History of the American Legion
History of The American Legion | |
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March 15, 1919 – Present day | |
This article is missing information about the American Legion's efforts against Harold Rugg's social studies textbooks. (July 2023) |
The history of The American Legion, a U.S. war veterans' organization headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana, began in Paris, France, March 15 to 17, 1919, by a thousand commissioned officers and enlisted men, delegates from all the units of the American Expeditionary Forces to an organization caucus meeting, which adopted a tentative constitution and selected the name "American Legion."[1] It was subsequently chartered by the 66th U.S. Congress on September 16, 1919.[2]
Background
The aftermath of two American wars in the second half of the 19th century had seen the formation of several ex-soldiers' organizations. Former Union Army soldiers of the American Civil War of 1861–65 established a fraternal organization called the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), while their Southern brethren would join together in the United Confederate Veterans (UCV).[3] Both organizations emerged as powerful political entities, with the GAR serving as a mainstay of the Republican Party, which controlled the Presidency from the Civil War through William Howard Taft's administration except for the two terms of office of Grover Cleveland.[3] In Southern politics the UCV maintained an even more dominant position as a bulwark of the Democratic Party which dominated there.[3] The conclusion of the brief Spanish–American conflict of 1898 ushered in another soldiers' organization, the American Veterans of Foreign Service, today known as the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW).[4]
20th century
World War I
Birth of the Legion
With the termination of hostilities in World War I in November 1918, some American officers who had been participants in the conflict began to think about creating a similar organization for the two million men who had been on European duty.[4] The need for an organization for former members of the AEF was pressing and immediate. With the war at an end, hundreds of thousands of impatient draftees found themselves trapped in France and pining for home, certain only that untold weeks or months lay ahead of them before their return would be logistically possible.[5] Morale plummeted.[5] Cautionary voices were raised about an apparent correlation between disaffected and discharged troops and the Bolshevik uprisings taking place in Russia, Finland, Germany and Hungary.[5]
This situation was a particular matter of concern to Lt. Col. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., eldest son of the 26th President. One day in January 1919, he had a discussion at General Headquarters with a mobilized National Guard officer named George A. White, a former newspaper editor with the Portland Oregonian.[6] After long discussion, he suggested the establishment at once of a new servicemen's organization including all members of the AEF, as well as those soldiers who remained stateside as members of the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps during the war without having been shipped abroad.[6] He and White advocated ceaselessly for this proposal until ultimately they found sufficient support at headquarters to move forward with the plan. General John J. Pershing issued orders to a group of 20 non-career officers to report to the YMCA in Paris on February 15, 1919.[7] The selection of these individuals had been made by Roosevelt.[7] They were joined with a number of regular Army officers Pershing selected himself.[8]
Twenty National Guard and Reserve officers serving in the A. E. F., representing the S. O. S., ten infantry divisions, and several other organizations, were ordered to report in Paris. ... Included in this number were Lieutenant Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., of the First Division, Lieutenant Colonel Franklin D'Olier of the S.O.S., and Lieutenant Colonel Eric Fisher Wood of the 88th Division. All of these officers have since told me that when they left their divisions they were distinctively permeated with the desire to form a veterans' organization of some comprehensive kind. When they got to Paris they immediately went into conference with the other officers. ... A dinner was spread in the Allied Officers' Club, Rue Faubourg St. Honore, on the night of February 16th... At that dinner the American Legion was born.
—The Story of The American Legion (1919)[9]
The session of reserve and regular officers was instructed to provide a set of laws to curb the problem of declining morale.[7] After three days, the officers presented a series of proposals, including eliminating restrictive regulations, organizing additional athletic and recreational events, and expanding leave time and entertainment programs.[10] At the end of the first day, the officers retired to the Inter-Allied Officers Club, a converted home across the street from the YMCA building.[8] There Lt. Col. Roosevelt told them his proposal for a new veterans' society.[11] Most of those present were rapidly won to Roosevelt's plan.[12] The officers decided to make all of their actions provisional until an elected convention of delegates could be convened and did not predetermine a program for the unnamed veterans organization.[12] Instead, they chose to expand their number with a large preliminary meeting which would consist of an equal number of elected delegates to represent both enlisted men and commissioned officers.[13]
A provisional executive committee of four people emerged from the February 15 "Roosevelt dinner": Roosevelt in the first place, who was to return to the United States and obtain his military discharge when able, and then to gather assistants and promote the idea of the new veterans' organization among demobilized troops there; George White, who was to travel France touring the camps of the AEF explaining the idea in person; Secretary of the group was veteran wartime administrator Eric Fisher Wood, together with former Ohio Congressman Ralph D. Cole, Wood was to establish a central office and to maintain contact by mail and telegram with the various combat divisions and headquarters staffs, as well as to publicize activities to the press.[14]
Preparations for a convention in Paris began apace. A convention call was prepared by Wood and "invitations" distributed to about 2,000 officers and enlisted men and publicized in the March 14, 1919 issue of Stars and Stripes.[15] The convention call expressed the desire to form "one permanent nation-wide organization...composed of all parties, all creeds, and all ranks who wish to perpetuate the relationships formed while in military service."[16] In addition to the personal invitations distributed, the published announcement indicated that "any officer or enlisted man not invited who is in Paris at the time of the meeting is invited to be present and to have a voice in the meeting."[16] The conclave was slated to begin on March 15.
The site of Ferdinand Branstetter Post No. 1 is a vacant lot in Van Tassell, Wyoming, where the first American Legion post in the United States was established in 1919. The post was named after Ferdinand Branstetter, a Van Tassell resident who died in World War I. The structure housing the post has since been demolished. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969. In 1969, it was hoped that an interpretative sign would be put up, and also possibly that a restored post building would be constructed.[17]
The first post of the Legion, General John Joseph Pershing Post Number 1 in Washington, DC, was organized on March 7, 1919, and obtained the first charter issued to any post of the Legion on May 19, 1919. The St. Louis caucus that same year decided that Legion posts should not be named after living persons, and the first post changed its name to George Washington Post 1. The post completed the constitution and made plans for a permanent organization. It set up temporary headquarters in New York City and began its relief, employment, and Americanism programs.
On May 20, 1919, Colonel Ernest Lester Jones received a petition from twenty (20) of the enlisted women of the United States Naval Reserve Force, for a charter to organize a Post to be known as the "Betsy Ross Post No. l", composed entirely of Yeomen (F) of the U.S. Navy. In October of that same year, the post changed its name to U.S.S. Jacob Jones, which commemorated the Navy heritage of the members.[18]
Congress granted The American Legion a national charter in September 1919.
Paris Post No. 1 was chartered by The American Legion on 13 December 1919.[19] It was the first overseas post to be chartered, and has been in continuous existence since then.
China Post One, formed in 1919 one year after the "great war" and chartered by The American Legion on April 20, 1920, was originally named the General Frederick Townsend Ward Post No. 1, China.[20] It is the only Post nominally headquartered in a Communist country, and has been operating in exile since 1948 – presently in Fate, Texas.[21]
Paris Caucus
Having immediately received a blizzard of acceptances to attend the opening of the "Liberty League Caucus", as he had begun to refer to it, Temporary Secretary Eric Fisher Wood began to search for use of a room of sufficient size to contain the gathering.[23] The Cirque de Paris had been retained, a large, multisided amphitheater sufficient to accommodate a crowd of about 2,000.[24] Delegates began to assemble from all over France. The 10:00 am scheduled start was delayed due to various logistical problems, with a beginning finally made shortly after 2:45 pm.[25]
As "Temporary Chairman" Teddy Roosevelt Jr. had already departed for America, the session was gaveled to order by Eric Wood, who briefly recounted Roosevelt's idea and the story of the 20 AEF officers who had jointly helped to give the new organization form.[25] In his keynote opening remarks Wood recommended to the delegates of the so-called Paris Caucus that they do three things: first, set up an apparatus to conduct a formal founding conference in the United States sometime in the winter; second, the body should draft a tentative name for the organization; and finally, the body should compose a provisional constitution to be submitted to the founding convention for its acceptance or rejection.[26]
William G. Price Jr. was selected to preside.[27] Convention rules were decided upon and four 15-member committees were chosen.[28] The Committee on Name reported back that they had considered a dozen potential names, including Veterans of the Great War, Liberty League, American Comrades of the Great War, Legion of the Great War, and The American Legion, among others.[29] This list was whittled down to five ranked choices for the consideration of the Caucus, with "The American Legion" the preferred option.[29] It was noted in passing during the course of debate on the topic that Teddy Roosevelt Jr. had been responsible for an earlier organization called "The American Legion" in 1914, a "preparedness" society with a claimed membership of 35,000 which had been absorbed into the Council of National Defense in 1916.[30]
The Committee on Constitution reported with a report containing the draft of a Preamble for the organization, specifying organizational objectives.[29] This document stated that the group
... desiring to perpetuate the principles of Justice, Freedom, and Democracy for which we have fought, to inculcate the duty and obligation of the citizen to the State; to preserve the history and incidents of our participation in the war; and to cement the ties of comradeship formed in service, do propose to found and establish an Association for the furtherance of the foregoing purposes.[31]
The majority report of the Committee on Convention recommended that 11 am on November 11, 1919—one year to the hour after the termination of hostilities in World War I—be selected as the date and time for the convocation of a national convention.[31] No location was specified.[31]
The Committee on Permanent Organization recommended an organization based upon territorial units rather than those based upon military organizations, governed by an Executive Committee of 50, with half of these coming from the officer corps and the other half coming from the ranks of enlisted men.[32]
St. Louis Caucus
The Paris Caucus in March was by its nature limited to soldiers of the AEF who remained in Europe; a parallel organizational meeting for those who had returned to the American preparatory to a formal organizational convention was deemed necessary. This was a conclave dominated by the presence of Theodore Roosevelt Jr., who called the convention to order amidst mass chanting akin to that of a Presidential nominating convention—"We Want Ted-dy! We Want Ted-dy!"[33]
A minor crisis followed when Roosevelt twice declined nomination for permanent chairman of the session, to the consternation of many overwrought delegates, who sought to emphasize the symbolism of President Theodore Roosevelt's son maintaining the closest of connections with the organization.[34]
The work of the St. Louis Caucus was largely shaped by the fundamental decisions made by the earlier Paris Caucus. Its agenda was in addition carefully prepared by a 49-member "Advance Committee", which included at least one delegate from each fledgling state organization and which drew up a draft program for the organization in advance of the convention's opening.[35]
As time before the scheduled start of the convention was short, delegation to the assembly was highly irregular. On April 10, 1919, Temporary Secretary Eric Fisher Wood mailed a letter to the Governor of every state, informing them of the forthcoming gathering and making note of the non-partisan and patriotic nature of the League.[36] Follow-up cables by Roosevelt and Wood encouraged the organization of state conventions to select delegates.[36] This was, however, largely a failed formality, as states lacked sufficient time to organize themselves and properly elect delegates to St. Louis.[36] In practice, the fledgling organization's provisional Executive Committee decided to allow each state delegation twice as many votes at that state had in the United States House of Representatives and left it to each to determine how those votes were apportioned.[36]
Participants at the St. Louis Caucus were enthusiastic although the session was not a productive one. Fully two days were invested choosing ceremonial officers and selecting Minneapolis as the site for the organization's formal Founding Convention in the fall.[37] Over 1100 participants competed to gain the floor to speechify, leading one historian to describe the scene as a "melee" in which "disorder reigned supreme."[38] Consequently, passage of the program by the gathering was largely a pro forma exercise, rushed through during the session's last day, with the actual decision-making process involving such matters as the constitution and publications of the organization being done in committee at night.[37]
The preamble of the constitution adopted in St. Louis became one of the seminal statements of the Legion's orientation and objectives:[39]
For God and Country we associate ourselves together for the following purposes:
To uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States of America; to maintain law and order; to foster and perpetuate a 100 Percent Americanism; to preserve the memories and incidents of our association in the Great War; to inculcate a sense of individual obligation to the community, state, and nation; to combat the autocracy of both the classes and the masses; to make right the master of might; to promote peace and good will on earth; to safeguard and transmit to prosperity the principles of justice, freedom, and democracy; to consecrate and sanctify our comradeship by devotion to mutual helpfulness.
The St. Louis Caucus spent much of its time discussing resolutions: whether a stand should be taken on the League of Nations, Prohibition, or the implementation of universal military service, whether posts composed of Negro soldiers should be established, and whether Secretary of War Newton D. Baker should be impeached for his apparent leniency towards conscientious objectors in the months after the war.[40]
A particularly hard line was taken towards the American radical movement, with one resolution passed on the final day calling on Congress to "pass a bill or immediately deporting every one of those Bolsheviks or Industrial Workers of the World."[41] Minneapolis, Minnesota was chosen for the site of the founding convention of the organization in November over the more centrally-located Chicago after much acrimonious debate about the perceived political transgressions of the Chicago city administration.
Founding Convention
The formal founding convention was held in Minneapolis, Minnesota from November 10 to 12, 1919. It was attended by 684 delegates from around the United States.[43]
From the outset The American Legion maintained a strictly nonpartisan orientation towards electoral politics. The group wrote a specific prohibition of the endorsement of political candidates into its constitution,[44] declaring:
... this organization shall be absolutely non-political and shall not be used for the dissemination of partisan principles or for the promotion of the candidacy of any person seeking public office or preferment; and no candidate for or incumbent of a salaried elective public office shall hold any office in The American Legion or in any branch or post thereof.
One semi-official historian of the organization has noted the way that this explicit refusal to affiliate with one or another political party had the paradoxical effect of rapidly building great political power for the organization, as politicians from both of the "old parties" competed for the favor of the Legion's massive and active membership.[45]
One of the gathering's primary accomplishment was the establishment of a permanent National Legislative Committee to advance the Legion's political objectives as its lobbying arm.[46] The first iteration of this official Washington, D.C.-based lobby for the Legion included only four members—two Republicans and two Democrats.[47] After 1920 the National Legislative Committee was expanded to consist of one member from each state, with additional effort made at the state level to exert pressure upon various state legislatures.[47]
Chief on the Legion's legislative agenda was a dramatic improvement of the level of compensation for soldiers who suffered permanent disability during the war. At the time of the end of World War I, American law stated that soldiers who suffered total disability were to receive only the base pay of a Private—$30 per month.[48] The Legion concentrated its lobbying effort in 1919 on passage of legislation increasing payment for total disability suffered in the war to $80 a month—a sum roughly sufficient in dollars of the day to provide a living wage.[48] Those partially disabled by their wounds were to receive lesser payments.[48] A flurry of lobbying by the Legion's National Legislative Committee in conjunction with cables sent to Congressional leaders by National Commander Franklin D'Olier helped achieve passage of this legislation by the end of 1919.[48]
The Legion's chief base of support during its first years was among the officers corps of the reserves and the National Guard.[49] The size of the regular army was comparatively small and its representation in the League in its earliest days was even more limited. Consequently, for nearly two decades The Legion maintained a largely isolationist perspective, best expressed in three resolutions passed by the Minneapolis founding convention:
1. That a large standing army is uneconomic and un-American. National safety with freedom from militarism is best assured by a national citizen army and navy based on the democratic principles of equality of obligation and opportunity for all.
2. That we favor universal military training and the administration of such a policy should be removed from the complete control of any exclusively military organization or caste.
3. That we are strongly opposed to compulsory military service in time of peace.[50]
Additional resolutions passed by the founding convention emphasized the need for military preparedness, albeit maintained through a citizens' army of reservists and National Guardsmen rather than through the costly and undemocratic structure of a vast standing army led by a professional military caste.[50] This nationalist isolationism would remain in place until the very eve of American entry into the Second World War.
Centralia Massacre
November 11, 1919, the first anniversary of Armistice Day and the occasion of the Legion's formal launch at its Minneapolis Founding Convention, was also a historical moment of violence and controversy. On that day a parade of Legionnaires took place in the mill town of Centralia, located in Southwestern Washington.[51] Plans were made by some of the marchers at the conclusion of their patriotic demonstration to storm and ransack the local hall maintained by the Industrial Workers of the World, a labor union founded 14 years earlier at a convention of socialists, anarchists, Marxists and radical trade unionists from all over the United States, which had been the target of multiple arrests, large trials, and various incidents of mob violence nationally during the months of American participation in World War I.[51] Plans for this violence had made their way to union members (commonly referred to as Wobblies), however, and 30 or 40 IWW members had been seen coming and going at their hall on the day of the march—some of whom were observed carrying guns.[51]
At 2.00 pm the march began at the city park, led by a marching band playing "Over There."[52] Marchers included Boy Scouts, members of the local Elks Lodge, active-duty sailors and marines, with about 80 members of the newly established Centralia and Chehalis posts bringing up the rear.[52] As the parade turned onto Tower Avenue and crossed Second Street, it passed IWW Hall on its left.[52] The parade stopped and Legionnaires surrounded the hall.[52]
Parade Marshal Adrian Cormier rode up on horseback and, according to some witnesses, blew a whistle giving the signal to the Legionnaires to charge the IWW headquarters building.[52] A group of marchers rushed the hall, smashing the front plate glass window and attempting to kick in the door.[52] Just as the door gave way, shots were fired from within at the intruders.[52] This provided the signal to other armed IWW members, who were stationed across the street to set up a crossfire against potential invaders and they also began firing on the Legionnaires.[53] In less than a minute the firing was over, with three AL members left dead or dying and others wounded.[54]
Taken by surprise by the armed defense of IWW headquarters, many Legionnaires rushed home to arm themselves, while others broke into local hardware stores to steal guns and ammunition.[54] Now armed, a furious mob reassembled and charged the IWW Hall again, capturing six IWW members inside.[54] The mob proceeded to destroy the front porch of the hall and a large bonfire was built, upon which were torched the local Wobblies' official records, books, newspapers and mattresses.[54]
One local Wobbly named Wesley Everest escaped through a back door when he saw the mob approaching the hall.[54] He fled into nearby woods, exchanging gunshots with his pursuers.[54] One of those chasing the fleeing IWW man was hit in the chest several times with bullets and was killed, running the death count of Legionnaires to four.[54] Everest was taken alive, kicked and beaten, and a belt wrapped around his neck as he was dragged back to the town to be lynched.[54] Local police intervened, however, and Everest was taken to jail, where he was thrown down on the concrete floor.[54] At 7:30 pm, on cue, all city lights in town went out for 15 minutes and Legionnaires stopped cars and forced them to turn out their headlights.[55] The Elks Hall gathering entered the jail without meeting resistance and took Wesley Everest, dragging him away to a waiting car but leaving other incarcerated Wobblies in jail cells unhindered.[56] A procession of six cars drove west to a railroad bridge across the Chehalis River.[57]
A rope was attached to Everest's neck and he was pushed off the bridge, but the lynching attempt was bungled and Everest's neck was not snapped by the fall.[57] Everest was hauled up again, a longer rope was substituted, and Everest was pushed off the bridge again.[57] The lynch mob then shined their car headlights on the hanging Everest and shot him.[57]
Although a mob milled around the jail all night, terrorizing the occupants, no further acts of extra-legal retribution were taken.[57] Everest's body was cut down the next morning, falling into the riverbed below, where it remained all day.[58] As night fell Everest's body was hauled back to town, the rope still around his neck, where it was refused by local undertakers and left on the floor of the jail in sight of the prisoners all night.[58] No charges were ever filed in connection with the lynching.[59]
Twelve IWW members were ultimately indicted by a grand jury for first degree murder in connection with the killing of the four Legionnaires and a local left wing lawyer was charged as an accessory to the crime.[59] A January 1920 trial resulted in the conviction of six defendants on charges of second degree murder.[60]
Roaring Twenties
The Legion was very active in the 1920s. The organization was formally non-partisan, endorsing candidates of no political party. Instead the group worked to the spread of the ideology of Americanism and acted as a lobbying organization on behalf of issues of importance to veterans, with particular emphasis on winning a "soldier's bonus" payment from the government and for the alleviation of the unemployment to which many soldiers returned. The Legion also served a strong social function, building and buying "clubhouses" in communities across America at which its members could gather, reflect, network, and socialize.
The Legion's efforts to promote Americanism during the 1920s included urging its members to report on publication materials perceived to be subversive, left-wing, or reflective of radical foreign political views, and established a National Americanism Commission to oversee its actions related to subversive activities.[61] It commissioned the development of textbooks that promoted American patriotism, worked with members of the National Education Association to promote the teaching of history from an American perspective, and sought the removal of textbooks it saw as "un-American".[62] It also supported legislation restricting immigration and seditious speech,[63] and used its influence in an effort to deny public forums to speakers whose views it opposed.[64]
In 1924, the Legion, led by its lobbyist Col. John Thomas Taylor,[65] and other veterans organizations won their battle for additional compensation for World War I veterans with the passage of the World War Adjusted Compensation Act. Most payments were scheduled to be paid in 1945.[66]
In 1923, Legion Commander Alvin Owsley cited Italian Fascism as a model for defending the nation against the forces of the left.[67] Owsley said:
If ever needed, The American Legion stands ready to protect our country's institutions and ideals as the Fascisti dealt with the destructionists who menaced Italy! ... The American Legion is fighting every element that threatens our democratic government—Soviets, anarchists, IWW, revolutionary socialists and every other red ... Do not forget that the Fascisti are to Italy what The American Legion is to the United States.[68]
The Legion invited Mussolini to speak at its convention as late as 1930.[68]
The Legion was instrumental in the creation of the U.S. Veterans' Bureau, now known as the Department of Veterans Affairs. The Legion also created its own American Legion Baseball Program, hosting national tournaments annually from 1926.
Commander Travers D. Carmen awarded Charles Lindbergh its "Distinguished Service Medal", the medal's first recipient, on July 22, 1927. The Legion's national convention was held in Paris in September 1927. A major part of this was drum and bugle corps competition in which approximately 14,000 members took part.
Great Depression
The American Legion Memorial Bridge in Traverse City, Michigan, was completed in 1930.[69] The Traverse City city commission decided to purchase dedication plaques for $100 at the request of the Legion in 1930.[69]
The Sons of the American Legion formed at the 14th National Convention in Portland, Oregon, on September 12–15, 1932. Membership is limited to the male descendants of members of The American Legion, or deceased individuals who served in the armed forces of the United States during times specified by the Legion.[70]
In the spring of 1933, at the very beginning of his presidency, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt sought to balance the federal budget by sharp reductions in veterans benefits, which constituted one quarter of the federal budget. The Economy Act of 1933 cut disability pensions and established strict new guidelines for proving disabilities. The Legion generally supported the FDR administration and the Act, while the VFW was loudly opposed. After a VFW convention heard speeches denouncing FDR's programs, the Legion invited Roosevelt to speak and he won the convention's support. Nevertheless, the Legion's stance was unpopular with its membership and membership plummeted in 1933 by 20% as 160,000 failed to renew their memberships. The VFW then campaigned for a "Bonus Bill" that would immediately pay World War I veterans what they were due in 1945 under the 1924 World War Adjusted Compensation Act. The Legion's failure to take a similar position allowed the much smaller, less prestigious VFW to rally support while accusing the Legion of ties to the FDR Administration and business interests.
In 1935, the first Boys' State convened in Springfield, Illinois. The Legion's first National High School Oratorical Contest was held in 1938.
After the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane, which killed about 480 former servicemen and women, the Legion was very critical of the government and the safety of the New Deal's Works Progress Administration camps.[71] When Col. Taylor testified about the event in front of the House Committee on World War Veterans' Legislation in 1937, he tried to have the Legion's report "Murder at Matecumbe" read into the Congressional Record. He was stopped by Chairman John Elliott Rankin and asked to leave a copy for the committee to review. It was made clear that the copy would not be put into the record.[72]
World War II
In 1942, the Legion adopted the practice of the VFW to become a perpetual organization, rather than die off as its membership aged as that of the Grand Army of the Republic was rapidly doing. The Legion's charter was changed to allow veterans of World War II to join.
The "G.I. Bill"
Throughout the 1940s, the Legion was active in providing support for veterans and soldiers who fought in World War II. The Legion wrote the original draft of the Veterans Readjustment Act, which became known as the G.I. Bill. The original draft is preserved at the Legion's National Headquarters. It was passed in 1944 by a conservative coalition in Congress that want to reach practically all wartime veterans, as opposed to the Roosevelt administration that wanted a much smaller program limited to a small elite.[73] The Legion mobilized its members across the country and secured passage in June 1944. Benefits included low-cost mortgages, low-interest loans to start a business, cash payments of tuition and living expenses to attend high school, college or vocational/technical school, as well as one year of unemployment compensation. It was available to veterans who had been on active duty during the war years for at least 120 days and had not been dishonorably discharged—exposure to combat was not required. The Legion helped veterans fill out the paperwork and obtain the benefits.[74]
Refusal of Japanese American Veterans
Many posts and departments refused Japanese-Americans entry into the Legion, until white officers from the 442nd RCT lobbied on behalf of their troops, gaining charters for the segregated Nisei Post 1183 in Chicago, Illinois, and a joint Chinese and Japanese Cathay Post 185 in Denver, Colorado. California veterans managed to convince a forward thinking VFW state commander to grant charters for 14 segregated Nisei VFW posts to returning veterans there, however Washington and Oregon state commanders for both the VFW and the Legion refused, and those veterans were forced to form their own independent nisei veteran organizations. Post 22 of Hood River, Oregon even passed a resolution to remove the names of 16 local Japanese-American veterans from its roll of honor. Scathing editorials in The Oregonian and The New York Times eventually caused the post to reverse its course, restoring all the names of Nisei servicemen from Hood River to the wall.[75][76][77]
The Cold War
As the new veterans returned home, membership soared to 3.3 million in 1946, triple the prewar number. There were another million members in the Women's Auxiliary. Its main objective after the war was to set up universal military service, but it had to settle for selective conscription,[78] The first Boys Nation program was held in 1946.
Late in 1950, at least some local Legion organizations began to support Senator Joe McCarthy, sponsoring his appearance at an "Americanism" rally in Houston. During his speech, the senator falsely claimed there were 205 Communists in the State Department.[79] The Legion also took a McCarthyist stance on film, threatening to boycott any theater that screened director Edward Dmytryk's Salt to the Devil (also known as Give Us This Day) (1949) because of Dmytryk's status on the blacklist.[80]
At the Legion's 1951 convention, it formally endorsed its "Back to God" movement.[81] When launching the program in 1953 with a national television broadcast that included speeches by President Eisenhower and Vice-President Nixon, the Legion's National Commander Lewis K. Gough said it promoted "regular church attendance, daily family prayer, and the religious training of children."[82]
The Legion's Americanism activities continued through to the 1950s. It promoted the passage of state bills requiring loyalty oaths of school teachers, and supported the activities of anti-Communist newspaper publishers, including William Randolph Hearst, in identifying Communist sympathizers in academic institutions.[83] It was also influential in the creation of state-level legislative investigations into communist or un-American activities,[84] and staged a mock Communist takeover of Mosinee, Wisconsin that garnered national headlines.[85] Its programs were rejuvenated by increased membership after World War II, and in its 1950 convention called for members of the American Communist Party to be tried for treason. Along with the VFW, it maintained files on supposed Communist sympathizers, and it shared the fruits of its research with government investigators.[86] Local posts picketed films they perceived as anti-American, and the national organization was formally involved in Hollywood's efforts to clear films of such influence.[87] The list of names and organizations the Legion provided to movie studios formed the basis for the Hollywood blacklist, and supported the work of the House Un-American Activities Committee and its predecessors before and during the Cold War. It was unsuccessful in applying pressure to the movie studios when the blacklist began to crumble in the late 1950s.[88]
The Legion's political activities were opposed from an early date by organizations like the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which characterized them as a danger to political and civil rights. In a report issued in 1921, the ACLU documented 50 instances of what it described as illegal acts of violence by Legionnaires.[64] In 1927, the ACLU reported that the Legion "had replaced the [Ku Klux] Klan as the most active agent of intolerance and repression in the country.[64] The Legion, for its part, branded the ACLU as an un-American organization at every convention it held between 1920 and 1962.[89] In 1952, the Legion asked for a congressional investigation into the ACLU to determine if it was a communist or communist front organization.[90]
Veterans of the Korean War were approved for membership in The Legion in 1950, and The American Legion Child Welfare Foundation was formed in 1954.
Although the Legion paid very close attention to the threat of domestic communism, it paid little attention to foreign affairs before 1945. It ignored the League of Nations. It was hostile to the Washington Naval Conference of 1921 that rolled back the naval arms race in the 1920s. Pacifism was popular in the 1920s, and Legion locals ridiculed it and sometimes booed the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom During World war II it accepted the wartime alliance with Stalin against Nazi Germany. As the Cold War emerged in 1946–47, the Legion paid increasing attention to an anti-Soviet foreign policy.[91] Its Counter-Subversive Activities Committee in 1946 began publishing the American Legion Firing Line, a newsletter for members which provides information on communist, fascist, and other extremist groups to its subscribers. It warned members against far-right groups such as the John Birch Society and anti-Semitic groups By the late 1950s the newsletter became much more interested in foreign affairs.[92] The Legion's policy resolutions endorsed large-scale defense spending and the deployment of powerful new weapon systems from the hydrogen bomb in the 1950s to Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative in the 1980s. Harry Truman was the first Legionnaire to occupy the White House, but he came under Legion attack for waging a limited war in Korea and not following the advice of General Douglas MacArthur in attacking China. By 1961 the Legion outright rejected the policy of containment, and called for the liberation of the captive peoples in Eastern Europe. Legion members typically hailed Barry Goldwater as their hero, But like Goldwater they rejected the extremism of the John Birch Society. The Legion supported increased intervention in Vietnam As well as anti-Communist forces in Central America and Afghanistan. The Legion never saw much benefit in the United Nations, and like other conservatives worried about a loss of American sovereignty to international bodies. The collapse of Soviet-style communism in Eastern Europe and in Russia itself saw the Legion looking to new venues for militaristic action. Thus, it praised President George H.W. Bush is intervention in Kuwait against Iraq in 1990. After 9-11, it vigorously endorsed President George W. Bush's strategy of a global war on terror, and it supported the invasion of Iraq in 2003.[93]
On May 30, 1969, the Cabin John Bridge, which carried the Capital Beltway (I-495) across the Potomac River northwest of Washington, was officially renamed to the "American Legion Memorial Bridge" in a ceremony led by Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the U.S. Selective Service System.[94]
In 1976, an outbreak of bacterial pneumonia occurred in a convention of the Legion at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia. This pneumonia killed 34 people at the convention and later became known as Legionnaires' disease (Legionellosis). The bacterium that causes the illness was later named Legionella.
In 1988, after over 44 years of opposing U.S. Merchant seamen from receiving benefits under the G.I. Bill, they allowed Merchant seamen to join The American Legion.[95][96] This followed Merchant seamen being granted limited veterans status by the United States Secretary of the Air Force on January 19, 1988.[97]
After a 1989 U.S. Supreme Court decision (Texas v. Johnson), The American Legion launched and funded an unsuccessful campaign to win a constitutional amendment against harming the flag of the United States. The Legion formed the Citizens' Flag Honor Guard and it later became the Citizens Flag Alliance.[98]
Close of the 20th century
In 1993, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts renamed a bridge in the city of Chicopee to the "American Legion Memorial Bridge".[99]
Also in 1993, two members of Garden City, Michigan, Post 396 shared an idea that would bond motorcycle enthusiasts in the Legion from the idea of Chuck Dare and post commander Bill Kaledas, creating the American Legion Riders. Joined by 19 other founding members, the group soon found itself inundated with requests for information about the new group. As a source of information a website was set up, and it continues to be a source of information worldwide. By 2009, the Legion Riders program had grown to over 1,000 chapters and 100,000 members in the United States and overseas.
In a letter to U.S. President Bill Clinton in May 1999, the Legion urged the immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Operation Allied Force in Yugoslavia. The National Executive Committee of the Legion met and adopted a resolution unanimously that stated, in part, that they would only support military operations if "Guidelines be established for the mission, including a clear exit strategy" and "That there be support of the mission by the U.S. Congress and the American people."[100]
21st century
2000s
In 2006, the Chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, Steve Buyer (R-Ind.), announced that he planned to eliminate the annual congressional hearings for Veterans Service Organizations that was established by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. In response, National Commander Thomas L. Bock said, "I am extremely disappointed in Chairman Buyer's latest effort to ignore the Veterans Service Organizations. Eliminating annual hearings before a joint session of the Veterans Affairs Committees will lead to continued budgetary shortfalls for VA resulting in veterans being underserved."[101]
The Legion has criticized the ACLU for using the threat of attorney fees to pressure locally elected bodies into removing religion from the public square.[102] As such the Legion states that it "is leading a nationwide effort to combat the secular cleansing of our American heritage",[102] stating that the phrase "separation of church and state" is nowhere mentioned in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution[102] The American Legion released a document titled "In the Footsteps of the Founders – A Guide to Defending American Values" to be available to the citizens of the United States of America.[102] The veteran's organization has done this to curtail religious-establishment cases against the Boy Scouts and the official display of the Ten Commandments and other religious symbols on public property.[102]
Recent events
In October 2011, National Commander Jimmie L. Foster objected to courts allowing homosexuals to serve openly in the military.[103]
On March 25, 2014, the Legion testified before Congress in favor of the bill "To amend title 38, United States Code, to reestablish the Professional Certification and Licensure Advisory Committee of the Department of Veterans Affairs (H.R. 2942; 113th Congress)." They argued that the legislation would "benefit service members, as well as those who eventually employ veterans in civilian work-force easing the placement of qualified veterans in civilian careers, and matching civilian employers with skilled veteran employees."[104] The American Legion argued that this committee was important to the process of matching military certifications with their corresponding civilian ones, smoothing that transition for veterans, and that the committee provided much needed expertise on these matters to the VA. The Legion said that "there is a definite need to resume this independent body with expertise in matters relating to licensing and credentialing which can present new solutions to VA's senior leadership and congressional members as well as other stakeholders."[104]
In 2014, Verna L. Jones was appointed as the first female executive director of the Legion.[105] In August 2017, Denise H. Rohan was elected as the first female national commander of the Legion.[106]
References
- ^ Wheat, George Seay (1919). "The Story of The American Legion". The Birth of the Legion. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 206. LCCN 19012694. OL 7238700M – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Statutes of the United States of America, passed at the First Session of the Sixty-sixth Congress, 1919... Washington: Government Printing Office. 1919. pp. 284–285. OL 20608782M – via Internet Archive.
- ^ a b c Marquis James (1923). A History of The American Legion. New York: William Green; p. 77. [ISBN missing]
- ^ a b Rumer 1990, p. 9.
- ^ a b c James, A History of The American Legion, p. 14.
- ^ a b James, A History of The American Legion, p. 15.
- ^ a b c James, A History of The American Legion, p. 16.
- ^ a b Rumer 1990, p. 13.
- ^ Wheat 1919, pp. 6–8
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, pp. 16–17.
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, pp. 17–18.
- ^ a b James, A History of The American Legion, p. 18.
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, pp. 18–19.
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, p. 20.
- ^ Rumer 1990, p. 15.
- ^ a b Rumer 1990, p. 16.
- ^ "An interpretative sign exists at the site, in 2009". warmonument.blogspot.com. August 31, 2012. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ "History of the U.S.S. Jacob Jones Post No. 2, The American Legion, Department of the District of Columbia, 1919–1939". The Genealogy Center. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
- ^ "Paris Post 1 History". www.parispost1.org. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "History Part I – 1919–1959". chinapost1.org. July 1, 1988. Archived from the original on September 3, 2015. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ "China Post One". chinapost1.org. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ Wheat 1919, p. 19
- ^ Rumer 1990, pp. 18–19.
- ^ Rumer 1990, p. 19.
- ^ a b Rumer 1990, p. 21.
- ^ Rumer 1990, p. 23.
- ^ Byer, Gene (March 16, 1953). "Gen. Wm. G. Price Jr. Recalls American Legion's Founding". Delaware County Times. Chester, PA. p. 13.
- ^ Rumer 1990, p. 24.
- ^ a b c Rumer 1990, p. 25.
- ^ Rumer 1990, p. 28.
- ^ a b c Rumer 1990, p. 26.
- ^ Rumer 1990, pp. 26–27.
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, p. 44.
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, pp. 45–46.
- ^ James, A History of The American Legion, pp. 47–48.
- ^ a b c d William Pencak, For God and Country: The American Legion, 1919–1941. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1989; p. 58.
- ^ a b Pencak, For God and Country, p. 59.
- ^ The words are those of Dorothy R. Harper, "Hawaii – Department History", quoted in Pencak, For God and Country, p. 59.
- ^ Wheat 1919, p. 193
- ^ Pencak, For God and Country, pp. 59–60.
- ^ Pencak, For God and Country, p. 60.
- ^ Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 349.
- ^ Richard Seely Jones, A History of The American Legion. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1946; p. 44.
- ^ Quoted in Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 49.
- ^ Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 45.
- ^ Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 46.
- ^ a b Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 47.
- ^ a b c d Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 48.
- ^ Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 85.
- ^ a b Jones, A History of The American Legion, p. 86.
- ^ a b c Tom Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919: Elmer Smith and the Wobblies. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1993; p. 40. [ISBN missing]
- ^ a b c d e f g Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, p. 51.
- ^ Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, pp. 51–52.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Copeland, The Centralia Massacre of 1919, p. 52.
- ^ Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, p. 53.
- ^ Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy, pp. 53–54.
- ^ a b c d e Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, p. 54.
- ^ a b Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, p. 55.
- ^ a b Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, p. 59.
- ^ Copeland, The Centralia Tragedy of 1919, pp. 65, 82–83.
- ^ Heale 1990, p. 82
- ^ Heale 1990, p. 86
- ^ Heale 1990, p. 85
- ^ a b c Ceplair, p. 38
- ^ "John Thomas Taylor Dies" (Press release). Indianapolis, IN: American Legion News Service. May 28, 1965. pp. 179–180. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
- ^ American Red Cross, "World War Adjusted Compensation Act", updated: July 19, 1926, pp. 363–374, Available online", accessed January 10, 2011
- ^ William Pencak, For God and Country: The American Legion, 1919–1941 Northeastern University Press, 1989; p. 21. [ISBN missing]
- ^ a b Alec Campbell, "Where Do All the Soldiers Go?: Veterans and the Politics of Demobilization", in Diane E. Davis, Anthony W. Pereira, eds., Irregular Armed Forces and their Role in Politics and State Formation. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003; pp. 110–111. [ISBN missing]
- ^ a b "Information on The American Legion Memorial Bridge". Michigan Department of Transportation Web Site. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ "History of Sons of the American Legion". legion.org/sons. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ Krishnaiyer, Kartik (September 4, 2015). "Flashback Friday: 1935 Labor Day Hurricane, 'Murder at Matecumbe'". The Florida Squeeze.
- ^ Dickson & Allen (2004). The Bonus Army: An American Epic. Walker & Company. pp. 256–257. ISBN 978-0802777386. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
- ^ Suzanne Mettler, "The creation of the GI Bill of Rights of 1944: Melding social and participatory citizenship ideals." Journal of Policy History 17#4 (2005): 345–374.
- ^ Glenn C. Altschuler and Stuart M. Blumin, The GI Bill: a new deal for veterans (2009) p. 118
- ^ Yenne, Bill (2007). Rising Sons: The Japanese American GIs who fought for the United States in World War II. New York: Thomas Dunne Books. pp. 247–252. ISBN 978-0312354640.
- ^ Tamura, Linda (2012). Nisei Soldiers Break Their Silence: Coming Home to Hood River. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295804460.
- ^ Hallman, Tom (November 11, 2022). "American Legion post apologizes to Nisei veterans, acknowledges role in Hood River's 'ugly history'". The Oregonian.
- ^ Morten Bach, "None so consistently right: The American Legion's Cold War, 1945–1950," (PhD dissertation, Ohio University, 2007) p 8.
- ^ Carelton, Don (2014). Red Scare: Right-Wing Hysteria, Fifties Fanaticism and their Legacy in Texas. University of Texas Press. p. 3057?. ISBN 978-0292758551.
- ^ Harper, Sue; Porter, Vincent (2003). British Cinema of the 1950s: The Decline of Deference. Oxford University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0198159353.
- ^ Sydney E. Ahlstrom, David D. Hall (2004). A Religious History of the American People. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300100129. Retrieved December 31, 2007.; Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion and the American Presidency: George Washington to George W. Bush (NY: Columbia University Press, 2009) pp. 278–279 [ISBN missing]
- ^ "'Back to God' Drive Enlists President". The New York Times. February 2, 1953. Retrieved February 1, 2011.
- ^ Heale 1990, p. 111
- ^ Ceplair, p. 120
- ^ Ceplair, p. 121
- ^ Heale 1990, p. 173
- ^ Heale 1990, p. 187
- ^ Ceplair, pp. 28, 33, 38, 121, 123, 198–200
- ^ Ceplair, p. 241
- ^ William A. Donohue, The Politics of the American Civil Liberties Union (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1985), p. 182 [ISBN missing]
- ^ Morten Bach, "None so consistently right: The American Legion's Cold War, 1945–1950," (PhD dissertation, Ohio University, 2007) Excerpt
- ^ Ronald Lora and William Henry Longton, The Conservative Press in Twentieth-Century America (1999) pp 479–488. [ISBN missing]
- ^ Timothy J Lynch, ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Military and Diplomatic History (2013) 1: 38–40. [ISBN missing]
- ^ "Cabin John Bridge Given a New Name", The Washington Post and Times-Herald (Washington, DC): City Life Section, May 31, 1969
- ^ The Boston Globe (December 9, 1987). "American Legion Still Opposes Veteran Status For Merchant Seamen". The Journal of Commerce. Retrieved May 7, 2016.
- ^ Brian Herbert, The Forgotten Heroes: The Heroic Story of the United States Merchant Marine (New York: Forge, 2005), p. 201
- ^ Christine Scott; Douglas Reid Weimer, Veterans Benefits: Merchant Seamen (Washington, DC, Congressional Research Service, May 8, 2007), p. 1
- ^ "Citizens Flag Alliance". sourcewatch.org. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ "Archives" (PDF). Library of the State of Massachusetts. Retrieved June 11, 2007.
- ^ "American Legion Urges Withdrawal of Troops from Yugoslavia". C-SPAN Video Library. May 18, 1999. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- ^ "Battle between Legion, Buyer Rages On". Army Times. June 12, 2006. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e "Legion campaign backs anti-ACLU bill" (PDF). American Legion. Retrieved March 6, 2013.
The American Legion family is involved in the effort to have the Veterans' Memorials, Boy Scouts, Public Seals, and Other Public Expressions of Religion Protection Act of 2007 (PERA) passed by Congress because of the clear need to stop the ACLU and other organizations from making enormous profits in lawsuits under the Establishment Clause attacking the Boy Scouts, the public display of the Ten Commandments, the Pledge of Allegiance, and other symbols of our American religious history and heritage, including religious symbols at veterans memorials. Pulling the rug out from under the funding source against American values should significantly curtail the current proliferation of attacks.
- ^ Foster, Jimmie (October 28, 2011). "Court oversteps its bounds on DADT". American Legion Magazine. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
- ^ a b Gonzalez, Steve (March 25, 2014). "Witness Testimony of Mr. Steve Gonzalez, Assistant Director, National Economic Commission, The American Legion". House Committee on Veterans Affairs. Archived from the original on May 29, 2014. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- ^ "American Legion Appoints First Female Executive Director". Military.com. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
- ^ Sicard, Sarah (August 24, 2017). "Meet The American Legion's First Female National Commander".
Further reading
- Budreau, Lisa M. (2010). "Chapter 18: Commemoration or Celebration?". Bodies of War: World War I and the Politics of Commemoration in America, 1919–1933. New York: New York University Press. pp. 176–184. ISBN 978-0-8147-9990-1. LCCN 2009029205. OCLC 326418453. OL 24533681M.
- Ebel, Jonathan H. (2010). "Chapter 7: "The Same Cross in Peace": The American Legion, the Ongoing War, and American Reillusionment". Faith in the Fight: Religion and the American Soldier in the Great War. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. pp. 168–190. ISBN 978-0-691-13992-0. LCCN 2009025681. OL 23606502M.
- Heale, M.J. (1990). American Anticommunism: Combating the Enemy Within, 1830–1970. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801840500. OCLC 21483404.
- Moorhead, Robert L. (1920). "Chapter XXI: The American Legion". The Story of the 139th Field Artillery, American Expeditionary Forces. Indianapolis, Indiana: The Bobbs-Merrill Company. pp. 179–182. OCLC 263171531 – via Internet Archive.
External links
- Media related to History of the American Legion at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website