Grand Army of the Republic
Progenitor of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW).
Founded in Decatur, Illinois on April 6, 1866, the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) consisted of Union Veterans of the Civil War, joined together at first for camaraderie, and later for political power. By 1890 their membership had risen to nearly 410,000 veterans.
Membership was limited to honorably discharged veterans of the Union Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Revenue Cutter Service who had served between April 12, 1861 and April 9, 1865.
The community level of the organization was called a “Post” and each was numbered consecutively within each Department (generally a particular state). 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 National organization was run by the elected “Commandery-in-Chief.”
The GAR founded soldiers’ homes, and was active in relief work and 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.
The final meeting 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.
The GAR’s Department of California and Nevada was organized on February 21, 1868. Eventually there were nearly 200 individual posts throughout the Department. While the last National Encampment was held in 1949, the Department of California and Nevada continued to hold their annual Department Encampments into the 1950s.
The last member of the Department, William Allen Magee of Company M, 12th Ohio Cavalry, died in Long Beach, California on January 23, 1953 at the age of 106 years.
The following is a list of GAR Posts within the area covered by the Gen. Alfred Pleasonton Camp No. 24, SUVCW. Not all of these Posts would have existed simultaneously:
Post Name | Post Number | City | County | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Richmond | 201 | San Pablo | Contra Costa | |
Gen. Canby | 77 | Martinez | Contra Costa | |
Somersville | 28 | Somersville | Contra Costa | |
Cdr. Williams | 28 | Nortonville | Contra Costa | |
Adm. D. D. Porter | 169 | Alameda | Alameda | |
Lookout Mountain | 88 | Berkeley | Alameda | |
Appomattox | 50 | Oakland | Alameda | |
Lou Morris | 47 | Livermore | Alameda | |
Joe Hooker | 11 | Alameda | Alameda | |
McPherson | 10 | Oakland | Alameda | |
Lyon | 8 | Oakland | Alameda | |
Lincoln | 1 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Chartered 10 Dec 1874. Last mentioned in 1940. Organized as Lincoln Post No. 2; Consolidated with Sedgwick Post No. 1 and reorganized as Lincoln Post No. 1. The original charter was destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. A replacement was issued on 28 Mar 1907. Associated with Lincoln Corps No. 3, WRC, and Seven Pines Circle No. 3, LGAR. |
Sedgwick | 1 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Organized 22 Apr 1867. Re-organized 13 Feb 1871. Organized from consolidation of Sedgwick Post No. 4 and Starr King Post No. 1 on 13 Feb 1871. Merged 10 Dec 1874 with Lincoln Post No. 2, which became Lincoln Post No. 1 |
Post No. 1 / Starr King | 1 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Organized 22 Apr 1867. Selected its namesake in Sep 1869. Merged 13 Feb 1871 with Sedgwick Post No. 4. |
Post No. 2 / Lincoln | 2 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Organized 26 May 1867. Selected its namesake in Sep 1869. Consolidated with Sedgwick Post No. 1 on 10 Dec 1874 and reorganized as Lincoln Post No. 1. |
George H. Thomas | 2 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Organized 1868. Last mentioned in 1940. Involved in relief work for 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire. |
Sedgwick | 4 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Chartered 8 Dec 1869. Charter surrendered 13 Feb 1871 to consolidate with Starr King Post No. 1 and become Sedgwick Post No. 1. |
Adm. Dahlgren | 5 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Chartered 23 Aug 1870. Charter surrendered 29 Apr 1872. Most of its members transferred to Lincoln Post No. 2. It was also known as the "German Post" and business was conducted in German. Its growth was hampered by the Franco- Prussian War. |
Post No. 11 | 11 | Presidio | San Francisco | Organized 1868. Charter surrendered 1868. No namesake. Known only by its number. |
James A. Garfield | 34 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Mustered in 22 Oct 1881. Involved in 1906 Earthquake relief. Associated with James A. Garfield Corps No. 21, WRC. |
Col. Cass | 46 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Mustered in 9 Sep 1882. Surrendered charter in 1907. Involved in 1906 Earthquake relief. |
Gen. G. G. Meade | 48 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Organized 1883. Disbanded 13 May 1921. Involved in 1906 Earthquake relief. Associated with General George G. Meade Corps No. 61, WRC. |
Liberty | 133 | San Francisco | San Francisco | Mustered 29 Oct 1886. Disbanded 16 Apr 1901. Organized as a "uniformed" Post, inspired by the National Encampment in San Francisco in 1886. |
Gen. Alfred Pleasonton Camp No. 24, SUVCW | Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)
Created: 20 Feb 2008; Modified: 13 Oct 2023