Bio: |
Greenwood, WI Grand Army of Republic--J. A. Eaton Post |
contact: |
Greenwood Public Library |
Email: |
stan@wiclarkcountyhistory.org |
Surnames: |
BOOTH CRANE CUMMINGS FOUST MCCARTY OELIG RICHELIEU ROSSMAN SCOVEL VINE WALLIS |
----Source:
Greenwood Pubic Library, "Clippings" and Glenn B. Knight, SUVCW
GRAND ARMY OF REPUBLIC, 30 MAY 1907
From left, top row: William Oelig, Pascal Wallis, unknown, John
Scovel,
John Foust, John McCarty, Tom Vine.
Lower row: John Booth, Jess Crane, Paul Rossman, Charles
Richelieu,
Charles Cummings.
Courtesy of the Greenwood, WI Public Library
Brief History of the Grand Army of the Republic
In early 1866 the United States of America--now securely one nation
again--was waking to the reality of recovery from war, and this had
been a much different war. In previous conflicts the care of the
veteran warrior was the province of the family or the community.
Soldiers then were friends, relatives and neighbors who went off to
fight--until the next planting or harvest. It was a community
adventure and their fighting unit had a community flavor.
By the end of the Civil War, units had become less homogeneous, men
from different communities and even different states were forced
together by the exigencies of battle where new friendships and
lasting trust was forged. With the advances in the care and
movement of the wounded, many who would have surely died in earlier
wars returned home to be cared for by a community structure weary
from a protracted war and now also faced with the needs of widows
and orphans. Veterans needed jobs, including a whole new group of
veterans--the colored soldier and his entire, newly freed, family.
It was often more than the fragile fabric of communities could
bear.
State and federal leaders from President Lincoln down had promised
to care for "those who have borne the burden, his widows and
orphans," but they had little knowledge of how to accomplish the
task. There was also little political pressure to see that the
promises were kept.
But probably the most profound emotion was emptiness. Men who had
lived together, fought together, foraged together and survived, had
developed an unique bond that could not be broken. As time went by
the memories of the filthy and vile environment of camp life began
to be remembered less harshly and eventually fondly. The horror and
gore of battle lifted with the smoke and smell of burnt black
powder and was replaced with the personal rain of tears for the
departed comrades. Friendships forged in battle survived the
separation and the warriors missed the warmth of trusting
companionship that had asked only total and absolute
commitment.
With that as background, groups of men began joining
together--first for camaraderie and then for political power.
Emerging most powerful among the various organizations would be the
Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), which by 1890 would number
409,489 veterans of the "War of the Rebellion."
Founded in Decatur, Illinois on April 6, 1866 by Benjamin F.
Stephenson, membership was limited to honorably discharged veterans
of the Union Army, Navy, Marine Corps or the Revenue Cutter Service
who had served between April 12, 1861 and April 9, 1865. The
community level organization was called a "Post" and each was
numbered consecutively within each department. Most Posts also had
a name and the rules for naming Posts included the requirement that
the honored person be deceased and that no two Posts within the
same Department could have the same name. The Departments generally
consisted of the Posts within a state and, at the national level,
the organization was operated by the elected
"Commandery-in-Chief."
Post Commanders were elected as were the Junior and Senior Vice
Commanders and the members of Council. Each member was voted into
membership using the Masonic system of casting black or white balls
(except that more than one black ball was required to reject a
candidate for membership). When a candidate was rejected, that
rejection was reported to the Department which listed the rejection
in general orders and those rejections were maintained in a "Black
Book" at each Post meeting place. The meeting rituals and induction
of members were similar to the Masonic rituals and have been handed
down to the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
The official body of the Department was the annual Encampment,
which was presided over by the elected Department Commander, Senior
and Junior Vice Commanders and the Council. Encampments were
elaborate multi-day events which often included camping out, formal
dinners and memorial events. In later years the Department
Encampments were often held in conjunction with the Encampments of
the Allied Orders, including Camps of the Sons of Veterans Reserve,
which at the time were quasi-military in nature, often listed as a
unit of the state militia or national guard.
National Encampments of the Grand Army of the Republic were
presided over by a Commander-in-Chief who was elected in political
events which rivaled national political party conventions. The
Senior and Junior Vice Commander-in-Chief as well as the National
Council of Administration were also elected.
The GAR founded soldiers' homes, was active in relief work and in
pension legislation. Five members were elected President of the
United States and, for a time, it was impossible to be nominated on
the Republican ticket without the endorsement of the GAR voting
block.
In 1868, Commander-in-Chief John A. Logan issued General Order No.
11 calling for all Departments and Posts to set aside the 30th of
May as a day for remembering the sacrifices of fallen comrades,
thereby beginning the celebration of Memorial Day.
With membership limited strictly to "veterans of the late
unpleasantness," the GAR encouraged the formation of Allied Orders
to aid them in its various works. Numerous male organizations
jousted for the backing of the GAR and the political battles became
quite severe until the GAR finally endorsed the Sons of Veterans of
the United States of America (later to become the Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War) as its heir. A similar, but less
protracted, battle took place between the Womans' Relief Corps
(WRC) and the Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic (LGAR) for
the title "official auxiliary to the GAR." That battle was won by
the WRC, which is the only Allied Order open to women who do not
have a hereditary ancestor who would have been eligible for the
GAR. But in this case the LGAR retained its strength and was made
one of the Allied Orders.
Coming along a bit later, the Daughters of Union Veterans of the
Civil War, similar to the SUVCW but for women, also earned the
designation as an Allied Order of the GAR. Rounding out the list of
Allied Orders is the Auxiliary to the Sons of Union Veterans of the
Civil War, which is open to women with hereditary ties to a veteran
or who is the spouse, sister or daughter of a member of the
SUVCW.
The final Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic was held in
Indianapolis, Indiana in 1949 and the last member, Albert Woolson
died in 1956 at the age of 109 years.
Submitted by:
Glenn B. Knight
Past Department Commander
Department of Pennsylvania
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
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