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Military Order of Foreign Wars

The Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States (MOFW) is one of the oldest veterans' and hereditary associations in the nation with a membership that includes officers and their hereditary descendants from all of the Armed Services.[1] Membership is composed of active duty, reserve and retired officers of the United States Armed Services, including the Coast Guard, National Guard, and allied officers, and their descendants, who have served during one of the wars in which the United States has or is engaged with a foreign power.[2]

Military Order of Foreign Wars Insignia

History Edit

The Order was founded on December 13, 1894, in the office of Frank M. Avery in the Tribune Building in New York City. The first signer of the Order's "Institution" (founding document) was Major General Fitz John Porter who was a veteran of both the Mexican War and the Civil War. Eighteen others signed the Institution of which five were Mexican War veterans, nine were descendants of American Revolutionary War officers and four who were descendants of officers who served in the War of 1812.

The resultant Order was initially known as the Military and Naval Order of the United States and was organized and later incorporated under that name. Its hereditary line of descent spans the period of American history since national independence during the Revolutionary War. Initially membership in the Order was limited to officer veterans (and their hereditary descendants) of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the Mexican War. (In addition, there is a requirement that ancestors who were militia officers must have had active service during wartime.)

Although there were many individuals who served as officers in the American Civil War and the Indian Wars who were living at the time of the Order's founding, that service did not qualify them for membership as those wars were considered to be domestic rather than foreign wars.

In April 1895, the name of the Order was officially changed to its present name – The Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States (MOFW). By the end of 1896, commanderies had been formed in seven states.

The MOFW was patterned after the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS) which was a military society for officers, and their descendants, who had served the Union during the American Civil War. As MOLLUS had restricted its membership to officers who had served in one particular war, the need was felt to have an organization for the descendants of officers who had served in the American Revolution, War of 1812 and the Mexican War – as well as the few surviving Mexican War veterans who were officers.

The influence of the Order spread rapidly and soon commanderies (state level organizations) were formed in other states. It was deemed advisable to form a National Commandery to centralize and coordinate the activities of the various state commanderies, and which would have general supervision and control over the policies and activities of the Order. The National Commandery was founded at a joint meeting of the individual state commanderies in March 1896 and General Alexander S. Webb was elected as the first Commander General.

The motto of the Military Order of Foreign Wars is the Latin phrase Deus et Libertas meaning God and Liberty.

The War and Navy Departments, and later the Department of Defense, under various resolutions of Congress, gave recognition to the Order and permitted the wearing of its insignia on uniforms.

Membership qualifications Edit

For the first two years of the MOFW's existence, membership categories were limited to Veteran and Hereditary companions who were either veteran officers or descendant of veteran officers who had served during the American Revolution, War of 1812, War with Tripoli or the Mexican War. Service during the American Civil War and the Indian Wars did not qualify as those were considered domestic rather than foreign conflicts.

In 1896 the membership category of Honorary Companion was created for presidents of the United States and officers who had attained the rank of major general or rear admiral. President William McKinley, President Grover Cleveland and Lieutenant General John M. Schofield were among the earliest honorary companions. The qualifications for Honorary Companions were later changed to require that officers be equal to or higher than lieutenant general or vice admiral.

The Spanish–American War of 1898 provided the Order with a great number of new Veteran Companions – particularly the Pennsylvania Commandery which, according to the MOFW Register published in 1900, accounted for over half of the Order's membership. Among the individuals who joined the MOFW between 1898 and 1900 were Admiral George Dewey, future president Theodore Roosevelt and future General of the Armies John J. Pershing. Most senior officers who served in the Spanish–American War were also veterans of the Civil War, and many belonged to both the MOFW and MOLLUS.

In 1928, a fourth membership status (junior companion) was created for sons of companions who had not reached the majority age of 21. In 1969, companionship was extended to those who served in an enlisted status during a foreign war and were later commissioned.

In time, the Order's membership qualifications were expanded to include service during conflicts with foreign powers which include, but are not limited to, the War with Spain, World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the War in Iraq and the War in Afghanistan. Combat or "in theater" service is not required for membership.

The membership of the Order and the number of state commanderies over the 100 years of the Order's existence has fluctuated, typically increasing after the end of a war and declining during times of peace. The Order's stringent and high eligibility requirements make it difficult for the Order to recruit members in large numbers. However, this selectivity has enabled the Order to sustain itself for over 100 years because it continues to fill its ranks with individuals of the highest caliber, patriotism, loyalty, and character.

Past Commanders-General Edit

  • Brevet Major General Alexander S. Webb (1896–1911)
  • Major General Charles F. Roe (1911–14)
  • Rear Admiral William B. Caperton (1914–17)
  • Brigadier General Samuel W. Fountain (1917–20)
  • Rear Admiral Robert E. Coontz (1920–23)
  • Major General Clarence R. Edwards (1923–26)
  • Captain William S. Bainbridge, MC, USN (1926–32)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Pelham St.G. Bissell (1932–38)
  • Colonel Philip L. Schuyler (1938–41)
  • Colonel William I. Forbes (1941–45)
  • Major General John F. O'Ryan (1945–46)
  • Colonel James A. Doherty (1946–49)
  • Colonel Edwin S. Bettelheirn Jr. (1949–51)
  • Brigadier General Joseph H. Lewis (1951–53)
  • Major General John Williams Morgan (1953–55)
  • Commander Ross H. Currier (1955–57)
  • Captain Richard F. Warren, USN (1957–59)
  • Lieutenant Benjamin L. Cook Jr., (1959–61)
  • Colonel Frederick B. Wiener (1961–63)
  • Commander James A. Lamphier, USNR (1963–65)
  • Brigadier General William C. Baxter (1965–67)
  • Rear Admiral Robert Granville Burke (1967–69)
  • Colonel Wilbur J. Myers (1969–71)
  • Rear Admiral Theodore C. Aylward (1971–73)
  • Colonel R. Graham Bosworth (1973–75)
  • Brigadier General Joseph S. Zarieko (1975–77)
  • Colonel Richard H. Love (1977–79)
  • Colonel John Denny Dale (1979–81)
  • Brigadier General William Uriah Ogletree (1981–83)
  • Brigadier General Arthur N. Phillips (1983–85)
  • Lieutenant Commander T. Johnson Ward, USN (1985–87)
  • Major General James C. McElroy (1987–89)
  • Commander Thomas F. Wiener, USN (1989–91)
  • Colonel Charles H. Bechtold, USMC (1991–93)
  • First Lieutenant Charles F. Dale (1993–95)
  • Colonel Versel Case Jr. (1995–97)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Ronald R. Sommer (1997–99)

Recent Commanders-General Edit

  • Colonel Joseph P. Kirlin III, USAR (1999–2001)
  • Captain Ronald E. Fischer, AUS (2001–03)
  • Major General John J. Salesses, USMCR (2003–05)
  • Colonel Duane Bartrem, MIARNG (2005–07)
  • Colonel Arthur J. Nattans, MDARNG (2007–09)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Lewis L. Neilson Jr., USAR (2009–11)
  • Major Wulf Lindenau, USA (2011–13)
  • Colonel David H. Russell, RIARNG (2013–15)
  • Captain Richard A. Coutermarsh, USAR (2 May 2015 until resigned on 1 September 2015)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Orfeo "Chuck" Trombetta Jr., USAR (1 September 2015 to 3 April 2018)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Kent A. D. Clark, USA (3 April 2018 to 4 May 2019)
  • Colonel Christopher V. Herndon, USA (4 May 2019 to 29 May 2021)
  • Lieutenant Commander Christopher Saint Victor-de Pinho (29 May 2021 – present)

Notable companions Edit

Note – The rank listed is the highest held by that individual in their career.[3]

Veteran Companions Edit

United States Army
United States Navy
United States Marine Corps
United States Air Force

Hereditary Companions Edit

Honorary Companions Edit

Presidents of the United States and the MOFW Edit

Five Presidents of the United States were elected companions (members) of the MOFW. Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower joined the MOFW as Veteran Companions. Presidents Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley joined the MOFW as honorary companions. (Presidents Harrison and Cleveland could also have joined the MOFW as hereditary companions.)

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Hereditary Society Precedence List".
  2. ^ "Home". mofwus.org.
  3. ^ Register of the Military Order of the Foreign Wars of the United States. National Commandery MOFW. 1900.

External links Edit

  • Official website  

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The Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States MOFW is one of the oldest veterans and hereditary associations in the nation with a membership that includes officers and their hereditary descendants from all of the Armed Services 1 Membership is composed of active duty reserve and retired officers of the United States Armed Services including the Coast Guard National Guard and allied officers and their descendants who have served during one of the wars in which the United States has or is engaged with a foreign power 2 Military Order of Foreign Wars Insignia Contents 1 History 2 Membership qualifications 3 Past Commanders General 4 Recent Commanders General 5 Notable companions 5 1 Veteran Companions 5 2 Hereditary Companions 5 3 Honorary Companions 6 Presidents of the United States and the MOFW 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe Order was founded on December 13 1894 in the office of Frank M Avery in the Tribune Building in New York City The first signer of the Order s Institution founding document was Major General Fitz John Porter who was a veteran of both the Mexican War and the Civil War Eighteen others signed the Institution of which five were Mexican War veterans nine were descendants of American Revolutionary War officers and four who were descendants of officers who served in the War of 1812 The resultant Order was initially known as the Military and Naval Order of the United States and was organized and later incorporated under that name Its hereditary line of descent spans the period of American history since national independence during the Revolutionary War Initially membership in the Order was limited to officer veterans and their hereditary descendants of the Revolutionary War the War of 1812 and the Mexican War In addition there is a requirement that ancestors who were militia officers must have had active service during wartime Although there were many individuals who served as officers in the American Civil War and the Indian Wars who were living at the time of the Order s founding that service did not qualify them for membership as those wars were considered to be domestic rather than foreign wars In April 1895 the name of the Order was officially changed to its present name The Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States MOFW By the end of 1896 commanderies had been formed in seven states The MOFW was patterned after the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States MOLLUS which was a military society for officers and their descendants who had served the Union during the American Civil War As MOLLUS had restricted its membership to officers who had served in one particular war the need was felt to have an organization for the descendants of officers who had served in the American Revolution War of 1812 and the Mexican War as well as the few surviving Mexican War veterans who were officers The influence of the Order spread rapidly and soon commanderies state level organizations were formed in other states It was deemed advisable to form a National Commandery to centralize and coordinate the activities of the various state commanderies and which would have general supervision and control over the policies and activities of the Order The National Commandery was founded at a joint meeting of the individual state commanderies in March 1896 and General Alexander S Webb was elected as the first Commander General The motto of the Military Order of Foreign Wars is the Latin phrase Deus et Libertas meaning God and Liberty The War and Navy Departments and later the Department of Defense under various resolutions of Congress gave recognition to the Order and permitted the wearing of its insignia on uniforms Membership qualifications EditFor the first two years of the MOFW s existence membership categories were limited to Veteran and Hereditary companions who were either veteran officers or descendant of veteran officers who had served during the American Revolution War of 1812 War with Tripoli or the Mexican War Service during the American Civil War and the Indian Wars did not qualify as those were considered domestic rather than foreign conflicts In 1896 the membership category of Honorary Companion was created for presidents of the United States and officers who had attained the rank of major general or rear admiral President William McKinley President Grover Cleveland and Lieutenant General John M Schofield were among the earliest honorary companions The qualifications for Honorary Companions were later changed to require that officers be equal to or higher than lieutenant general or vice admiral The Spanish American War of 1898 provided the Order with a great number of new Veteran Companions particularly the Pennsylvania Commandery which according to the MOFW Register published in 1900 accounted for over half of the Order s membership Among the individuals who joined the MOFW between 1898 and 1900 were Admiral George Dewey future president Theodore Roosevelt and future General of the Armies John J Pershing Most senior officers who served in the Spanish American War were also veterans of the Civil War and many belonged to both the MOFW and MOLLUS In 1928 a fourth membership status junior companion was created for sons of companions who had not reached the majority age of 21 In 1969 companionship was extended to those who served in an enlisted status during a foreign war and were later commissioned In time the Order s membership qualifications were expanded to include service during conflicts with foreign powers which include but are not limited to the War with Spain World War I World War II the Korean War the Vietnam War the Gulf War the War in Iraq and the War in Afghanistan Combat or in theater service is not required for membership The membership of the Order and the number of state commanderies over the 100 years of the Order s existence has fluctuated typically increasing after the end of a war and declining during times of peace The Order s stringent and high eligibility requirements make it difficult for the Order to recruit members in large numbers However this selectivity has enabled the Order to sustain itself for over 100 years because it continues to fill its ranks with individuals of the highest caliber patriotism loyalty and character Past Commanders General EditBrevet Major General Alexander S Webb 1896 1911 Major General Charles F Roe 1911 14 Rear Admiral William B Caperton 1914 17 Brigadier General Samuel W Fountain 1917 20 Rear Admiral Robert E Coontz 1920 23 Major General Clarence R Edwards 1923 26 Captain William S Bainbridge MC USN 1926 32 Lieutenant Colonel Pelham St G Bissell 1932 38 Colonel Philip L Schuyler 1938 41 Colonel William I Forbes 1941 45 Major General John F O Ryan 1945 46 Colonel James A Doherty 1946 49 Colonel Edwin S Bettelheirn Jr 1949 51 Brigadier General Joseph H Lewis 1951 53 Major General John Williams Morgan 1953 55 Commander Ross H Currier 1955 57 Captain Richard F Warren USN 1957 59 Lieutenant Benjamin L Cook Jr 1959 61 Colonel Frederick B Wiener 1961 63 Commander James A Lamphier USNR 1963 65 Brigadier General William C Baxter 1965 67 Rear Admiral Robert Granville Burke 1967 69 Colonel Wilbur J Myers 1969 71 Rear Admiral Theodore C Aylward 1971 73 Colonel R Graham Bosworth 1973 75 Brigadier General Joseph S Zarieko 1975 77 Colonel Richard H Love 1977 79 Colonel John Denny Dale 1979 81 Brigadier General William Uriah Ogletree 1981 83 Brigadier General Arthur N Phillips 1983 85 Lieutenant Commander T Johnson Ward USN 1985 87 Major General James C McElroy 1987 89 Commander Thomas F Wiener USN 1989 91 Colonel Charles H Bechtold USMC 1991 93 First Lieutenant Charles F Dale 1993 95 Colonel Versel Case Jr 1995 97 Lieutenant Colonel Ronald R Sommer 1997 99 Recent Commanders General EditColonel Joseph P Kirlin III USAR 1999 2001 Captain Ronald E Fischer AUS 2001 03 Major General John J Salesses USMCR 2003 05 Colonel Duane Bartrem MIARNG 2005 07 Colonel Arthur J Nattans MDARNG 2007 09 Lieutenant Colonel Lewis L Neilson Jr USAR 2009 11 Major Wulf Lindenau USA 2011 13 Colonel David H Russell RIARNG 2013 15 Captain Richard A Coutermarsh USAR 2 May 2015 until resigned on 1 September 2015 Lieutenant Colonel Orfeo Chuck Trombetta Jr USAR 1 September 2015 to 3 April 2018 Lieutenant Colonel Kent A D Clark USA 3 April 2018 to 4 May 2019 Colonel Christopher V Herndon USA 4 May 2019 to 29 May 2021 Lieutenant Commander Christopher Saint Victor de Pinho 29 May 2021 present Notable companions EditNote The rank listed is the highest held by that individual in their career 3 Veteran Companions Edit United States ArmyColonel Theodore Roosevelt USV Hero of the Battle of San Juan Hill posthumous Medal of Honor recipient and President of the United States General of the Army Dwight D Eisenhower Army Chief of Staff Supreme Allied Commander in Europe and President of the United States General of the Armies John J Pershing Commander of the American Expeditionary Force and Army Chief of Staff General of the Army Douglas MacArthur Medal of Honor recipient Army Chief of Staff Commander Southwest Pacific Area and United Nations Commander during the Korean War General Tasker H Bliss Army Chief of Staff General Alexander Haig NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe and Secretary of State General John L Hines Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Stanley H Ford Lieutenant General Nelson A Miles Commanding General of the United States Army and Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant General Samuel B M Young First U S Army Chief of Staff Major General Thomas M Anderson Nephew of Brigadier General Robert Anderson Major General Christopher C Augur Mexican War Veteran and Civil War general Major General Frank Baldwin Two time Medal of Honor recipient Major General Joseph Cabell Breckinridge Sr Veteran of the Civil War and the Spanish American War Major General John R Brooke Commander of Puerto Rican Expedition in Spanish American War Major General Matthew C Butler Served as major general in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War and in the United States Army during the Spanish American War Major General Reginald A Centracchio permanent dead link Former Adjutant General of Rhode Island Major General John Clem Youngest Union soldier in the American Civil War Major General George Whitefield Davis Spanish American War veteran Major General George W Getty Mexican War Veteran and American Civil War Union general Major General William Montrose Graham Jr Veteran of the Civil War and Spanish American War Major General Frederick D Grant Son of General and President Ulysses S Grant Major General Francis V Greene Spanish American War veteran Major General Mark L Hersey Veteran of the Spanish American War and commanded the 4th Division during the First World War Major General William August Kobbe Veteran of the Civil War Spanish American War and Philippine Insurrection Major General Wesley Merritt Military Governor of the Philippines Major General Paul B Malone General in First World War Major General James S Negley Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Major General John F O Ryan Commander of 27th Division in the First World War Major General Fitz John Porter Mexican War and Civil War Veteran Major General William R Shafter Commander of V Corps in Cuba during the Spanish American War Major General William Farrar Smith Mexican War and Civil War Veteran Major General David S Stanley Medal of Honor recipient Major General Samuel S Sumner Cavalry brigade commander at the Battle of San Juan Hill Major General Joseph Wheeler Lieutenant general in the Confederate States Army and division commander at Battle of San Juan Hill Brevet Major General George W Getty Mexican War and Civil War Veteran Brevet Major General John P Hatch Mexican War and Civil War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Albion P Howe Mexican War and Civil War Veteran Brevet Major General Zealous B Tower Mexican War Veteran and Civil War general Brigadier General Adelbert Ames Medal of Honor recipient Governor of Mississippi United States Senator Civil War and Spanish American War Veteran Brigadier General Rick Baccus Commander of Joint Task Force 160 Brigadier General Richard C Drum Adjutant General of the United States Army Brigadier General Harry C Egbert Veteran of the Mexican War Spanish American War and Philippine Insurrection Brigadier General Samuel W Fountain Veteran of the Civil War and Spanish American War Brigadier General Charles C Gilbert Brigadier General Webb C Hayes Medal of Honor recipient and son of President Rutherford B Hayes Brigadier General Philip W Kearny Son of Major General Philip Kearny Brigadier General John Brown Kerr Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Marion Maus Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General William J McKee 1 Brigadier General Billy Mitchell Outspoken air power advocate Brigadier General John H Parker recipient of four Distinguished Service Crosses Brigadier General Alexander C M Pennington Career Army officer Brigadier General Charles Foster Tillinghast Sr Veteran of the Spanish American War and World War I Colonel Jacob G Frick Mexican War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient Colonel Edwin Meese USAR Attorney General of the United States Colonel Lewis L Millett Medal of Honor recipient and veteran of World War II Korea and Vietnam Lieutenant Colonel John Jacob Astor IV Reputed wealthiest man in the United States when he died on the RMS Titanic in 1912 Lieutenant Colonel William H H Benyaurd Medal of Honor recipient Major John Alexander Logan Jr Medal of Honor recipient Major Barclay Harding Warburton I Veteran of the Spanish American War and aide to General John J Pershing Captain Woodbury Kane Socialite and member of Roosevelt s Rough Riders Captain Richard A Coutermarsh Distinguished Member of the 9th Infantry Regiment as conferred by the Secretary of the United States Army Captain Frank J Williams Retired Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court Brevet Captain Gustavus W Smith Mexican War veteran and major general in the Confederate States Army 1st Lieutenant Richard B Abell Retired United States Claims Court judge Ensign Dyer Pierce Veteran of the War of 1812 United States NavyAdmiral of the Navy George Dewey Hero of the Battle of Manila Bay Fleet Admiral William Halsey Commander of the 3rd Fleet in Second World War Admiral William B Caperton Commander of the Pacific Fleet during the First World War Admiral Robert E Coontz Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Cameron McRae Winslow Commanded cable cutting operation in Cuba Vice Admiral John Benjamin Totushek USNR Commander of the Naval Reserve Force Rear Admiral George Balch Superintendent of the United States Naval Academy Rear Admiral Reginald R Belknap Commander of the North Sea Mine Barrage in First World War Rear Admiral Daniel L Braine Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Rear Admiral William G Buehler Veteran of the Civil War and the Spanish American War Rear Admiral Charles Edgar Clark Captain of the battleship USS Oregon during the Spanish American War Rear Admiral George Partridge Colvocoresses Veteran of the Battle of Manila Bay Rear Admiral Joseph Coghlan Commanded the cruiser USS Raleigh C 8 at the Battle of Manila Bay Rear Admiral Francis A Cook Veteran of the Battle of Mobile Bay and commander of the cruiser USS Brooklyn at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Rear Admiral Peirce Crosby Veteran of the Mexican War Rear Admiral William M Folger Commander of the United States Asiatic Fleet Rear Admiral Bancroft Gherardi Veteran of the Battle of Mobile Bay Rear Admiral Henry Glass Led capture of Guam during the Spanish American War Rear Admiral Caspar F Goodrich President of the Naval War College Rear Admiral Richmond P Hobson Medal of Honor recipient Rear Admiral Austin Melvin Knight President of the Naval War College Rear Admiral Stephen B Luce Founder of the United States Naval War College Rear Admiral Bowman H McCalla Led capture of Guantanamo Bay Cuba Rear Admiral William T Sampson Leader of the Naval Campaign in Cuba Rear Admiral Winfield Scott Schley Hero the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Rear Admiral Thomas O Selfridge Veteran of the Siege of Veracruz Rear Admiral Thomas O Selfridge Jr Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Rear Admiral Charles D Sigsbee Captain of the armored cruiser USS Maine Rear Admiral William T Swinburne Commander of the Pacific Fleet Rear Admiral John Henry Russell Civil War veteran Rear Admiral John C Watson Commander of the Asiatic Squadron Rear Admiral John L Worden Commanding officer of the USS Monitor Commodore Oscar C Badger Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Captain Alfred Brooks Fry USNR Marine and civil engineer Captain William F Halsey Sr Father of Fleet Admiral William F Halsey Jr Lieutenant Commander John Philip Sousa USNR Legendary band leader United States Marine CorpsLieutenant General Dennis McCarthy USMC Lieutenant General John Twiggs Myers USMC Recipient of the Brevet Medal Major General George Barnett USMC Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Major General Smedley Butler USMC Two time Medal of Honor recipient Major General George F Elliott USMC Commandant of the Marine Corps Major General John J Salesses USMCR Dean of Graduate Studies at Rhode Island College Major General Littleton Waller USMC Veteran of the Spanish American War Philippine Insurrection and First World War Brigadier General Henry Clay Cochrane USMC Veteran of the Civil War and the Spanish American War Brigadier General James Forney USMC Veteran of the Civil War and the Spanish American War Brevet Brigadier General Robert Leamy Meade USMC Nephew of Major General George G Meade Colonel Thomas Y Field USMC Colonel Robert W Huntington USMC Commanded 1st Marine Battalion during the capture of Guantanamo Bay Cuba in 1898 Captain Bernard Jackvony USMC Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island United States Air ForceColonel Bruce Sundlun USAFR Governor of Rhode Island Hereditary Companions Edit Governor and Senator Morgan G Bulkeley President of Aetna Insurance Governor of Connecticut and United States Senator Lieutenant Governor William H Bulkeley Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut and brigadier general in the Connecticut National Guard The Honorable Amos Madden Thayer Eighth Circuit Federal Court of Appeals judge Rear Admiral Richard Worsam Meade Veteran of the Civil War Rear Admiral Thomas O Selfridge Jr Veteran of the Civil War and son of Rear Admiral Thomas O Selfridge Sr Rear Admiral John Grimes Walker Descendant of Lieutenant Aaron Walker who served in the American Revolution Brevet Major General Theodore S Peck Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Alexander S Webb Medal of Honor recipient Civil War general signer of the Original Institution of the MOFW in 1894 and first President General of the MOFW Brigadier General New York National Guard James M Varnum Surrogate of New York County and socialite Brevet Brigadier General Horace Porter Medal of Honor recipient and United States Ambassador to France Colonel Louis R Cheney Mayor of Hartford Connecticut Lieutenant Colonel Russell Benjamin Harrison Great Grandson of President and Major General William Henry Harrison Also a Veteran Companion who served in the Spanish American War Brevet Major Augustus P Davis Founder of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Brevet Major Rufus King Jr Medal of Honor recipient and descendant of Major and Senator Rufus King who was a signer of the United States Constitution The Reverend Alexander Hamilton Direct descendant of Secretary of the Treasury and Major General Alexander Hamilton Honorary Companions Edit President and Brevet Brigadier General Benjamin Harrison Brigade commander in nine battles during the Civil War Also eligible to join as an hereditary companion due to his grandfather Major General William Henry Harrison s service in the War of 1812 President and Brevet Major William McKinley President during the Spanish American War and breveted for gallantry in action in the Civil War President Grover Cleveland Purchased a substitute to avoid being drafted during the Civil War Also eligible to be an hereditary companion due to the service of his great grandfather Captain Aaron Cleveland during the American Revolution General Barry McCaffrey Commanded the 24th Infantry Division in Operation Desert Storm and United States Southern Command General John J Sheehan USMC Commander in Chief United States Atlantic Command Lieutenant General John M Schofield Civil War veteran Medal of Honor recipient Commanding General of the United States Army Superintendent of West Point and Secretary of War Rear Admiral George E Belknap Civil War veteran Commanded monitor USS Canonicus at the Second Battle of Fort Fisher Rear Admiral William S Cowles Commander of the Asiatic Fleet and brother in law of President Theodore Roosevelt Rear Admiral Eugene B Fluckey World War II submarine commander and Medal of Honor recipient Rear Admiral Thomas H Stevens Jr Civil War veteran Commanded monitor USS Winnebago at the Battle of Mobile Bay Major General Thomas H Barry Spanish American War veteran and Superintendent of West Point Major General Thomas H Ruger Civil War veteran and Superintendent of the United States Military Academy Major General David S Stanley Civil War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient Major General Frank Wheaton Civil War veteran with a total of 42 years of military service Brevet Major General Eugene A Carr Civil War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient Colonel William Donald Schaefer USAR Governor of Maryland and longtime Mayor of Baltimore Captain Paul Bucha Medal of Honor recipient Presidents of the United States and the MOFW EditFive Presidents of the United States were elected companions members of the MOFW Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower joined the MOFW as Veteran Companions Presidents Grover Cleveland Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley joined the MOFW as honorary companions Presidents Harrison and Cleveland could also have joined the MOFW as hereditary companions See also Edit nbsp Society portal nbsp United States portalVeterans of Foreign Wars of the United States Society of the Cincinnati Aztec Club of 1847 Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Naval and Military Order of the Spanish War Military Order of the Dragon Military Order of the Carabao Military Order of the World Wars Order of LafayetteReferences Edit Hereditary Society Precedence List Home mofwus org Register of the Military Order of the Foreign Wars of the United States National Commandery MOFW 1900 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Military Order of Foreign Wars nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1921 Collier s Encyclopedia article Military Order of Foreign Wars Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military Order of Foreign Wars amp oldid 1161400649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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