Huerfano County, Colorado
Grand Army of the Republic
Post 61, Walenburg, Colorado
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Contributed by Karen Mitchell
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Grand Army of the Republic
(GAR), organization established by Civil War veterans of the Union army and navy. Principal figures in the founding of the GAR were John A. Logan and Richard J. Oglesby. The first post was formed (Apr. 6, 1866) at Decatur, Ill., and at the first national encampment, held at Indianapolis, Ind., on Nov. 20, 1866, 10 states and the District of Columbia were represented.
Gen. Stephen A. Hurlbut, the first commander in chief, was succeeded by Logan, who was followed in office by Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside. They were the most prominent military men to head the GAR.
By 1890, when the GAR reached its peak, more than 400,000 members were reported. The members sought to strengthen the bonds of comradeship, to preserve the memory of their fallen comrades (they secured the general adoption of Memorial Day to achieve this purpose), to give aid to soldiers' widows and orphans and to handicapped veterans, and, most of all, to fight for pension increases and other benefits.
Although the organization was nonpolitical, GAR members were overwhelmingly Republican and formed a reliable bloc of that party's strength in the years up to 1900. Soldier preference in federal appointments became the rule, and pension legislation was usually enacted by the Republicans with their support in mind. The National Tribune, founded (1877) by George E. Lemon, a powerful pensions attorney of Washington, D.C., kept GAR members posted on pension matters.
The organization scored a great victory in 1879 with the passage of the Arrears of Pension Act, which led many more veterans to apply for pensions. Theoretically, only those who suffered disabilities in service were entitled to pensions, but it became the practice for lenient Congressmen to introduce private pension bills. These were almost always granted until Grover Cleveland, the first President to examine the bills critically, found many of them to be fraudulent. The fact that Cleveland was a Democrat further confirmed GAR members in their staunch Republicanism.
Auxiliary societies associated with the GAR were the Sons of Veterans (1881), the Women's Relief Corps (1883), and the Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic (1886). A separate veterans organization, the United Confederate Veterans, was organized in 1889, but its membership (less than 50,000 at its peak) never approached that of the GAR.
With the coming of the 20th cent. the GAR declined rapidly in numbers and influence. The 83rd and last encampment was also held at Indianapolis, on Aug. 28-31, 1949, with 6 of the 16 surviving members in attendance. The last member of the GAR died in 1956.
NAME, RANK, COMPANY, UNIT
BYRNE, JAMES, Private, H, 25TH NY CAV
BYRNE, RICHARD B, Private, K, 13TH CT INF
CAPPS, S J, Sailor, , US NAVY FOREST ROSE
CARTER, JOHN D, Private, F, 153RD IL INF
CONINE, A A, Private, K, 26TH IA INF
CREESY, T L, Corporal, K, 7TH KS INF
DAILY, ISAAC, Private, K, 15TH WV INF
GITHENS, S T, Private, I, 1ST MO SM
GOODE, WILLIAM A, Sergeant, B, 2ND KS CAV
GREEN, C F, Private, K, 50TH IL INF
HEALEY, JOHN, Private, K, 137TH PA INF
KASTER, ENOCH, Private, G, 6TH IA CAV
KELLY, DAN, Private, C, 100TH PA INF
LEE, LOUIS G, Private, C, 29TH US INF
MOORE, JOHN A C, Sergeant, B, 2ND KS CAV
PARKER, J W, Sergeant, E, 1ST CO INF
PROVANC, J B, Sergeant, L, 2ND WV CAV
RACE, Z H, Private, B, 156TH NY INF
RHOADES, W H, Private, A, 42ND MO INF
ROSEBERRY, HARRINGTON, Private, E, 1ST CO CAV
ROYS, A T, Private, A, 42ND OH INF
SMILEY, JAMES K, Private, H, 211TH PA
STEWART, WILLIAM POST 83, Bugler, M, 2ND CO CAV
TUCKER, J J, Private, G, 21ST IA INF
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