Established in 1866, The Grand Army of the Republic
(G.A.R.) was a fraternal organization of Union veterans. This photograph shows Union veterans marching
at the 36th National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic
(G.A.R.) in Washington, D.C. on October, 1902. The organization disbanded in
1956 with the death of the last Union veteran.
The last Union veteran, Willard Woolson died in 1956 at the age of 106. Woolson
was a drummer boy. The last Union combat
soldier, James Hard, died in 1953 at the age of 109.
Claims and counter-claims
swirl around the age and status of the last veterans, both Union and
Confederate. The last verifiable Confederate veteran is thought to have been
Pleasant Riggs Crump (1847-1951), although several men subsequently claimed to
be the “oldest” Confederate soldier. Crump
was from Alabama and served at the siege of Petersburg.
The last American slave is thought to have
been Sylvester Magee who died in 1971 at the purported age of 130. There is no
birth certificate to verify his birth date.
General George S. Patton once said, “Compared to war,
all other forms of human endeavor shrink to insignificance.” Here are four
stories about the history of the world IF wars we know about happened
differently or IF wars that never happened actually took place.
Love, Sex, and Marriage in the Civil War
A brief look at love, sex, and marriage in the Civil War. The book
covers courtship, marriage, birth control and pregnancy, divorce, slavery and
the impact of the war on social customs.
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