that other women were members of the GAR as well Kady Brownwell Sarah Emma EdmondsLater years Edit The GAR reached its largest enrollment in 1890 with 410 000 members 15 It held an annual National Encampment every year from 1866 to 1949 Interesting anecdotes from the war were told around the many campfires at these reunions and compiled in a book of campfire chats including descriptions of the festivities at the 1884 1886 encampments in Minneapolis Portland Maine and San Francisco 16 At the final encampment in Indianapolis Indiana in 1949 the few surviving attendees voted to retain the existing officers in place until the organization s dissolution Theodore Penland of Oregon the GAR s Commander at the time was therefore its last 3 At the time of the last national encampment 16 members were still living and six were able to attend including James Hard the last combat veteran who had fought at First Bull Run Antietam and Chancellorsville 17 In 1956 after the death of the last member Albert Woolson the GAR was formally dissolved 3 Memorials honors and commemorations Edit The 1948 postal stamp commemorating the GAR s final national encampment The Stephenson Grand Army of the Republic Memorial in Washington D C Memorial Hall Sidney Ohio which housed the GAR Post There are physical memorials to the Grand Army of the Republic in numerous communities throughout the United States U S Route 6 is known as the Grand Army of the Republic Highway for its entire length 18 The Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps began during the conflict by both sides In 1948 the Grand Army of the Republic was commemorated on a stamp 19 In 1951 the U S Postal Service printed a virtually identical stamp for the final reunion of the United Confederate Veterans 20 State posts EditEvery state even those of the former Confederacy fell within a GAR Department and within these Departments were the Posts forerunners of modern American Legion Halls or VFW Halls The posts were made up of local veterans many of whom participated in local civic events As the posts were formed they were assigned to the home Department of the National Commander in chief of the year that they were chartered There was no GAR post in London but there was a Civil War Veterans Association Group that had many GAR members belonging to it As Civil War veterans died or were no longer able to participate in GAR activities posts consolidated or were disbanded 21 Posts were assigned a sequential number based on their admission into the state s GAR organization and most posts held informal names which honored comrades battles or commanders it was not uncommon to have more than one post in a state honoring the same individual such as Abraham Lincoln and posts often changed their informal designation by vote of the local membership See List of Grand Army of the Republic Posts in Kansas List of Grand Army of the Republic Posts in KentuckyIn popular culture EditJohn Steinbeck s East of Eden features several references to the Grand Army of the Republic Despite having very little actual battle experience during his brief military career cut short by the loss of his leg Adam Trask s father Cyrus joins the GAR and assumes the stature of a great man through his involvement with the organization At the height of the GAR s influence in Washington he brags to his son I wonder if you know how much influence I really have I can throw the Grand Army at any candidate like a sock Even the President likes to know what I think about public matters I can get senators defeated and I can pick appointments like apples I can make men and I can destroy men Do you know that Cyrus Trask character East of Eden Later in the book references are made to the graves of GAR members in California in order to emphasize the passage of time 22 Sinclair Lewis also refers to the GAR in his acclaimed novel Main Street 23 and in his novel It Can t Happen Here 24 as does Charles Portis s classic novel True Grit 25 the GAR is briefly mentioned in William Faulkner s novel The Sound and the Fury 26 and Willa Cather s short story The Sculptor s Funeral briefly references the GAR 27 The GAR is mentioned in the seldom sung second verse of the patriotic song You re a Grand Old Flag 28 The GAR is referenced in John McCrae s poem He Is There which was set to music in 1917 by Charles Ives as part of his cycle Three Songs of the War 29 In Ward Moore s 1953 alternate history novel Bring the Jubilee the Confederates won the Civil War and became a major world power while the rump United States was reduced to an impoverished dependence The Grand Army of the Republic is the name of a nationalistic organization working to restore the United States to its former glory through acts of sabotage and terrorism 30 The name appears in the Star Wars prequel era Star Wars The Clone Wars refers to the clone army as The Grand Army of the Republic Notable commanders in chief Edit Benjamin F Stephenson 1866 John Alexander Logan 1868 Ambrose Burnside 1871 John Frederick Hartranft 1875 1877 Medal of Honor Paul Vandervoort 1882 John S Kountz 1884 John G B Adams 1893 Medal of Honor John Peter Shindel Gobin 1897 Wilmon W Blackmar 1904 Medal of Honor James R Tanner 1905Women s auxiliaries Edit Tea Tray Cadets 1880 membership badge an early women s auxiliary to the G A R The Woman s Relief Corps was founded in 1879 as a secret organization and recognized in 1883 as the official women s auxiliary to the G A R The Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic was also a significant organization It was founded by Lelia P Roby 31 As a congressionally chartered non profit organization it is the oldest women s hereditary organization in the United States The original objectives of the organization included promotion of patriotism and loyalty to the Union and participation in community service especially for the aid of our Veterans and their dependents 32 As original Union veterans of the G A R organized in 1866 grew old many women s groups formed to aid them and their widows and orphans The Loyal Ladies League was established in 1881 as an auxiliary to the G A R in 1886 the organization went more national and changed its name to The Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic 33 It was incorporated by Public Law 86 47 S 949 of the 86th Congress on June 17 1959 34 In 1899 the president was Dr Julia P Shade of Philadelphia Pennsylvania 35 Its president in 1922 was Mrs Ethel M Irish of Fond du Lac Wisconsin 36 See also EditAustin Conrad Shafer California Department official with Department commander photo Charles Sumner Post No 25 Grand Army of the Republic Grand Army of the Republic Hall disambiguation list of halls across multiple states G A R Memorial Junior Senior High School Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania Hamilton County Memorial Building Cincinnati Ohio Joel Minnick Longenecker List of Grand Army of the Republic Commanders in Chief National Association of Army Nurses of the Civil War Russell A AlgerReferences Edit Stuart McConnell Glorious Contentment The Grand Army of the Republic 1865 1900 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 1997 Grand Army of the Republic History December 13 2013 a b c Knight Glenn B Brief History of the Grand Army of the Republic suvcw org Retrieved January 18 2011 John E Gilman 1910 The Grand Army of the Republic civilwarhome com Retrieved March 5 2011 a b A Brief History of the Grand Army of the Republic Grand Army of the Republic Museum and Library Retrieved March 5 2011 Ward William H 1886 Records of Members of the Grand Army of the Republic pp 545 547 Ward Joseph Ripley Chandler 1889 History of the George G Meade Post No 1 Philadelphia p 49 Ward p 515 sfn error no target CITEREFWard help What One GAR Post Has accomplished Norwood Mass The Norwood Press 1913 p 85 Harrison Benjamin Hedges Charles February 20 1892 Speeches of Benjamin Harrison Twenty Third President of the United States New York United States Book Company Retrieved October 13 2021 Grand army memorial souvenir of Comrade Wm McKinley Post no 25 Buffalo McKinley Memorial Publishing 1902 George McJimsey Glorious Contentment the Grand Army of the Republic 1865 1900 Annals of Iowa 52 4 1993 pp 474 476 citing Stuart McConnell Glorious contentment The Grand Army of the Republic 1865 1900 U of North Carolina Press 1997 p 222 A female comrade of the Grand Army New York Herald September 16 1870 Sarah Emma Edmonds Private December 1841 September 5 1898 American Battlefield Trust Retrieved October 13 2021 Rothbard Murray N June 19 2019 Beginning the Welfare State Civil War Veterans Pensions Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics 22 1 68 81 doi 10 35297 qjae 010019 S2CID 197810818 Davis Washington 1888 Camp Fire Chats Chicago Lewis Publishing Co Retrieved August 14 2019 Stilwell Blake September 3 2022 The last Union combat veteran of the Civil War lived to see the Cold War We Are The Mighty Retrieved September 3 2022 Richard F Weingroff July 27 2009 U S 6 The Grand Army of the Republic Highway Federal Highway Administration Retrieved February 14 2011 A Gibson Gary 1999 Remembering the Grand Army of the Republic Fifty Years Later Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Retrieved March 2 2011 B G A R Issue National Postal Museum Retrieved January 11 2014 U S Stamps 1951 stampscatalog info Archived from the original on March 3 2011 Retrieved March 2 2011 List of posts and location by department Library of Congress 2001 Retrieved July 3 2014 Steinbeck East of Eden edstephan org Retrieved April 20 2011 Lewis Sinclair April 12 2006 XXXV Main Street PDF Project Gutenberg Retrieved January 6 2015 Lewis Sinclair 1935 VII It Can t Happen Here Feedbooks Retrieved December 11 2016 Portis Charles December 5 2010 True Grit New York Overlook Press ISBN 9781590206508 Retrieved January 16 2015 The Sound and the Fury Glossary University of Mississippi Press 1996 p 54 ISBN 0 87805 936 9 Retrieved April 20 2011 The Sculptor s Funeral Classic Reader Retrieved January 16 2015 Cohan George M 1906 You re a Grand Old Flag Annotated Music Library of Congress Performing Arts Encyclopedia New York F A Mills Retrieved April 24 2013 He Is There Song of America Archived from the original on May 10 2011 Retrieved March 17 2011 Moore Ward January 1 2009 Bring the Jubilee Wildside Press ISBN 978 1434478535 Retrieved January 16 2015 Willard Frances Elizabeth Livermore Mary Ashton Rice 1893 ROBY Mrs Lelia P A Woman of the Century Fourteen Hundred seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life Charles Wells Moulton p 617 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic Retrieved August 22 2019 History Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic Retrieved August 22 2019 Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates of the 86th Congress Vol 105 Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1959 p 19861 LGAR Past National Presidents suvcw org Retrieved October 12 2019 Official Register and Directory of Women s Clubs in America Vol XXIV Helen M Winslow 1922 Retrieved August 22 2019 Further reading EditAinsworth Scott Electoral Strength and the Emergence of Group Influence in the Late 1800s The Grand Army of the Republic American Politics Research 23 3 1995 319 338 Cimbala Paul A Veterans North and South The Transition from Soldier to Civilian after the American Civil War Santa Barbara Praeger 2015 xviii 189 pp Dearing Mary R Veterans in Politics The Story of the GAR 1974 online Gannon Barbara A The Won Cause Black and White Comradeship in the Grand Army of the Republic 2011 Jordan Brian Matthew Marching Home Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War New York Liveright 2015 McConnell Stuart Glorious Contentment The Grand Army of the Republic 1865 1900 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 1997 Marten James Alan Sing Not War The Lives of Union amp Confederate Veterans in Gilded Age America Univ of North Carolina Press 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grand Army of the Republic Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article about Grand Army of the Republic GAR page at Library of Congress SUVCW official website ASUVCW official website DUVCW official website Medals related to the GAR in the collection of the American Numismatic Society Grand Army Museum Lynn Massachusetts at Essex National Heritage website Grand Army Museum Lynn Massachusetts at official City of Lynn website Photographs of Members of the Stevens Post Seattle Washington Grand Army of the Republic Museum and Library Philadelphia Pennsylvania The Grand Army of the Republic Philip R Schuyler Post No 51 records including membership records constitution and by laws correspondence and minutes of the Philip R Schuyler Post No 51 are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania Geocache on the Memorial Highway Grand Army of the Republic Collection Archived May 25 2018 at the Wayback Machine McLean County Museum of History archives Illinois Theodore C Cazeau Grand Army of the Republic Collection Lavery Library St John Fisher College Rochester NY Grand Army of the Republic Department of Kansas Encampments 1882 1944 Grand Army of the Republic Walla Walla records at the Whitman College and Northwest Archives Whitman College Grand Army of the Republic GAR George H Thomas Post No 17 collection Rare Books and Manuscripts Indiana State Library Grand Army of the Republic medals and ribbons 1888 1956 California State Library California History Room Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Army of the Republic amp oldid 1127867545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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