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Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States

The Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS), or, simply, the Loyal Legion, is a United States military order organized on April 15, 1865, by three veteran officers of the Union Army. The original membership was composed of commissioned officers of the Regular or Volunteer Army, U.S. Navy, or U.S. Marine Corps who served during the American Civil War, or who had served and thereafter been commissioned and who thereby "had aided in maintaining the honor, integrity, and supremacy of the national movement" during the Civil War.

The Loyal Legion – U.S. Marine Band

The Loyal Legion was formed in response to rumors from Washington of a conspiracy to incapacitate the United States government by the assassination of its leaders in the immediate aftermath of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln.[1] The founding members stated their purpose as cherishing the memories and associations of the war waged in defense of the unity and indivisibility of the Republic; the strengthening of the ties of fraternal fellowship and sympathy formed by companionship in arms; the relief of the widows and children of dead companions of the order; and the advancement of the general welfare of the soldiers and sailors of the United States. The veterans' organization became a hereditary society after the original officers died off. The modern organization is composed of men who are direct descendants, nephews, or first cousins of these officers (hereditary members), and also other men who share the ideals of the Order (Associate members), who collectively are considered "Companions". A female auxiliary, Dames of the Loyal Legion of the United States (DOLLUS), was formed in 1899 and accepted as an affiliate in 1915.[2]

Origins edit

Following the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865, rumors spread that the act had been part of a broader conspiracy to overthrow the legally constituted government of the United States by assassinating its chief men. Many people at first gave credence to these rumors, including three of the officers assigned to the honor guard for Lincoln's body as it was transported to Springfield, Illinois, for burial; these three men, Brevet Lt. Col. Samuel Brown Wylie Mitchell, Lt. Col. Thomas Ellwood Zell, and Captain Peter Dirck Keyser, are considered the founders of the Order. To demonstrate their loyalty, they decided to form a "Legion" modeled on the Revolutionary War Society of the Cincinnati. The Loyal Legion was organized mainly during the same meetings that planned Lincoln's funeral and during a mass meeting of Philadelphia war veterans on April 20, culminating in a meeting on May 31, 1865, in Independence Hall in Philadelphia, at which the name was chosen.

The Order initially was composed of three classes of members:

  • Officers who had fought in the Army, Navy, or Marine Corps of the United States in the suppression of the Rebellion, or enlisted men who had so served and were subsequently commissioned in the regular forces of the United States, constituted the "Original Companions of the First Class." The eldest direct male lineal descendants of deceased Original Companions or eligible officers could be admitted as "Hereditary Companions of the First Class."
  • "Companions of the Second Class" were the eldest direct male lineal descendants of living Original Companions or of living individuals who were eligible for membership in the First Class. (NOTE: The use of the Rule of Primogeniture was abolished in 1905 for both the First and Second classes of membership, opening membership to all male lineal descendants, and later changes opened membership to male lineal descendants of siblings of eligible officers (i.e., a nephew relationship), and in 2021, to male lineal descendants of an aunt or uncle of eligible officers (i.e., a first-cousin relationship.) The Second Class of Companions was discontinued as the former officers died off and the Order became composed entirely of descendants.)
  • The Third Class comprised distinguished civilians who had rendered faithful and conspicuous service to the Union during the Civil War. By the law of the Order, no new elections to this class were made after 1890.[3]

Later history edit

The Loyal Legion grew rapidly in the late 19th century and had Companions in every Northern state and many of the states that had once formed the Confederacy. The Commandery in Chief was established on October 21, 1885, with authority over the 14 state commanderies. Previously, the Pennsylvania Commandery functioned as the "first among equals" of the commanderies as it was both the oldest and largest.

At its height about 1900, the Order had more than 8,000 Civil War veterans as active members, including nearly all notable general and flag officers and several presidents: Ulysses S. Grant, William T. Sherman, Philip H. Sheridan, George H. Thomas, George B. McClellan, Rutherford B. Hayes, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison, and William McKinley. The Order's fame was significant enough to inspire John Philip Sousa to compose the "Loyal Legion March" in its honor in 1890.

The Loyal Legion is one the oldest hereditary military societies in the United States. Predecessors to it include the Society of the Cincinnati, instituted in 1783, and the Aztec Club of 1847, both similarly founded by and for commissioned officers of the United States military.

Today, the Order serves as a hereditary society (male relatives of eligible officers) rather than as a functioning military order (though many Companions are either military veterans or on active military duty). Among other activities, Companions organize and participate in commemorative events, provide awards to deserving ROTC cadets, and assist with preservation efforts. Of particular note is that each year, the Loyal Legion commemorates President Lincoln's birthday with a wreath-laying ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. In 2009, the MOLLUS helped coordinate an extended tribute with the help of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission to celebrate the two-hundredth anniversary of Lincoln's birthday.

There are now three basic categories of membership: Hereditary, Associate (non-hereditary), and Honorary. Just as many Original Companions of the Order were also members of the Grand Army of the Republic (the "GAR"), many current Companions of the Order are also members of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW), the legal heir to the GAR.

Organizationally, the Loyal Legion is composed of a National Commandery-in-Chief and individual state Commanderies. There are currently 20 state Commanderies. Current national officers for the 2023–2025 term include Commander-in-Chief Michael Timothy Bates, Esq, of New Jersey; Senior Vice-Commander-in-Chief Paul Davis of Michigan; Junior Vice-Commander-in-Chief William F. Forbes of Pennsylvania; Treasurer-in-Chief Lee Alan Tryon, CPA, of Connecticut; Recorder-in-Chief Gary L. Grove, PhD. of Pennsylvania; Registrar-in-Chief Jefferson Davis Lilly II, MPA, of Indiana; Judge Advocate-in-Chief Matthew D. Dupee of Pennsylvania; Surgeon-in-Chief Peter B. Kane of Pennsylvania; and Chaplain-in-Chief Jeffry C. Burden, Esq. of Virginia.

Commanders-in-Chief edit

  • Major General George Cadwalader – First MOLLUS Commander-in-Chief, 1865–79. (Died in office.)
  • Major General Winfield Scott Hancock – 1879–86. (Died in office.)
  • General Philip H. Sheridan – 1886–88. (Died in office.)
  • Major General Rutherford B. Hayes – 1888–93. (Died in office.)
  • Rear Admiral John J. Almy – 1893.
  • Brigadier General Lucius Fairchild – 1893–95.
  • Major General John Gibbon – 1895–96. (Died in office.)
  • Rear Admiral Bancroft Gherardi – 1896–99.
  • Lieutenant General John M. Schofield – 1899–1903.
  • Major General David McMurtrie Gregg – 1903–05.
  • Major General John R. Brooke – 1905–07.
  • Major General Grenville M. Dodge – 1907–09.
  • Lieutenant General John C. Bates – 1909–11.
  • Rear Admiral George W. Melville – 1911–12. (Died in office.)
  • Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur – 1912. (Died in office.)
  • Colonel Arnold A. Rand – 1912–13. (First non-flag officer to serve as MOLLUS commander-in-chief.)
  • Brevet Brigadier General Thomas Hamlin Hubbard – 1913–15. (Died in office.)
  • Rear Admiral Louis Kempff – 1915.
  • Lieutenant General Samuel B.M. Young – 1915–19.
  • Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles – 1919–25. (Died in office.)
  • Rear Admiral Purnell F. Harrington – 1925–27.
  • Master Robert M. Thompson, USN – 1927–30. (Died in office.)
  • Brigadier General Samuel W. Fountain – 1930. (Died in office.)
  • Brevet Major George Mason – 1930–31.
  • Captain William P. Wright – 1931–33. (Died in office. Last Civil War veteran to serve as MOLLUS commander-in-chief. Also was Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic from 1932 to 1933.)
  • Colonel Hugh Means – 1933–35.
  • Colonel William Ennis Forbes – 1935–40. (Resigned.)
  • Major General Malvern Hill Barnum – 1940–41.
  • Mr. James Vernor Jr. – 1941–47 (First MOLLUS commander-in-chief who did not serve in the United States Armed Forces.)
  • Rear Admiral Reginald R. Belknap, USN – 1947–51.
  • Donald H. Whittemore – 1951–53
  • Commander William C. Duval, USNR – 1953–57
  • Major General Ulysses S. Grant III – 1957–61. (SUVCW Commander-in-Chief, 1953–55.)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Donald M. Liddell Jr., USAR – 1961–62. (Resigned.)
  • Lieutenant Colonel H. Durston Saylor II, USAR – 1962–64.
  • Major General Clayton B. Volgel, USMC – 1964. (Died in office. Last flag officer to serve as MOLLUS commander-in-chief.)
  • Colonel Walter E. Hopper, USAR – 1964–67.
  • Lieutenant Colonel Lenahan O'Connell, USAR – 1967–71.
  • Colonel Brooke M. Lessig USAR – 1971–73.
  • Charles Allan Brady Jr. – 1973–75.
  • Colonel Joseph B. Daugherty – 1975–77.
  • Thomas N. McCarter III – 1977–81.
  • Lieutenant Colonel Philip M. Watrous – 1981–83.
  • Alexander P. Hartnett – 1983–85.
  • William H. Upham – 1985–89. (Last commander-in-chief to serve more than two years in office.)
  • 1st Lieutenant Lowell V. Hammer – 1989–91. (SUVCW Commander-in-Chief, 1991–92.)
  • Henry N. Sawyer – 1991–93.
  • Colonel Scott W. Stucky, USAFR – 1993–95. (Federal judge.)
  • The Rev. Canon Robert G. Carroon – 1995–97.
  • The Hon. Michael P. Sullivan – 1997–99.
  • Major Robert J. Bateman – 1999–2001.
  • Gordon R. Bury II – 2001–03. (SUVCW Commander-in-Chief, 1986–87.)
  • Douglas R. Niermeyer, 2003–05.
  • Benjamin C. Frick, Esq. 2005–07.
  • Karl F. Schaeffer, 2007–09.
  • Keith Harrison – 2009–11. (SUVCW Commander-in-Chief, 1994–95.)
  • Jeffry C. Burden, Esq. – 2011–13.
  • Waldron K. Post II – 2013–15.
  • Captain James A. Simmons, USAF – 2015–17.
  • Colonel Eric A. Rojo, USA – 2017–19.
  • Dr. Joseph T. Coleman – 2019–21.
  • Colonel Robert D. Pollock, USAF – 2021–23.
  • Michael T. Bates, Esq. - 2023- .

Prominent Companions edit

Note – the ranks indicated are the highest the individual held in the United States armed forces or in state militia service and not necessarily the highest rank held during the Civil War.

Presidents of the United States edit

Note – Presidents Andrew Johnson and James Garfield were both generals in the U.S. Army during the Civil War and were thus eligible to be veteran companions of MOLLUS but did not join the Order.

Vice Presidents edit

  • Vice President Hannibal Hamlin, who had served under President Lincoln from 1861 to 1865, was elected MOLLUS Companion of the 3rd Class. While he was vice president, he served as a corporal with Company A of the Maine State Guard (a.k.a. Maine Coast Guards) at Fort McClary in Kittery, Maine from July to September 1864.
  • Vice President Henry Wilson, who served under President Grant from 1873 until he died in 1875, was colonel of the 22nd Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry and was a MOLLUS Companion of the First Class.
  • Vice President Charles G. Dawes, who served under President Coolidge from 1925 to 1929, became a First Class Companion in succession to his father, Brevet Brigadier General Rufus Dawes. Vice President Dawes served as a brigadier general with the U.S. Army during World War I and also received the Nobel Peace Prize.

In addition to the above, President Andrew Johnson, vice president before President Lincoln's death and the founding of MOLLUS, was eligible to become a First Class Companion of MOLLUS but did not join the Order. President Chester A. Arthur, who was vice president prior to the death of President Garfield, was elected in 1882 as a 3rd Class Companion while serving as president.

Honorary Companions edit

A limited number of individuals may be elected as Honorary Companions of MOLLUS. They are usually individuals with distinguished careers in public service or the military.

Veteran Companions edit

United States Army edit

Note – The rank indicated is the highest held in the Regular Army, the Volunteers, or in retirement.

Generals edit
Field officers edit
Company officers edit

United States Navy edit

United States Marine Corps edit

3rd Class Companions edit

From 1865 to 1890, a limited number of civilians who contributed outstanding service to the United States during the Civil War were elected into the Order as 3rd Class Companions.

Hereditary Companions edit

Initially, the MOLLUS had Companions of the Second Class, the eldest sons of Companions of the First Class (i.e., veterans of the Civil War who also held a commission at some point). A Second Class Companion became a First Class Companion upon his father's death, and brothers of fallen officers were allowed to join as hereditary companions if there was no surviving issue. These practices were discontinued in 1905 when the MOLLUS Constitution was changed to allow any direct male descendant of a U.S. Army officer to become a MOLLUS Companion. The nomenclature of First Class and Second Class Companions was discarded, leaving only the qualifiers of "Original" and "Hereditary" Companions. Later, the eligibility rules were changed to allow nephews of U.S. officers to become hereditary Companions of the MOLLUS; and as of October 2021, a first-cousin relationship to an officer (i.e., the officer was the child of the aunt or uncle of the applicant) qualifies the applicant for hereditary membership.

Military and naval officers edit

Public officials edit

Others edit

Associate Companions edit

MOLLUS allows state commanderies, at their discretion, to elect up to one-third of their membership as Associate Companions.

Posthumous Companions edit

Non-members who were or are eligible for membership edit

Eligible veteran officers who did not join MOLLUS edit

Several noteworthy Union officers, although eligible, did not become MOLLUS companions. They included the following:

Brigadier General and President Andrew Johnson, Major General and President James Garfield, Major General and United States Senator Francis Preston Blair Jr., Brevet Brigadier General Kit Carson, Major General John A. Dix, Acting Ensign Pierre d'Orleans, Duke of Penthièvre, Rear Admiral Samuel Dupont, Major General John G. Foster, Major General John C. Fremont, Captain Charles Vernon Gridley USN, Brevet Major General William S. Harney, Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan, Major General George Meade, Major General and Governor Edwin D. Morgan, Major General Edward Ord, Major General Daniel Sickles, Brevet Major General Emory Upton, Brevet Brigadier General Thomas J. Rodman, Brevet Brigadier General Sylvanus Thayer, Captain Augustin Thompson, Brevet Major General Zealous Bates Tower, Acting Assistant Third Engineer George Westinghouse, Rear Admiral John Ancrum Winslow, Major General John E. Wool.

Major General George Meade was posthumously inducted as a MOLLUS companion in 2015.

Noteworthy persons eligible for hereditary companionship in MOLLUS edit

William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor was, and his male descendants are, eligible for hereditary membership in MOLLUS by right of his father's service in the U.S. Army. All other male descendants of Rear Admiral Winfield Scott Schley and William Backhouse Astor Sr. are eligible for membership in MOLLUS by collateral descent.

All male descendants of 19th-century railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt are eligible to join MOLLUS as collateral descendants of Vanderbilt's youngest son, Captain George Washington Vanderbilt, who graduated West Point in 1860 and died on January 1, 1864, in Nice, France without issue. These descendants include the current Duke of Marlborough and CNN reporter Anderson Cooper. Anderson Cooper is also eligible for hereditary membership in MOLLUS because of his descent from Major General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick.

Major General David D. Porter, USMC, a recipient of the Medal of Honor, was eligible for membership in MOLLUS by right of his descent from his grandfather, Admiral David Dixon Porter.

Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother, CIA Director Allen Dulles, were eligible for membership in MOLLUS by right of their descent from their maternal grandfather Colonel John W. Foster, who served as Secretary of State in the administration of President Benjamin Harrison.

Vice-president of the United States Richard (Dick) Cheney, by right of descent from Captain Samuel Fletcher Cheney of the 21st Ohio Volunteer Infantry.

John Bouvier Kennedy Schlossberg, grandson of President John F. Kennedy, by right of descent from Captain John V. Bouvier of the 80th New York Volunteer Infantry (20th New York State Militia). Captain Bouvier was the great-grandfather of First Lady Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy.

Eligible royalty edit

Several Europeans of royal descent at eligible for membership in MOLLUS by right of their descent from Captain Philippe d'Orleans, the grandson of King Louis Philippe I of France.

King Felipe VI of Spain and his father, former King of Spain Juan Carlos, are eligible for hereditary companionship in MOLLUS, as are their male descendants. The same is true for the family of the Orleanist pretenders to the throne of France.

King Manuel II of Portugal (1889–1932) was eligible to become a hereditary companion of MOLLUS as his mother was a daughter of Philippe d'Orleans. He had no offspring.

Prince Pedro Carlos of Orléans-Braganza (b. 1945) is a claimant to the Brazilian throne and a descendant of Philippe d'Orleans. His nephew is Peter, Hereditary Prince of Yugoslavia (b. 1980).

Prince Amedeo, Duke of Aosta (1943–2021), head of the House of Savoy and claimant to the throne of Italy, was eligible for hereditary MOLLUS membership but was elected as an honorary member instead.

Several other individuals of royal descent can join MOLLUS by right of their descent from Prince Robert, Duke of Chartres – the brother of Prince Philippe, who also served with the Union Army. These descendants included Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark (b. 1938) and previously included Henri, Count of Paris (1908–1999) (longtime pretender to the French throne), Count Aage of Rosenborg (1887–1940) (who served as an officer in the French Foreign Legion), and Prince Axel of Denmark (1888–1964).

Prince Pierre, Duke of Penthièvre was a cousin of the Count of Paris and served in the Union Navy as an ensign on the frigate USS John Adams.

Jean d'Orleans (b. 1965) is the current Count of Paris and Orleanist pretender to the French throne.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector". Social Networks and Archival Context.
  2. ^ "National Home Page of the Dames of the Loyal Legion of the United States". Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  3. ^ New International Encyclopedia
  4. ^ Aubin, Joshua Harris (1906). Register of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Pub. under the auspices of the commandery of the state of Massachusetts. p. 207.
  5. ^ "Cipriano Andrade, Rear Admiral, United States Navy". 21 June 2023.
  6. ^ "Silas Casey III, Rear Admiral, United States Navy". 21 June 2023.
  7. ^ "MOLLUS – Commander-in-Chief Rear Admiral Purnell Frederick Harrington".
  8. ^ "Rear Admiral Wildes Dead; Was on His Way Home from China on Sick Leave when Death Overtook Him". The New York Times. 8 February 1903.
  9. ^ https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1878/11/30/80737847.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1885/05/03/121572722.pdf[bare URL PDF]

Further reading edit

  • Carroon, Robert G. & Dana B. Shoaf (2001). Union Blue: The History of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Shippensburg, PA: White Mane Books. ISBN 1-57249-190-6. LCCN 00049955.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • MOLLUS-organized marker for Union POWs buried in Richmond, Virginia
  • MOLLUS-Massachusetts Photograph Collection US Army Heritage and Education Center, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania

military, order, loyal, legion, united, states, confused, with, legion, united, states, american, legion, mollus, simply, loyal, legion, united, states, military, order, organized, april, 1865, three, veteran, officers, union, army, original, membership, compo. Not to be confused with Legion of the United States or American Legion The Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States MOLLUS or simply the Loyal Legion is a United States military order organized on April 15 1865 by three veteran officers of the Union Army The original membership was composed of commissioned officers of the Regular or Volunteer Army U S Navy or U S Marine Corps who served during the American Civil War or who had served and thereafter been commissioned and who thereby had aided in maintaining the honor integrity and supremacy of the national movement during the Civil War source source The Loyal Legion U S Marine BandThe Loyal Legion was formed in response to rumors from Washington of a conspiracy to incapacitate the United States government by the assassination of its leaders in the immediate aftermath of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln 1 The founding members stated their purpose as cherishing the memories and associations of the war waged in defense of the unity and indivisibility of the Republic the strengthening of the ties of fraternal fellowship and sympathy formed by companionship in arms the relief of the widows and children of dead companions of the order and the advancement of the general welfare of the soldiers and sailors of the United States The veterans organization became a hereditary society after the original officers died off The modern organization is composed of men who are direct descendants nephews or first cousins of these officers hereditary members and also other men who share the ideals of the Order Associate members who collectively are considered Companions A female auxiliary Dames of the Loyal Legion of the United States DOLLUS was formed in 1899 and accepted as an affiliate in 1915 2 Contents 1 Origins 2 Later history 3 Commanders in Chief 4 Prominent Companions 4 1 Presidents of the United States 4 2 Vice Presidents 4 3 Honorary Companions 4 4 Veteran Companions 4 4 1 United States Army 4 4 1 1 Generals 4 4 1 2 Field officers 4 4 1 3 Company officers 4 4 2 United States Navy 4 4 3 United States Marine Corps 4 5 3rd Class Companions 4 6 Hereditary Companions 4 6 1 Military and naval officers 4 6 2 Public officials 4 6 3 Others 4 7 Associate Companions 4 8 Posthumous Companions 5 Non members who were or are eligible for membership 5 1 Eligible veteran officers who did not join MOLLUS 5 2 Noteworthy persons eligible for hereditary companionship in MOLLUS 5 3 Eligible royalty 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOrigins editFollowing the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln on April 14 1865 rumors spread that the act had been part of a broader conspiracy to overthrow the legally constituted government of the United States by assassinating its chief men Many people at first gave credence to these rumors including three of the officers assigned to the honor guard for Lincoln s body as it was transported to Springfield Illinois for burial these three men Brevet Lt Col Samuel Brown Wylie Mitchell Lt Col Thomas Ellwood Zell and Captain Peter Dirck Keyser are considered the founders of the Order To demonstrate their loyalty they decided to form a Legion modeled on the Revolutionary War Society of the Cincinnati The Loyal Legion was organized mainly during the same meetings that planned Lincoln s funeral and during a mass meeting of Philadelphia war veterans on April 20 culminating in a meeting on May 31 1865 in Independence Hall in Philadelphia at which the name was chosen The Order initially was composed of three classes of members Officers who had fought in the Army Navy or Marine Corps of the United States in the suppression of the Rebellion or enlisted men who had so served and were subsequently commissioned in the regular forces of the United States constituted the Original Companions of the First Class The eldest direct male lineal descendants of deceased Original Companions or eligible officers could be admitted as Hereditary Companions of the First Class Companions of the Second Class were the eldest direct male lineal descendants of living Original Companions or of living individuals who were eligible for membership in the First Class NOTE The use of the Rule of Primogeniture was abolished in 1905 for both the First and Second classes of membership opening membership to all male lineal descendants and later changes opened membership to male lineal descendants of siblings of eligible officers i e a nephew relationship and in 2021 to male lineal descendants of an aunt or uncle of eligible officers i e a first cousin relationship The Second Class of Companions was discontinued as the former officers died off and the Order became composed entirely of descendants The Third Class comprised distinguished civilians who had rendered faithful and conspicuous service to the Union during the Civil War By the law of the Order no new elections to this class were made after 1890 3 Later history editThe Loyal Legion grew rapidly in the late 19th century and had Companions in every Northern state and many of the states that had once formed the Confederacy The Commandery in Chief was established on October 21 1885 with authority over the 14 state commanderies Previously the Pennsylvania Commandery functioned as the first among equals of the commanderies as it was both the oldest and largest At its height about 1900 the Order had more than 8 000 Civil War veterans as active members including nearly all notable general and flag officers and several presidents Ulysses S Grant William T Sherman Philip H Sheridan George H Thomas George B McClellan Rutherford B Hayes Chester A Arthur Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley The Order s fame was significant enough to inspire John Philip Sousa to compose the Loyal Legion March in its honor in 1890 The Loyal Legion is one the oldest hereditary military societies in the United States Predecessors to it include the Society of the Cincinnati instituted in 1783 and the Aztec Club of 1847 both similarly founded by and for commissioned officers of the United States military Today the Order serves as a hereditary society male relatives of eligible officers rather than as a functioning military order though many Companions are either military veterans or on active military duty Among other activities Companions organize and participate in commemorative events provide awards to deserving ROTC cadets and assist with preservation efforts Of particular note is that each year the Loyal Legion commemorates President Lincoln s birthday with a wreath laying ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D C In 2009 the MOLLUS helped coordinate an extended tribute with the help of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of Lincoln s birthday There are now three basic categories of membership Hereditary Associate non hereditary and Honorary Just as many Original Companions of the Order were also members of the Grand Army of the Republic the GAR many current Companions of the Order are also members of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War SUVCW the legal heir to the GAR Organizationally the Loyal Legion is composed of a National Commandery in Chief and individual state Commanderies There are currently 20 state Commanderies Current national officers for the 2023 2025 term include Commander in Chief Michael Timothy Bates Esq of New Jersey Senior Vice Commander in Chief Paul Davis of Michigan Junior Vice Commander in Chief William F Forbes of Pennsylvania Treasurer in Chief Lee Alan Tryon CPA of Connecticut Recorder in Chief Gary L Grove PhD of Pennsylvania Registrar in Chief Jefferson Davis Lilly II MPA of Indiana Judge Advocate in Chief Matthew D Dupee of Pennsylvania Surgeon in Chief Peter B Kane of Pennsylvania and Chaplain in Chief Jeffry C Burden Esq of Virginia nbsp A membership medal given to an Original Companion here Capt Edward Taylor of the 95th Ohio Infantry The design of the medal remains unchanged nbsp A membership medal worn by Brevet Col Perrin V Fox of the 1st Michigan Engineers His son later wore this medal as a descendant member Descendant members wore a ribbon with a blue stripe in the center until 1935 when all members were entitled to use a red center ribbon nbsp Enrollment certificate of Col Charles Anderson 93rd Ohio Infantry Commanders in Chief editMajor General George Cadwalader First MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1865 79 Died in office Major General Winfield Scott Hancock 1879 86 Died in office General Philip H Sheridan 1886 88 Died in office Major General Rutherford B Hayes 1888 93 Died in office Rear Admiral John J Almy 1893 Brigadier General Lucius Fairchild 1893 95 Major General John Gibbon 1895 96 Died in office Rear Admiral Bancroft Gherardi 1896 99 Lieutenant General John M Schofield 1899 1903 Major General David McMurtrie Gregg 1903 05 Major General John R Brooke 1905 07 Major General Grenville M Dodge 1907 09 Lieutenant General John C Bates 1909 11 Rear Admiral George W Melville 1911 12 Died in office Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur 1912 Died in office Colonel Arnold A Rand 1912 13 First non flag officer to serve as MOLLUS commander in chief Brevet Brigadier General Thomas Hamlin Hubbard 1913 15 Died in office Rear Admiral Louis Kempff 1915 Lieutenant General Samuel B M Young 1915 19 Lieutenant General Nelson A Miles 1919 25 Died in office Rear Admiral Purnell F Harrington 1925 27 Master Robert M Thompson USN 1927 30 Died in office Brigadier General Samuel W Fountain 1930 Died in office Brevet Major George Mason 1930 31 Captain William P Wright 1931 33 Died in office Last Civil War veteran to serve as MOLLUS commander in chief Also was Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic from 1932 to 1933 Colonel Hugh Means 1933 35 Colonel William Ennis Forbes 1935 40 Resigned Major General Malvern Hill Barnum 1940 41 Mr James Vernor Jr 1941 47 First MOLLUS commander in chief who did not serve in the United States Armed Forces Rear Admiral Reginald R Belknap USN 1947 51 Donald H Whittemore 1951 53 Commander William C Duval USNR 1953 57 Major General Ulysses S Grant III 1957 61 SUVCW Commander in Chief 1953 55 Lieutenant Colonel Donald M Liddell Jr USAR 1961 62 Resigned Lieutenant Colonel H Durston Saylor II USAR 1962 64 Major General Clayton B Volgel USMC 1964 Died in office Last flag officer to serve as MOLLUS commander in chief Colonel Walter E Hopper USAR 1964 67 Lieutenant Colonel Lenahan O Connell USAR 1967 71 Colonel Brooke M Lessig USAR 1971 73 Charles Allan Brady Jr 1973 75 Colonel Joseph B Daugherty 1975 77 Thomas N McCarter III 1977 81 Lieutenant Colonel Philip M Watrous 1981 83 Alexander P Hartnett 1983 85 William H Upham 1985 89 Last commander in chief to serve more than two years in office 1st Lieutenant Lowell V Hammer 1989 91 SUVCW Commander in Chief 1991 92 Henry N Sawyer 1991 93 Colonel Scott W Stucky USAFR 1993 95 Federal judge The Rev Canon Robert G Carroon 1995 97 The Hon Michael P Sullivan 1997 99 Major Robert J Bateman 1999 2001 Gordon R Bury II 2001 03 SUVCW Commander in Chief 1986 87 Douglas R Niermeyer 2003 05 Benjamin C Frick Esq 2005 07 Karl F Schaeffer 2007 09 Keith Harrison 2009 11 SUVCW Commander in Chief 1994 95 Jeffry C Burden Esq 2011 13 Waldron K Post II 2013 15 Captain James A Simmons USAF 2015 17 Colonel Eric A Rojo USA 2017 19 Dr Joseph T Coleman 2019 21 Colonel Robert D Pollock USAF 2021 23 Michael T Bates Esq 2023 Prominent Companions editNote the ranks indicated are the highest the individual held in the United States armed forces or in state militia service and not necessarily the highest rank held during the Civil War Presidents of the United States edit Abraham Lincoln Captain Illinois Militia Posthumously enrolled Ulysses S Grant General U S Army Veteran Companion Rutherford B Hayes Brevet Major General Volunteers Veteran Companion and MOLLUS Commander in Chief from 1888 to 1893 Chester A Arthur Brigadier General New York Militia 3rd Class Companion Benjamin Harrison Brevet Brigadier General Volunteers Veteran Companion William McKinley Brevet Major 23rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry Veteran Companion Herbert Hoover Honorary Companion elected in 1961 Dwight Eisenhower General of the Army U S Army Honorary Companion elected in 1953 Note Presidents Andrew Johnson and James Garfield were both generals in the U S Army during the Civil War and were thus eligible to be veteran companions of MOLLUS but did not join the Order Vice Presidents edit Vice President Hannibal Hamlin who had served under President Lincoln from 1861 to 1865 was elected MOLLUS Companion of the 3rd Class While he was vice president he served as a corporal with Company A of the Maine State Guard a k a Maine Coast Guards at Fort McClary in Kittery Maine from July to September 1864 Vice President Henry Wilson who served under President Grant from 1873 until he died in 1875 was colonel of the 22nd Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry and was a MOLLUS Companion of the First Class Vice President Charles G Dawes who served under President Coolidge from 1925 to 1929 became a First Class Companion in succession to his father Brevet Brigadier General Rufus Dawes Vice President Dawes served as a brigadier general with the U S Army during World War I and also received the Nobel Peace Prize In addition to the above President Andrew Johnson vice president before President Lincoln s death and the founding of MOLLUS was eligible to become a First Class Companion of MOLLUS but did not join the Order President Chester A Arthur who was vice president prior to the death of President Garfield was elected in 1882 as a 3rd Class Companion while serving as president Honorary Companions edit A limited number of individuals may be elected as Honorary Companions of MOLLUS They are usually individuals with distinguished careers in public service or the military President and General of the Army Dwight D Eisenhower elected in 1953 President Herbert Hoover elected in 1961 Fleet Admiral Chester W Nimitz Commander in Chief of the Pacific Fleet and Chief of Naval Operations General of the Army Omar Bradley Chief of Staff of the United States Army and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Lieutenant General Milton G Baker Lieutenant General John L Ballantyne III Rear Admiral Thomas V Cooper HRH Amadeo Prince of Savoy Mr Ken Burns Filmmaker Mr Don Troiani Artist Veteran Companions edit United States Army edit Note The rank indicated is the highest held in the Regular Army the Volunteers or in retirement Generals edit General Ulysses S Grant United States Army Commanding General General William Tecumseh Sherman United States Army Commanding General General Philip H Sheridan United States Army Commanding General and MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1886 88 Lieutenant General John M Schofield Medal of Honor recipient United States Army Commanding General and MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1899 1903 Lieutenant General Nelson A Miles Medal of Honor recipient United States Army Commanding General and MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1919 25 Lieutenant General Samuel B M Young First United States Army Chief of Staff and MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1915 19 Lieutenant General Adna R Chaffee United States Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General John C Bates Army Chief of Staff and MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1909 11 Lieutenant General Henry C Corbin Adjutant General of the United States Army Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur Medal of Honor recipient and MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1912 Father of General Douglas MacArthur Brevet Lieutenant General Winfield Scott United States Army Commanding General 1841 1861 and hero of the War of 1812 Major General Thomas M Anderson Nephew of Brevet Major General Robert Anderson Major General Christopher C Augur Veteran of the Mexican War and wounded in action at the Battle of Cedar Mountain Major General Frank Baldwin Two time Medal of Honor recipient Major General Nathaniel P Banks Governor of Massachusetts and Congressman Major General Zenas Bliss Medal of Honor recipient Major General Joseph Cabell Breckinridge Sr Cousin of Vice President and Confederate general John C Breckinridge Major General John R Brooke MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1905 07 Major General Ambrose Burnside GAR Commander in Chief 1871 73 Governor of Rhode Island and United States Senator Major General Daniel Butterfield Medal of Honor recipient Major General George Cadwalader First MOLLUS Commander and Chief 1865 79 Major General Silas Casey Career Army Officer Major General John Clem Youngest Union soldier in the Civil War Major General George Armstrong Custer Legendary Cavalryman and cultural icon Major General Napoleon J T Dana Major General Grenville M Dodge MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1907 09 Major General William H Emory Major General Francis Fessenden Lost a leg while commanding a brigade in the Red River Campaign Mayor of Portland Maine Major General James W Forsyth Commander of the 7th Cavalry Regiment at the Wounded Knee Massacre Major General William B Franklin Major General John Gibbon MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1895 96 Major General George L Gillespie Medal of Honor recipient Chief Engineer and Assistant Chief of Staff of the United States Army Major General Gordon Granger Author of the Juneteenth proclamation Major General Adolphus Greely Arctic explorer and Medal of Honor recipient Major General George S Greene Hero of Culp s Hill in the Battle of Gettysburg Major General Schuyler Hamilton Grandson of Alexander Hamilton Major General Winfield Scott Hancock MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1879 86 Major General Guy V Henry Recipient of the Medal of Honor Major General Oliver Otis Howard Founder and namesake of Howard University Major General Charles Frederic Humphrey Sr Quartermaster General and Medal of Honor recipient Major General Henry Jackson Hunt Commanded U S artillery during Picket s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg Major General Erasmus D Keyes Major General J Warren Keifer U S Representative and veteran of the Spanish American War Major General William August Kobbe Major General Henry W Lawton Medal of Honor recipient Major General John A Logan GAR Commander in Chief 1868 71 founder of Decoration Day United States Senator and vice presidential candidate Major General George B McClellan United States Army Commanding General Major General Henry C Merriam Medal of Honor recipient Major General Wesley Merritt Superintendent of West Point Major General Robert Patterson Veteran of the War of 1812 Mexican War and Civil War Major General John Pope Major General John C Robinson Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic 1877 79 Lieutenant Governor of New York 1873 74 and Medal of Honor recipient Major General William S Rosecrans Major General Thomas H Ruger Major General Theodore Runyon Mayor of Newark New Jersey and Ambassador to Germany Major General William R Shafter Commander of V Corps in Cuba during the Spanish American War Major General Thomas W Sherman Major General Daniel Sickles Hero of the Battle of Gettysburg Major General Henry W Slocum Major General David S Stanley Medal of Honor recipient Major General George Stoneman Governor of California Major General Samuel S Sumner Major General Wager Swayne Medal of Honor recipient and military governor of Alabama Major General Alfred Terry Major General George H Thomas Hero of the Battles of Chickamauga Chattanooga and Nashville Major General Lew Wallace Author of Ben Hur Major General John F Weston Medal of Honor recipient Major General Frank Wheaton Major General Loyd Wheaton Medal of Honor recipient Major General James Harrison Wilson Veteran of the Civil War Spanish American War and the Boxer Rebellion Major General Thomas J Wood Brevet Major General Adelbert Ames Mississippi Governor and Senator Brevet Major General Russell A Alger GAR Commander in Chief 1889 90 Secretary of War during the Spanish American War Brevet Major General Nicholas Longworth Anderson Nephew of Brevet Major General Robert Anderson and father of Ambassador Larz Anderson Brevet Major General Robert Anderson Hero of Fort Sumter Brevet Major General Christopher Columbus Andrews Diplomat and forester Brevet Major General Absalom Baird Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General John G Barnard Distinguished military engineer Brevet Major General George L Beal Treasurer of Maine Brevet Major General John Milton Brannan Career Army officer Served in Mexican and Civil Wars Brevet Major General James Henry Carleton Brevet Major General Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain Hero of Little Round Top in the Battle of Gettysburg and Governor of Maine Brevet Major General Augustus Louis Chetlain Organized the first Black Regiment in the Western Theater Brevet Major General Charles H T Collis Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Philip St George Cooke Author of cavalry tactics Brevet Major General Newton Martin Curtis Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Charles Devens Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic 1873 75 Brevet Major General James Deering Fessenden Brevet Major General Manning Ferguson Force Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General James Barnet Fry Brevet Major General George W Getty Brevet Major General Lewis A Grant Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General David McM Gregg Cavalry commander Brevet Major General Cyrus Hamlin Son of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin Brevet Major General John F Hartranft GAR Commander in Chief 1875 77 Governor of Pennsylvania and Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General John Porter Hatch Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Albion P Howe Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Brevet Major General George H Nye Commander of the 29th Maine Regiment Brevet Major General Richard W Johnson Brevet Major General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick one of the youngest generals in the Civil War Brevet Major General Martin T McMahon Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General St Clair Augustine Mulholland Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Alfred L Pearson Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Theodore S Peck Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Galusha Pennypacker Youngest general during the Civil War Brevet Major General William H Powell Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Rufus Saxton Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General William H Sewell Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Alexander Shaler Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General George H Sharpe Secret service agent Brevet Major General Charles H Smith Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General John W Sprague Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Alexander S Webb Medal of Honor recipient and City College of New York president Brevet Major General William Wells Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General Orlando B Willcox Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major General James Alexander Williamson Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General George Lippitt Andrews Brigadier General Abraham K Arnold Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General John B Babcock Career officer and Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Richard Napoleon Batchelder Quartermaster General and Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Joshua Hall Bates Ohio state senator Brigadier General William E Birkhimer Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Louis H Carpenter Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Thomas Lincoln Casey Engineer who completed the Washington Monument Brigadier General Powell Clayton Governor of Arkansas U S Senator and Ambassador to Mexico Brigadier General Charles A Coolidge Brigadier General Thomas L Crittenden Brigadier General Francis S Dodge Army Paymaster General and Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Eugene D Dimmick Career officer Brigadier General Edgar S Dudley Brigadier General Richard C Drum U S Army adjutant general Brigadier General Charles P Eagan U S Army Commissary General court martialed during the embalmed beef scandal during the Spanish American War Expelled from MOLLUS after making disparaging remarks about General Nelson Miles before a Congressional committee investigating the scandal Brigadier General William Ennis Brigadier General Lucius Fairchild MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1893 95 GAR Commander in Chief 1886 87 Governor of Wisconsin and Minister to Spain Brigadier General Samuel W Fountain MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1930 Brigadier General Henry Blanchard Freeman Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General John C Gilmore Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Edward S Godfrey Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Edward H Hobson Brigadier General Lucius F Hubbard Governor of Minnesota A veteran of both the Civil War and the Spanish American War Brigadier General Eli L Huggins Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Bernard J D Irwin Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Horatio Collins King Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Charles Mattocks Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General John H Patterson Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Alexander Cummings McWhorter Pennington Jr Career Army officer Brigadier General Richard Henry Pratt Founder of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School Brigadier General Americus V Rice United States Representative Brigadier General Edmund Rice Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Theophilus Francis Rodenbough Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General George B Rodney Brigadier General William H Seward Jr Son of Secretary of State William Seward Brigadier General Rufus Saxton Third Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General M A W Shockley medical corps career officer 4 Brigadier General Theodore Schwan Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Jacob H Smith War criminal Brigadier General Julius Stahel Hungarian American Medal of Honor recipient and diplomat Brigadier General Edwin Vose Sumner Jr Brigadier General David G Swaim Judge Advocate General of the U S Army Brigadier General George Miller Sternberg U S Army Surgeon General Brigadier General Stephen Thomas Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Egbert L Viele United States Representative Brigadier General Daniel D Wheeler Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Samuel Whitside Major of the 7th Cavalry Regiment at the Wounded Knee Massacre Brigadier General John Moulder Wilson Chief Engineer of the Army and Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Henry Clay Wood Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Carle A Woodruff Medal of Honor recipient Brigadier General Horatio Gouverneur Wright Chief Engineer of the United States Army Brevet Brigadier General Charles Francis Adams Jr Railroad president Brevet Brigadier General John Jacob Astor III Philanthropist and socialite Brevet Brigadier General Delevan Bates Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General John C Black Medal of Honor recipient and Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic 1903 04 Brevet Brigadier General Charles Brayton Rhode Island postmaster and political boss Brevet Brigadier General Cecil Clay Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Henry B Clitz Veteran of Mexican War Brevet Brigadier General Amasa Cobb United States Representative Brevet Brigadier General Byron M Cutcheon Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Rufus Dawes Great grandson of patriot William Dawes Brevet Brigadier General Samuel Fallows Reformed Episcopal bishop Brevet Brigadier General Thomas Clement Fletcher Governor of Missouri Brevet Brigadier General John P S Gobin GAR Commander in Chief 1897 98 and lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania Brevet Brigadier General Nathan Goff Jr Brevet Brigadier General Edwin S Greeley President General of the Sons of the American Revolution Brevet Brigadier General Oliver Duff Greene Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General James G Grindlay Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Charles Hamlin Son of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin Brevet Brigadier General William Levis James Chief quartermaster of the Department of Virginia Brevet Brigadier General Albert G Lawrence Ambassador to Costa Rica Brevet Brigadier General John Willock Noble Secretary of the Interior Brevet Brigadier General Paul A Oliver Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Ario Pardee Jr Defended Culp s Hill at the Battle of Gettysburg Brevet Brigadier General Ely S Parker Seneca Native American aide to General Grant Brevet Brigadier General Charles E Phelps Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Horace Porter Medal of Honor recipient and United States Ambassador to France Brevet Brigadier General Philip S Post Medal of Honor recipient and Consul General to Austria Hungary Brevet Brigadier General Samuel Miller Quincy Mayor of New Orleans Brevet Brigadier General Isaac R Sherwood U S Representative Brevet Brigadier General Augustus B R Sprague Mayor of Worcester Massachusetts Brevet Brigadier General Andrew B Spurling Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Hazard Stevens Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Frederick W Swift Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Charles Henry Tompkins Colonel 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery Brevet Brigadier General William S Tilton Brevet Brigadier General Benjamin F Tracy Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Henry E Tremain Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Victor Vifquain Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General Francis A Walker President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Brevet Brigadier General Stephen Minot Weld Jr Businessman and horticulturalist Brevet Brigadier General Joseph N G Whistler Cousin of the artist James Abbott McNeill Whistler Brevet Brigadier General Edward W Whitaker Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General William H Withington Medal of Honor recipient Field officers edit Colonel Charles Anderson 93rd Ohio Infantry 27th Governor of Ohio wounded at Stones River Colonel George Grenville Benedict Medal of Honor recipient Colonel James S Casey Medal of Honor recipient Colonel George Earl Church Civil engineer geographer and explorer Colonel Luigi Palma di Cesnola Medal of Honor recipient and Director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Colonel John W Foster Ambassador and Secretary of State Colonel Smith H Hastings Medal of Honor recipient Colonel James Jackson Medal of Honor recipient Colonel William P Kellogg United States Senator and Governor of Louisiana Colonel John Mason Loomis Lumber tycoon philanthropist and founder of the Loomis Chaffee School Colonel Douglas Putnam Fought at the battles of Shiloh and Missionary Ridge Colonel Matthew Quay United States Senator and Medal of Honor recipient Colonel James Martinus Schoonmaker Medal of Honor recipient Colonel Henry R Tilton Medal of Honor recipient Colonel Amasa Tracy Medal of Honor recipient Colonel John Tweedale Medal of Honor recipient Colonel Wheelock G Veazey GAR Commander in Chief 1890 91 and Medal of Honor recipient Colonel John Wainwright Medal of Honor recipient Colonel William C Webb Political figure Colonel Henry Wilson Vice President of the United States Brevet Colonel Eugene B Beaumont Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel James Coey Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel Stephen P Corliss Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel Benjamin W Crowninshield Aide de camp to General Philip Sheridan Brevet Colonel Johnston de Peyster First re raised U S flag over Richmond in 1865 Brevet Colonel William D Dickey Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel Douglas Hapeman Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr Supreme Court associate justice Brevet Colonel Horatio Collins King Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel Augustus Pearl Martin Mayor of Boston Brevet Colonel William R Parnell Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Colonel Walter S Payne SUVCW Commander in Chief 1885 87 Brevet Colonel Elisha Hunt Rhodes Diarist and author and served as Senior Vice Commander in Chief of the GAR Brevet Colonel Robert S Robertson Medal of Honor recipient and Lieutenant Governor of Indiana Brevet Colonel Washington A Roebling Engineer of the Brooklyn Bridge Brevet Colonel Alfred J Sellers Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel William Henry Harrison Benyaurd Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel James M Burns Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel Frederick Fuger Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel Asa Bird Gardiner Lawyer author and controversial political figure Lieutenant Colonel Eli Lilly Pharmaceutical chemist industrialist and entrepreneur Lieutenant Colonel Theodore Lyman Congressman from Massachusetts Lieutenant Colonel James Quinlan Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel William Y W Ripley Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel Cyrus Sears Medal of Honor recipient Lieutenant Colonel Levi Parker Wright First Commander of Fort Whipple which became Fort Myer Lieutenant Colonel T Elwood Zell Founder of MOLLUS Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Nicoll Benjamin Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Charles A Clark Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Henry A du Pont Medal of Honor recipient industrialist and United States Senator Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Robert Hale Ives Goddard Businessman and reformist politician Brevet Lieutenant Colonel George Edward Gouraud Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Brown Wylie Mitchell Founder of MOLLUS Major William Sully Beebe Medal of Honor recipient Major Mason Carter Medal of Honor recipient Major John M Deane Medal of Honor recipient Major Charles DeRudio Adventurer Major John Mead Gould Author diarist and banker Major Moses Harris Medal of Honor recipient Major William W McCammon Medal of Honor recipient Major Myles Moylan Medal of Honor recipient Major James B Pond Medal of Honor recipient Major Charles M Rockefeller Medal of Honor recipient Major Henry Romeyn Medal of Honor recipient Major Joseph A Sladen Medal of Honor recipient Major Sidney W Thaxter Medal of Honor recipient Major Hampton S Thomas Medal of Honor recipient Major Clifford Thomson Medal of Honor recipient Major Moses Veale Medal of Honor recipient Major William Warner GAR Commander in Chief 1888 89 Major Edmund Zalinski Inventor of the pneumatic dynamite gun Surgeon Joseph K Corson Medal of Honor recipient Surgeon Richard J Curran Medal of Honor recipient Surgeon Gabriel Grant Medal of Honor recipient Surgeon George E Ranney Medal of Honor recipient Surgeon John Maynard Woodworth First Surgeon General of the United States Brevet Major William H Appleton Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major Charles E Belknap U S Representative Brevet Major Augustus P Davis SUVCW founder Brevet Major Ira H Evans Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major Charles Gilbert Gould Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major Rufus King Jr Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major William Marland Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major George H Maynard Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major John Patterson Rea GAR Commander in Chief 1887 88 Brevet Major John Wallace Scott Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major William G Tracy Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Major Adelbert B Twitchell Educator Company officers edit Captain John G B Adams Medal of Honor recipient and GAR commander in chief 1893 94 Captain Marion T Anderson Medal of Honor recipient Captain Robert Burns Beath GAR Commander in Chief 1883 84 Captain Alexander M Beattie Medal of Honor recipient Captain George W Brush Medal of Honor recipient Captain Edward Lyon Buchwalter Business executive Captain Samuel Swinfin Burdett GAR Commander in Chief 1885 86 Captain John J Carter Medal of Honor recipient Captain Robert G Carter Medal of Honor recipient Captain Walter H Cooke Medal of Honor recipient Captain Charles D Copp Medal of Honor recipient Captain Stephen P Corliss Medal of Honor recipient Captain Andrew Davidson Medal of Honor recipient Captain George E Davis Medal of Honor recipient Captain Theodore R Davis Illustrator Captain William W Douglas Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court Captain and Governor Elisha Dyer Governor of Rhode Island Captain George W Ford Medal of Honor recipient Captain Frank Furness Prolific architect and Medal of Honor recipient Captain Peter Dirck Keyser Founder of MOLLUS Captain William A Ketcham Indiana Attorney General Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic Captain Oscar Lapham U S Representative from Rhode Island Captain Robert Todd Lincoln Son of President Abraham Lincoln Captain Sylvester H Martin Medal of Honor recipient Captain George Sargent Merrill GAR Commander in Chief 1881 82 Captain William E Miller Medal of Honor recipient Captain Elias Riggs Monfort GAR Commander in Chief 1915 16 Captain Clement C Moore II Architect and grandson of the author of Twas the Night Before Christmas Captain Walter S Payne SUVCW Commander in Chief 1885 1887 Captain Prince Philippe Count of Paris a k a Philippe d Orleans Claimant to the French throne Captain Theodore S Peck Medal of Honor recipient Captain James P Postles Medal of Honor recipient Captain Milton Russell Medal of Honor recipient Captain Harlan J Swift Medal of Honor recipient Captain John Michael Tobin Medal of Honor recipient Captain John J Toffey Medal of Honor recipient Captain Charlemagne Tower Lawyer and businessman Captain Albert D Wright Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Captain John Vernou Bouvier Sr Great Grandfather of Jacqueline Kennedy Brevet Captain Joseph B Foraker Governor of Ohio and United States Senator Brevet Captain Francis M Smith Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant William B Avery Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant Francis E Brownell Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant Allan H Dougall Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant John Galloway Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant Thomas P Gere Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant Charles P Goodyear Jr Son of vulcanized rubber inventor Charles Goodyear 1st Lieutenant Charles A Longfellow Son of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1st Lieutenant John L Mitchell United States Senator and father of aviation prophet Billy Mitchell 1st Lieutenant John Palmer GAR Commander in Chief 1891 92 and New York Secretary of State 1st Lieutenant William T Simmons Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant George H Stockman Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant Anthony Taylor Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant Amos Madden Thayer Federal judge 1st Lieutenant William G Thompson Mayor of Detroit Michigan 1st Lieutenant John J Toffey Medal of Honor recipient 1st Lieutenant William H Upham Governor of Wisconsin 1st Lieutenant Oscar N Wilmington Last Civil War veteran to become a MOLLUS companion 2nd Lieutenant Loyall Farragut Son of Admiral David Farragut 2nd Lieutenant Marcus A Hanna United States Senator and political boss 2nd Lieutenant Abraham G Mills President of the National League Chaplain Charles Comfort Tiffany Episcopal clergyman Chaplain Henry Clay Trumbull Leader in the Sunday School Movement United States Navy edit Admiral of the Navy George Dewey Hero of the Battle of Manila Bay Senior Navy Admiral 1898 1917 Admiral David G Farragut Hero of the Battle of Mobile Bay Senior Navy Admiral 1862 1870 Admiral David Dixon Porter Senior Navy Admiral 1870 1891 Vice Admiral Stephen Clegg Rowan Mexican War and Civil War veteran Served as vice admiral from 1870 to 1889 Rear Admiral John J Almy MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1893 Rear Admiral Cipriano Andrade First U S Navy admiral born in Mexico 5 Rear Admiral Conway Hillyer Arnold Rear Admiral Theodorus Bailey Rear Admiral John R Bartlett Oceanographer Rear Admiral George E Belknap Rear Admiral Gottfried Blocklinger one of the last Civil War veterans to join MOLLUS Rear Admiral Daniel L Braine Rear Admiral William G Buehler Rear Admiral and Brevet Major General Samuel P Carter The only person to have been an admiral in the U S Navy and a general in the U S Army Rear Admiral Silas Casey III 6 Rear Admiral French Ensor Chadwick President of the Naval War College Rear Admiral Charles Edgar Clark Captain of USS Oregon during the Spanish American War Rear Admiral Joseph Coghlan Commander of the cruiser USS Raleigh at the Battle of Manila Bay Rear Admiral George Partridge Colvocoresses Rear Admiral Francis A Cook Commander of USS Brooklyn at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Rear Admiral William S Cowles Rear Admiral Arent S Crowninshield Rear Admiral Charles Henry Davis Rear Admiral Nehemiah Dyer Participated in both the Battle of Mobile Bay and Battle of Manila Bay where he commanded the cruiser USS Baltimore Rear Admiral Robley D Evans Commander of the Great White Fleet Rear Admiral Norman von Heldreich Farquhar Rear Admiral William M Folger Rear Admiral John D Ford Participated in the Battle of Mobile Bay and Manila Bay Rear Admiral Bancroft Gherardi MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1896 1899 Rear Admiral James Henry Gillis 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 Purnell F Harrington MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1925 1927 7 Rear Admiral Richard Inch Rear Admiral John Irwin Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Rear Admiral Louis Kempff MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1915 Rear Admiral Lewis A Kimberly Rear Admiral Stephen B Luce Founder of the United States Naval War College Rear Admiral Bowman H McCalla Captured Guantanamo Bay Cuba in 1898 Rear Admiral Richard Worsam Meade III Nephew of Major General George G Meade Rear Admiral George W Melville MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1911 1912 a survivor of the ill fated Jeannette expedition and recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal Rear Admiral John Porter Merrell President of the Naval War College Rear Admiral Jefferson Franklin Moser Rear Admiral George H Preble Nephew of Commodore Edward Preble Rear Admiral William Radford Rear Admiral Alexander Rhind Veteran of the Mexican War Rear Admiral Christopher Raymond Perry Rodgers Nephew of Commodores Oliver Hazard Perry and Matthew C Perry Rear Admiral Frederick Rodgers Rear Admiral John Augustus Rodgers Grandson of Commodore Matthew C Perry Rear Admiral John Henry Russell Rear Admiral William T Sampson Commander of Naval Forces at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Rear Admiral Thomas O Selfridge Rear Admiral Thomas O Selfridge Jr Rear Admiral Winfield Scott Schley Commanded cruiser USS Brooklyn at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Rear Admiral Montgomery Sicard Chief of the US Navy Bureau of Ordnance Rear Admiral Charles D Sigsbee Commanding officer of USS Maine Rear Admiral Charles Stewart Hero of the War of 1812 Rear Admiral Yates Stirling Rear Admiral Charles H Stockton President of the Naval War College Rear Admiral William T Swinburne Rear Admiral Edward D Taussig Claimed Wake Island and Governor of Guam Rear Admiral Henry Clay Taylor President of the Naval War College Rear Admiral George H Wadleigh Rear Admiral Henry A Walke Rear Admiral John G Walker Chief of the Bureau of Navigation Rear Admiral John C Watson Rear Admiral Frank Wildes Captain of the cruiser USS Boston at the Battle of Manila Bay 8 Rear Admiral John L Worden Commanding officer of USS Monitor Commodore Oscar C Badger Commodore Henry Eagle Commodore Edward Andre Gabriel Barrett Commodore John P Gillis Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Commodore John Guest Commodore William H Macomb Commodore George H Perkins Commodore William F Spicer 9 Commodore William T Truxton 10 Captain Richard Worsam Meade II Brother of Major General George G Meade Captain James S Thornton Executive officer of USS Kearsarge in its battle with CSS Alabama Commander Zera Luther Tanner Commanding officer of the research ship USFC Albatross Lieutenant Commander William Gurdon Saltonstall Master Robert M Thompson MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1927 1930 Chief Sailmaker Charles H Jones Possibly the only Chief Warrant Officer to join MOLLUS United States Marine Corps edit Major General Charles Heywood Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Brigadier General Henry Clay Cochrane Veteran of the Civil War Spanish American War and Boxer Rebellion Brigadier General James Forney Posthumous recipient of the Marine Corps Brevet Medal Brigadier General Percival Pope Recipient of the Marine Corps Brevet Medal Brigadier General Jacob Zeilin Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Brevet Brigadier General Robert Leamy Meade Nephew of Major General George G Meade Colonel Robert W Huntington Commanded the 1st Marine Battalion at Guantanamo Bay in 1898 Colonel Charles Grymes McCawley Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel John L Broome Veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War Major and Paymaster John C Cash3rd Class Companions edit From 1865 to 1890 a limited number of civilians who contributed outstanding service to the United States during the Civil War were elected into the Order as 3rd Class Companions John Albion Andrew Governor of Massachusetts Henry B Anthony United States Senator and Governor of Rhode Island Brigadier General Chester A Arthur Quartermaster General of the New York Militia Alexander D Bache Topographical engineer Austin Blair Governor of Michigan Salmon P Chase Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Gregg Curtin Governor of Pennsylvania John Watts de Peyster Major General in the New York Militia William C Endicott Secretary of War John M Forbes Railroad magnate philanthropist and abolitionist Lafayette S Foster United States Senator from Connecticut Edward Everett Hale Unitarian clergyman and abolitionist Hannibal Hamlin United States Vice President John B Henderson United States Senator and author of the 13th Amendment William W Hoppin Governor of Rhode Island David Jerome State senator from Michigan Benito Juarez President of Mexico Samuel J Kirkwood Governor of Iowa Frederic W Lincoln Mayor of Boston Frederick F Low Governor of California George W McCrary Secretary of War under President Hayes Frederick Law Olmsted Secretary of the United States Sanitary Commission and designer of Central Park Joel Parker Governor of New Jersey John S Pillsbury Founder of the Pillsbury Company and Governor of Minnesota Alexander H Rice Mayor of Boston Congressman and Governor of Massachusetts Theodore Roosevelt Sr Treasurer of the Union League Club and father of President Theodore Roosevelt William H Seward Secretary of State John Sherman Secretary of State Secretary of the Treasury and United States Senator James Speed Attorney General William Sprague Governor of Rhode Island and United States Senator Edwin M Stanton Secretary of War John P Usher Secretary of the Interior Gideon Welles Secretary of the Navy Hereditary Companions edit Initially the MOLLUS had Companions of the Second Class the eldest sons of Companions of the First Class i e veterans of the Civil War who also held a commission at some point A Second Class Companion became a First Class Companion upon his father s death and brothers of fallen officers were allowed to join as hereditary companions if there was no surviving issue These practices were discontinued in 1905 when the MOLLUS Constitution was changed to allow any direct male descendant of a U S Army officer to become a MOLLUS Companion The nomenclature of First Class and Second Class Companions was discarded leaving only the qualifiers of Original and Hereditary Companions Later the eligibility rules were changed to allow nephews of U S officers to become hereditary Companions of the MOLLUS and as of October 2021 a first cousin relationship to an officer i e the officer was the child of the aunt or uncle of the applicant qualifies the applicant for hereditary membership Military and naval officers edit General of the Army Douglas MacArthur Legendary general Son of Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur Jr General Jonathan Wainwright Medal of Honor recipient Admiral William V Pratt President of the Naval War College and Chief of Naval Operations Lieutenant General Albert Jesse Bowley Sr Veteran of the Spanish American War and World War I Lieutenant General Adna R Chaffee Jr Father of the U S Army Armor branch Lieutenant General John MacNair Wright Jr Veteran of World War II and the Vietnam War Vice Admiral Walter N Vernou USN Veteran of the Spanish American War World War I and World War II Major General Malvern Hill Barnum Commanded the 183rd Brigade during World War I MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1940 41 Major General Frederick Dent Grant Son of General Ulysses S Grant Major General Ulysses S Grant III MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1957 61 SUVCW Commander in Chief 1953 55 and Aztec Club of 1847 President Major General Sherman Miles Son of Lieutenant General Nelson A Miles Major General John H Russell Jr Commandant of the Marine Corps Major General Henry G Sharpe Quartermaster General of the Army Major General Samuel D Sturgis Jr General in World War I Major General Clayton Barney Vogel USMC Founder of the Navajo Code Talkers Rear Admiral Charles J Badger Commander in Chief Atlantic Fleet 1913 14 Rear Admiral Reginald R Belknap MOLLUS Commander in Chief 1947 51 Rear Admiral William H Emory Jr USN Rear Admiral John B Hamilton USPHS Second Surgeon General of the United States Rear Admiral Richard Worsam Meade III USN Rear Admiral Yates Stirling Jr USN Rear Admiral Herbert Winslow Son of Rear Admiral John Ancrum Winslow Brigadier General Charles Wheaton Abbot Jr Adjutant General of Rhode Island Brigadier General George Andrews Adjutant General of the United States Army Brigadier General William M Cruikshank Brigadier General Elisha Dyer Jr RIM Governor of Rhode Island Brigadier General Webb Hayes Medal of Honor recipient and son of President Rutherford B Hayes Brigadier General Charles King USV Son of Brigadier General Rufus King Brigadier General Charles L McCawley USMC Brigadier General Billy Mitchell USAAS Military air power prophet Brigadier General George C Reid II USMC Medal of Honor recipient Brevet Brigadier General George Leamy Meade USMC Nephew of Major General George G Meade Colonel Frederick W Galbraith Jr NA Second National Commander of the American Legion Colonel George H Morgan USA Recipient of the Medal of Honor Colonel Melville Shaw USMC Recipient of the Marine Corps Brevet Medal Colonel Herbert Jermain Slocum Commander at the Battle of Columbus New Mexico Captain Alfred Brooks Fry USNR Marine engineer Captain Arthur MacArthur III USN Brother of General Douglas MacArthur Captain Worth G Ross USRCS Commandant of the Revenue Cutter Service Lieutenant Colonel Russell Benjamin Harrison USV Son of President Benjamin Harrison Lieutenant Colonel Henry L Roosevelt USMC Assistant Secretary of the Navy Major John Vernou Bouvier Jr Lawyer stockbroker and grandfather of Jacqueline Kennedy Major John Alexander Logan Jr USV Medal of Honor recipient Major Theodore Lyman NA Noted physicist and professor at Harvard University Major Robert Powell Page Wainwright USV Father of General Jonathan Wainwright Captain Larz Anderson USV Minister to Belgium and Ambassador to Japan Public officials edit John Clayton Allen United States Representative Captain and Ambassador Larz Anderson Minister to Belgium and Ambassador to Japan Warren R Austin United States Senator Zenas Work Bliss Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island Congressman Henry S Boutell Minister to Switzerland Private and United States Senator Morgan Bulkeley President of the Aetna Insurance Company Thomas M Foglietta U S Representative and Ambassador to Italy Albert Johnson U S Representative Major George A Paddock U S Representative Lieutenant Colonel Henry L Roosevelt USMC Assistant Secretary of the Navy Lieutenant Colonel Ret Steve Russell U S Representative James W Wadsworth Jr United States Senator Stuyvesant Wainwright II U S Representative Leland Justin Webb Mayor of Columbus Kansas and SUVCW Commander in Chief Ambassador Henry L Wilson Ambassador to Mexico George P Wheeler Minister to Paraguay and Albania Robert J Wynne U S Postmaster General Others edit Henry L P Beckwith Jr Heraldist and genealogist Delevan Bates Bowley SUVCW Commander in Chief 1928 29 John Nicholas Brown II Philanthropist Rufus C Dawes Utility company president and brother of Charles G Dawes Reverend Morgan Dix Episcopal priest and son of Major General John A Dix Harry Augustus Garfield President of Williams College and son of President and Major General James A Garfield William Osborn McDowell Founder of the Sons of the American Revolution Richard D Orr SUVCW Commander in Chief 1997 98 Prince Philippe Duke of Orleans Claimant to the French throne Associate Companions edit MOLLUS allows state commanderies at their discretion to elect up to one third of their membership as Associate Companions Tad D Campbell SUVCW Commander in Chief 2014 15 Mark Day SUVCW Commander in Chief 2017 18 Jonas Arnell Szurkos Swedish phaleristics expert Herald at the Chancery of His Majesty s Royal Orders of Knighthood Mark Felton British YouTuber author and historian of the Second World War Perley Mellor SUVCW Commander in Chief 2012 2013 Donald W Shaw SUVCW Commander in Chief 2018 2019 Frank J Williams Retired Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court Posthumous Companions edit President Abraham Lincoln Major General George Meade Commander of the Army of the Potomac 1st Lieutenant Alonzo Cushing Medal of Honor recipientNon members who were or are eligible for membership editEligible veteran officers who did not join MOLLUS edit Several noteworthy Union officers although eligible did not become MOLLUS companions They included the following Brigadier General and President Andrew Johnson Major General and President James Garfield Major General and United States Senator Francis Preston Blair Jr Brevet Brigadier General Kit Carson Major General John A Dix Acting Ensign Pierre d Orleans Duke of Penthievre Rear Admiral Samuel Dupont Major General John G Foster Major General John C Fremont Captain Charles Vernon Gridley USN Brevet Major General William S Harney Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan Major General George Meade Major General and Governor Edwin D Morgan Major General Edward Ord Major General Daniel Sickles Brevet Major General Emory Upton Brevet Brigadier General Thomas J Rodman Brevet Brigadier General Sylvanus Thayer Captain Augustin Thompson Brevet Major General Zealous Bates Tower Acting Assistant Third Engineer George Westinghouse Rear Admiral John Ancrum Winslow Major General John E Wool Major General George Meade was posthumously inducted as a MOLLUS companion in 2015 Noteworthy persons eligible for hereditary companionship in MOLLUS edit William Waldorf Astor 1st Viscount Astor was and his male descendants are eligible for hereditary membership in MOLLUS by right of his father s service in the U S Army All other male descendants of Rear Admiral Winfield Scott Schley and William Backhouse Astor Sr are eligible for membership in MOLLUS by collateral descent All male descendants of 19th century railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt are eligible to join MOLLUS as collateral descendants of Vanderbilt s youngest son Captain George Washington Vanderbilt who graduated West Point in 1860 and died on January 1 1864 in Nice France without issue These descendants include the current Duke of Marlborough and CNN reporter Anderson Cooper Anderson Cooper is also eligible for hereditary membership in MOLLUS because of his descent from Major General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick Major General David D Porter USMC a recipient of the Medal of Honor was eligible for membership in MOLLUS by right of his descent from his grandfather Admiral David Dixon Porter Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother CIA Director Allen Dulles were eligible for membership in MOLLUS by right of their descent from their maternal grandfather Colonel John W Foster who served as Secretary of State in the administration of President Benjamin Harrison Vice president of the United States Richard Dick Cheney by right of descent from Captain Samuel Fletcher Cheney of the 21st Ohio Volunteer Infantry John Bouvier Kennedy Schlossberg grandson of President John F Kennedy by right of descent from Captain John V Bouvier of the 80th New York Volunteer Infantry 20th New York State Militia Captain Bouvier was the great grandfather of First Lady Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Eligible royalty edit Several Europeans of royal descent at eligible for membership in MOLLUS by right of their descent from Captain Philippe d Orleans the grandson of King Louis Philippe I of France King Felipe VI of Spain and his father former King of Spain Juan Carlos are eligible for hereditary companionship in MOLLUS as are their male descendants The same is true for the family of the Orleanist pretenders to the throne of France King Manuel II of Portugal 1889 1932 was eligible to become a hereditary companion of MOLLUS as his mother was a daughter of Philippe d Orleans He had no offspring Prince Pedro Carlos of Orleans Braganza b 1945 is a claimant to the Brazilian throne and a descendant of Philippe d Orleans His nephew is Peter Hereditary Prince of Yugoslavia b 1980 Prince Amedeo Duke of Aosta 1943 2021 head of the House of Savoy and claimant to the throne of Italy was eligible for hereditary MOLLUS membership but was elected as an honorary member instead Several other individuals of royal descent can join MOLLUS by right of their descent from Prince Robert Duke of Chartres the brother of Prince Philippe who also served with the Union Army These descendants included Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark b 1938 and previously included Henri Count of Paris 1908 1999 longtime pretender to the French throne Count Aage of Rosenborg 1887 1940 who served as an officer in the French Foreign Legion and Prince Axel of Denmark 1888 1964 Prince Pierre Duke of Penthievre was a cousin of the Count of Paris and served in the Union Navy as an ensign on the frigate USS John Adams Jean d Orleans b 1965 is the current Count of Paris and Orleanist pretender to the French throne See also edit nbsp American Civil War portal nbsp Society portalSociety of the Cincinnati Aztec Club of 1847 Grand Army of the Republic Military Order of the Stars and Bars Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Military Order of Foreign Wars Naval Order of the United States Naval and Military Order of the Spanish War Military Order of the Dragon Military Order of the CarabaoReferences edit Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts collector Social Networks and Archival Context National Home Page of the Dames of the Loyal Legion of the United States Retrieved 3 November 2016 New International Encyclopedia Aubin Joshua Harris 1906 Register of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Pub under the auspices of the commandery of the state of Massachusetts p 207 Cipriano Andrade Rear Admiral United States Navy 21 June 2023 Silas Casey III Rear Admiral United States Navy 21 June 2023 MOLLUS Commander in Chief Rear Admiral Purnell Frederick Harrington Rear Admiral Wildes Dead Was on His Way Home from China on Sick Leave when Death Overtook Him The New York Times 8 February 1903 https timesmachine nytimes com timesmachine 1878 11 30 80737847 pdf bare URL PDF https timesmachine nytimes com timesmachine 1885 05 03 121572722 pdf bare URL PDF Further reading editCarroon Robert G amp Dana B Shoaf 2001 Union Blue The History of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Shippensburg PA White Mane Books ISBN 1 57249 190 6 LCCN 00049955 External links editOfficial website MOLLUS organized marker for Union POWs buried in Richmond Virginia MOLLUS Massachusetts Photograph Collection US Army Heritage and Education Center Carlisle Barracks Pennsylvania Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States amp oldid 1206299081, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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