American Legion
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The American Legion is an organization of veterans of the United States armed forces who served in wartime. The Organization was founded in 1919 by veterans returning from Europe after World War I and is headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Image:AmerLegion color Emblem.jpg In addition to organizing commemorative events and volunteer activities, the American Legion is active in U.S. politics. Its primary political activity is lobbying for the interests of veterans, including support for veteran's benefits such as pensions and the Veterans Affairs hospital system.
The state American Legions run an annual civic training event for high school juniors called Boys State. Two members from each Boys State are selected for Boys Nation. The American Legion Auxiliary runs Girls State and Girls Nation.
Today, the group has nearly 3 million members.
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[edit] Timeline
[edit] 1910s
The American Legion was founded in mid-March 1919 in Paris by members of the American Expeditionary Forces, and chartered by the United States Congress in September of that same year. The first national convention of the American Legion was held from November 10-12, 1919 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The original purpose of the Legion was to "preserve the memories and incidents of our association in the great war". Prior to World War I, few rural, working class, or even middle class Americans traveled to Europe. For a majority of urban Americans, their understanding of Europe had been acquired through the European immigrants they knew. Thus the two million Americans who had served in the American Expeditionary Forces had had very different experiences than their families, friends and neighbors. The American Legion allowed these young men and women who had served "Over There" to re-integrate into their hometowns and to still remain in contact with others who had been abroad. The Legion served as a supportive group, a social club and a type of extended family for former service men and women. In 1919, a new American Legion group in Washington was involved in the Centralia Massacre (Washington).
[edit] 1920s
The American Legion was very active in the 1920s. It 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. Commander Travers D. Carmen awarded Charles Lindbergh its "Distinguished Service Medal," the medal's first recipient, on July 22, 1927.
[edit] 1930s
By 1931, membership of the American Legion had reached 1 million.
The Sons of the American Legion was formed at the American Legion's 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 American Legion. In 2007 The Sons of the American Legion celebrates seventy-five years of service to God and Country. The organization has over 300,000 members.
According to congressional testimony in the 1930s, several of the American Legion's leaders, including its original bankroller Irénée du Pont, plotted a fascist coup against the Government of Franklin D. Roosevelt called the Business Plot. According to testimony the plot was averted because Major General Smedley Butler warned Roosevelt of the plan.
In 1935, the first Boys' State convenes in Springfield, Illinois.
The American Legion's first National High School Oratorical Contest was held in 1938.
[edit] 1940s
In 1942, the original charter of the American Legion is changed in order to allow veterans of World War II to join. Throughout the 1940s, the American Legion was very active in providing support for veterans and soldiers who fought in World War II. The American Legion campaigned for the G.I. Bill, which was signed into law in June, 1944.
The American Legion was active in campaigning for the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II in relocation camps. [1] [2]
The first Boys Nation program was held in 1946.
[edit] 1950s
The American Legion asked for a congressional investigation into the ACLU for their petitioning to end loyalty-oath laws for public workers such as school teachers during the red scare. [3]
Veterans of the Korean War were approved for membership in The American Legion in 1950.
The American Legion Child Welfare Foundation is formed in 1954.
[edit] 1970s
In 1976, there was an outbreak of bacterial pneumonia among those attending a convention of the American Legion at The Bellevue Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia. This form of pneumonia became known as Legionnaires' disease, or Legionellosis. The bacterium that causes the illness was later named Legionella.
[edit] 1980s
After a 1989 Supreme Court decision, the American Legion launched and funded a 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 Citizens Flag Alliance. [4]
[edit] 1990s
In a letter to U.S. President Bill Clinton in May of 1999, the American Legion urged the immediate withdrawal of American troops from Operation Allied Force in Yugoslavia. The National Executive Committee of The American 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". [5][6]
[edit] 2000s
On August 30, 2005, Thomas P. Cadmus, National Commander, stated in an address to the Legion's National Convention that terrorism should be stopped by "any means necessary." [7] In reaction, 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 Eisenhower. National Commander of the American Legion Thomas L. Bock had the following to say:
"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." [8]
[edit] Membership Eligibility Requirements
Any person will be eligible for membership who was a member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard or Air Force of the United States and assigned to active duty at some time during any of the following periods:
- April 6, 1917 to November 11, 1918... (World War 1)
- December 7, 1941 to December 31, 1946... (World War 2)
- (U.S. Merchant Marine eligible only from December 7, 1941 to August 16, 1945)
- June 25, 1950 to January 31, 1955... (Korean War)
- December 22, 1961 to May 7, 1975... (Vietnam War)
- August 24, 1982 to July 31, 1984... (Lebanon/Grenada)
- December 20, 1989 to January 31, 1990... (Operation Just Cause-Panama)
- August 2, 1990 to Today (Operation Desert Shield/Storm)...or cessation of hostilities as determined by the Government of the United States.
[edit] Organizational Structure
[edit] Posts
The Post is the basic unit of the Legion and usually represents a small geographic area such as a single town or part of a county. There are roughly 14,900 posts in the United States. The Post is used for formal business such as meetings and a coordination point for community service projects. Often the Post will host community events such as Bingo, Hunter breakfasts, holiday celebrations, and etc. It is also not uncommon for the Post to contain a bar open during limited hours.
[edit] Departments
The Posts are grouped together into a state level organization known as a Department for the purposes of coordination and administration. There is a total of 55 Departments; one for each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, France, Mexico, and the Philippines. The 3 Departments located overseas are intended to allow active duty military stationed and veterans living overseas to be actively involved with the American Legion similar to as if they were back in the states. The Department of France [9] consists of 29 Posts located in 10 European counties, the Department of Mexico [10] consists of 22 Posts located in Central America, and the Department of Philippines covers Asia and the Pacific Islands.
[edit] National Headquarters
The main American Legion Headquarters is located on the Indiana War Memorial Plaza in Indianapolis. It is the primary office for the National Commander and also houses the historical archives, library, Membership affairs, and the Magazine editorial offices. The Legion also owns a building in Washington D.C. that contains many of the operation offices such as Legislative, Veterans Affairs, Media Relations, and etc. [11]
[edit] List of National Commanders
- Frank Irwin Joseph (probably pre World War II)
- Martin B. McKneally 1959-1960
- Thomas P. Cadmus, 2 September 2004–25 August 2005
- Thomas L. Bock, 25 August 2005–31 August 2006
- Paul A. Morin, 31 August 2006-present
[edit] References In Popular Culture
On their 1989 album, Key Lime Pie, the alternative rock band Camper Van Beethoven referenced the American Legion in their song "When I Win The Lottery", with the lyrics,
"And when I win the lottery, gonna buy the house next to Mr. Red, White and Blue, and when I win the lottery, gonna buy Post 306 American Legion, paint it red with five gold stars."
American Legion Post 306 is the John W. Lupa Post in Middlesex, New Jersey.
[edit] See also
- The Royal British Legion
- Veterans of Foreign Wars
- Royal Canadian Legion
- Returned and Services League of Australia
- Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association
- Grand Army of the Republic
[edit] External links
- American Legion web site
- Position on the Enola Gay exhibit
- Story of the American Legion by George Seay Wheat (1919)
- American Legion Photographs in the Western Historical Manuscript Collection at the University of Missouri-St. Louis
[edit] Further reading
- Richard Seelye Jones. A history of the American legion (1946)
- Thomas B. Littlewood. Soldiers Back Home: The American Legion in Illinois, 1919-1939 (2004)
- William Pencak. For God & Country: The American Legion, 1919-1941 (1989)
- Thomas A. Rumer. The American Legion: An Official History, 1919-1989 (1990)de:Amerikanische Legion

