Following the war, veterans organizations sprang up all over the nation. Memphis seemed slow to join the various groups. Prominent in the 1870s was the Mexican War Veterans Association, with Gideon Pillow as its commander. It appears that the original fraternal group in Memphis was known as the “Confederate Veterans Historical Association.” This later becomes the Confederate Veteran Historical Association Camp No. 28 after the United Confederate Veteran was formed in July 1889. Its counterpart in Memphis was the William J. Smith Post 1896, Grand Army of the Republic.[1]
Both organizations held
national reunions for their membership in different locations across the United
States. Quite possibly the closest that a GAR reunion was held to Memphis was
the National Encampment in St. Louis in September 1887. Three times, the United
Confederate Veterans held national reunions in Memphis: 1901, 1909, and 1924.
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Program from the 1901 reunion. (TN Virtual Archives) |
The 19th
Annual Reunion of the United Confederate Veterans was held June 8-10, 1909. The
reunion was held jointly with the Confederate Southern Memorial Association.
The crowds, estimated at 90,000 visitors (railroad officials believed the
number of visitors at 175,000), found the route of the parade of veterans “a
mass of brilliant bunting and fluttering flags . . . It was noticeable that the
star-spangled banner was given almost equal place in many instances with the
banner that was furled but never conquered.” Many local citizens sported badges
that read “I live here; ask me.” The Bijou Theater was used as the convention
hall where the meetings of delegates took place. The governor was on hand to
welcome the veterans and their guest, followed by the singing of “Dixie,” and a
“Rebel yell.” Clement A. Evans spoke, as did Lewis Guion, pleading for a park
at Vicksburg, with a Confederate monument. There was a memorial service in
honor of Jefferson Davis, the introduction of Nathan Bedford Forrest’s great-grandson,
a reunion of the Immortal 600, and a grand ball. As at many of the reunions,
there was a casualty or two. Jack Duhig, a member of the Sterling Price Camp,
Dallas, Texas, died in a local hospital, probably from a heat stroke.[3]
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Veterans at the 1924 reunion. (flickr-ufomtiger52) |
The 34th Annual reunion of the United Confederate Veterans was held June 3-5, 1924. Reunion headquarters was at the Claridge Hotel, and thousands were reported in attendance. The event started with a memorial service at Elmwood Cemetery, with the Confederate graves being marked with flags and addresses on several topics, including Jefferson Davis. It was Davis’s birthdate. On June 4, the reunion officially began. The mayor of Memphis spoke (but the governor only sent his regards), then Commander-in- Chief W.B. Haldeman. “The grim reaper is rapidly depleting the ranks of the Confederate veterans,” Haldeman told the crowd, estimated at 5,000. Haldeman was re-elected as commander, and annual dues were increased. Most of the veterans were now driven in cars along the parade route. The only Confederate general present seems to have been Felix Robertson. There were also twenty “old ex-slaves who had served . . . during the war.” The Memphis D.A.R. sponsored an opening luncheon, the Kiwanis Club sponsored the floral parade, the R.O.T.C. and the Boy Scouts provided programing and helped the old veterans around the city, while there were several balls, one sponsored by the Ladies’ Confederate Memorial Association and another by the Memphis United Daughters of the Confederacy. Several veterans were reported in the hospital, “suffering from natural afflictions and the infirmities of age.” One newspaper editor was happy to have the veterans in Memphis, but also found the reunion “tinged. . . with sadness. It is more and more evident that the day is not far distant when there will be the grand final reunion in a city not made with hands, the reunion in which every man who fought on either side in the sixties will have a part.”[4]
[1] Public
Ledger, April 25, 1890; The Memphis Commercial, January 21, 1894.
[2] Confederate
Veteran, 9:248-250; The Commercial Appeal, May 5, 1901, May 28, 1901.
[3] Confederate
Veteran, 17:197, 314-16; The Commercial Appeal, June 11, 1909.
[4] Confederate
Veteran, 32: 251-54; The Commercial Appeal, June 4, 1924, June 7,
1923.
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