We are the
U.S. Grant Camp 68 Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War |
General of the Armies of the United States
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NEWS! NEWS! NEWS!
Our Annual Christmas Party at the Greenbriar Country Club, Kirkwood, MO, took place on December 5
Camp Commander & SVR 1st Lt Bob Aubuchon assist with the dedication of a monument to unknown Union & Confederate dead at Harmonie Cemetery, Innsbruck, MO on November 4, 2023
Remembering the 56th US Colored Troops Infantry - Jefferson Barracks Nat'l Cemetery
Oct 20, 2023 |
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GOING TO OR COMING BACK FROM NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT, MANY OF OUR DELEGATES VISITED THE U.S. GRANT COTTAGE HISTORIC SITE IN NEW YORK
Grant Camp Members at the 2023 Nashua Encampment
(Non-Grant Camp Member Dale Crandell, second from right, Present, but Past C-in-C Ed Krieser Not Pictured)
(Non-Grant Camp Member Dale Crandell, second from right, Present, but Past C-in-C Ed Krieser Not Pictured)
Scenes from General of the Armies US Grant Remembrance Day at US Grant NHS, Affton, MO on 22 July
MAY 29 -
MEMORIAL DAY
Civil War Ceremonies at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery
PDC John Avery at the Memorial Day Ceremonies in Manchester, MO
Grant Camp Presents SUVCW Awards to Local J-ROTC Outstanding Cadets
Dedication of 5 Union Soldier Graves
22 April - Harugari Cemetery -
Manchester, MO
US Grant Camp at Lincoln Remembrance Day at his Tomb 15 April
OUR LATEST EVENTS
SHERMAN REMEMBRANCE DAY 11 MARCH 2023
Our Life Member, Greg Wolk, gives the presentation opening the Grant In Missouri display at the Thomas Sappington House in Crestwood on Feb 18.
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PDCs Sumner Hunnewell and Walt Busch along with JVC Jim Morrison (and his wife, Barb) and Camp Commander Craig Mathews, Sr attend the Daughters of the American Revolution Ceremony on Feb 20 in Layfayette Park, St. Louis
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We did a lot in 2022, like hold several ceremonies that you can see on some of our other pages. One of the neatest was when our Past Commander presented General David Petraeus with a flag that flew over General William T Sherman's Grave.
We have a lot more coming in 2023! Retired Major General Byron Bagby is at this time committed to being our keynote speaker at a ceremony in October for the 56th US Colored Troops at their monument. SO READ ON! JOIN US AT OUR EVENTS! JOIN US AS A MEMBER AND HELP US PRESERVE THE MEMORY OF OUR CIVIL WAR VETERANS, GENERAL OF THE ARMIES US GRANT & THE SOLDIERS OF THE GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC! |
2023 Calendar
(So Far)
- General William T Sherman Remembrance Day - March 11 - 1 PM - Calvary Cemetery
- Department Meeting - March 18 - 10 AM - Missouri River Regional Library -
- Lincoln Tomb Ceremony - April 15 - Oak Ridge Cemetery, Springfield IL - Fall-in at 9 AM.
- Dedication of 5 Union Soldier Graves -22 April - Hargari Cemetery - Old Meramec Rd, Manchester, MO. - 10 AM.
- Memorial Day - May 29 - Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery
- Department Encampment - June 2 & 3 - Springfield, MO
- General Ulysses S Grant Remembrance Day - July 22 - 10 AM US Grant NHS (White Haven) - Affton, MO
- SUVCW National Encampment - Aug 3-6 - Nashua, NH
- Central Region - Allied Orders Association - Oct 6 & 7 - Dayton, OH
- Department Meeting - Saturday, Oct (UNKNOWN DATE) - 10am - Missouri River Regional Library - Jefferson City
- 56th US Colored Troops Remembrance - Oct 19 or 20 11am - Jefferson Barracks Cemetery
- Memorial Remembrance - Nov 18 - Gettysburg, PA
- Christmas Dinner - December (TBD)
Belated Promotion -
U.S. Grant - General of the Armies - Huzzah!
Thu, 12/22/2022 - 11:00More than 150 years after leading the Union Armies to victory in the Civil War, Ulysses Grant is about to be promoted to General of the Armies of the United States.
The move, authorized in the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act, would make Grant just the third officer to receive the rank. The others are John Pershing [for those of you who don't know, he was a Missourian], who was promoted to the rank in 1919, and George Washington, who received a posthumous promotion in 1976, according to the Arlington National Cemetery website.
The general of the armies rank is higher than the World War II five-star grade of general of the army, which was held by officers such as George Marshall, Douglas MacArthur, Dwight Eisenhower and Omar Bradley.
Grant, who became the nation’s first four-star general in 1866 and was elected in 1868 as the 18th president of the United States, attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, and later fought in the Mexican War, according to his White House bio.
At the beginning of the Civil War, Grant was appointed to command an unruly volunteer regiment, which he whipped into shape before rising to the rank of brigadier general of volunteers.
He continued to distinguish himself in battle, fighting at Forts Henry and Donelson, Shiloh and Chattanooga in Tennessee, and Vicksburg, Mississippi, according to the White House.
In March 1864, President Abraham Lincoln appointed him General-in-Chief. Grant directed Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman to drive through the south while he and the Army of the Potomac pinned down Confederate Gen. Robert Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia.
On April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered, and Grant wrote “magnanimous” terms of surrender that would prevent treason trials, according to the White House.
Grant was president from 1869 to 1877. He died in 1885.
U.S. Grant - General of the Armies - Huzzah!
Thu, 12/22/2022 - 11:00More than 150 years after leading the Union Armies to victory in the Civil War, Ulysses Grant is about to be promoted to General of the Armies of the United States.
The move, authorized in the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act, would make Grant just the third officer to receive the rank. The others are John Pershing [for those of you who don't know, he was a Missourian], who was promoted to the rank in 1919, and George Washington, who received a posthumous promotion in 1976, according to the Arlington National Cemetery website.
The general of the armies rank is higher than the World War II five-star grade of general of the army, which was held by officers such as George Marshall, Douglas MacArthur, Dwight Eisenhower and Omar Bradley.
Grant, who became the nation’s first four-star general in 1866 and was elected in 1868 as the 18th president of the United States, attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, and later fought in the Mexican War, according to his White House bio.
At the beginning of the Civil War, Grant was appointed to command an unruly volunteer regiment, which he whipped into shape before rising to the rank of brigadier general of volunteers.
He continued to distinguish himself in battle, fighting at Forts Henry and Donelson, Shiloh and Chattanooga in Tennessee, and Vicksburg, Mississippi, according to the White House.
In March 1864, President Abraham Lincoln appointed him General-in-Chief. Grant directed Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman to drive through the south while he and the Army of the Potomac pinned down Confederate Gen. Robert Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia.
On April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered, and Grant wrote “magnanimous” terms of surrender that would prevent treason trials, according to the White House.
Grant was president from 1869 to 1877. He died in 1885.