Grand Army of the Republic
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Post No. 40
Dated August 8, 1873 at GAR Headquarters at New York City, NY
And noted the year of our Independence the ninety-seventh.
Department Commander Stephen P. Corliss
Ass't. Adjutant General John Perley

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #37'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #40'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #116'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #155'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #159'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #186'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #201'

Link To 'G.A.R. Post #337'

Link To 'County Historian Home Page'

GAR MEDAL

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Grand Army Of The Republic Post No. 40 Membership:

Francis M. Rappley                              Henry Covert
Jno. U. Chambers Jas. U. Conover
Lewis D. Woodruff Jno. C. Williams
Jos. U. Foster Patrick Carroll
Abram B. Hart Archibald U. Covert
Jacob Dickens Jno. U. Hani(?)gton
Abram Wilson H. V. L. Jones
E. F. (?) Raker H. Peterson
Jno. A. L. Bodine Jno. Magee
H. Williams

Transcribed by Sandie Stoker Gilliland, Town of Scipio Historian on January 29, 2006

Grand Army of the Republic

The Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) was an organization founded in 1866 by Union Army Surgeon Benjamin Franklin Stephenson. The organization was originally envisioned as a brotherhood of veterans who were dedicated to helping other veterans.

The first post was established at Decatur, Illinois in April 1866. Soon after a second post was organized in Springfield, Illinois, and others began to emerge throughout the northeastern states. By September of 1866, following a mass meeting of Civil War veterans in Pittsburgh, the movement began to spread east with the establishment of GAR posts by ex-union soldiers.

Each post was set up similar to a Union Army encampment. Every post had "sentries" at the door, in order to go to another post you needed a "transfer;" members could be "court-martialed" as well as "dishonorably discharged." The post-commander would act as general officer, and would report to the departmental commander (assistant Adjutant General), who was in charge of all the posts in one state. He in turn would report to the national-commander (Adjutant General). Every post in America was to adopt the same rituals and constitution.

The GAR was a powerful political organization that did a lot of patriotic and social work. It was through the GAR, and the pension lobby, that many soldiers and their families received pensions. The Grand Army also promoted the honoring of our military through parades, national encampments, placement of war memorials, and the establishment of Memorial Day as a national holiday.

The following link provides further detailed information on the GAR posts in New York: http://library.morrisville.edu/local_history/sites/gar_post/list_gar.html

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As the result of the opportunity through a Larry J. Hackman grant to attend a local historian seminar in September of 2005 at the NYS Archives in Albany, NY, we are able to post transcripts of the rosters found there for many of the GAR posts in Cayuga County, NY.  Good quality prints of these rosters can also be seen at the Cayuga County Historian's Office.  The transcripts are provided by Town of Scipio Historian, Sandie Gilliland.

Old Historic Post Office Bldg. Auburn NY
The Cayuga County NY Historian's Office

The information found on this website page is published
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Cayuga County NY Historian's Office
in Auburn NY

 
This Page Was Last Updated: 01/29/2006