It isn't even Memorial Day any more, really. And, it wasn't to start with, either!
So   where did it come from? Unlike many holidays, there is no   centuries-old   background here. The background there is will help not   only understanding  Memorial Day for what it is and isn't, but our  secular  holidays as a  whole, and provide some eye-openers on the  political  scene.
The Original Memorial Day.
On  5  May 1868 General John A Logan, commander in chief of the Grand Army  of  the Republic, designated 30 May 1868 "for the purpose of strewing  with  flowers, or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died  in  defense of their country during the late rebellion". Not only for   that,  but also to "renew our pledge to aid and assist those whom they   have  left among us a sacred charge upon the Nation's gratitude—the   soldier's  and sailor's widow and orphan". The designation was for 1868  only, but  it expressed "the hope that it will be kept up from year to  year, while a   survivor of the war remains to honor the memory of his  departed  comrades".
What does this mean?
The above words,  from the  proclamation itself, General Orders No.11 from  G.A.R.  headquarters, make  it clear that the reference is to the Civil  War. So  who is Logan and  what is the G.A.R.?
The  latter was not a unit  in the Civil War.   It was a group founded 6  April 1866 by Benjamin F  Stephenson MD in  Decatur IL for veterans of  the U.S. Army who had  served in the Civil  War. He himself had served  as surgeon of the 14th   Illinois Infantry with the rank of Major. The unit was a regiment  with   the Army of the Tennessee for a three year term ending 24 June  1864,   after which he returned to Springfield IL, the state capital, to resume   medical practice.
Among the notable  commanding officers of the   Army of the Tennessee are its first,  Ulysses S Grant, and its second,   William T  Sherman, who arranged for  John A Logan to be its fifth and   last after the war was actually over. There's a story there. The third   commander, James B McPherson, was  killed in action 22 July 1864 during   the Battle of Atlanta, and Logan  temporarily replaced him, but command   went to another, Oliver O Howard from the Army of the Cumberland.   Howard, like Sherman, was West  Point; Logan wasn't. However, Sherman   arranged for Logan to become  commander so he could lead the army in the   Grand Review to kind of  make up for being passed over. It disbanded 1   August 1865.
And what was the Grand Review? An event on 23 and 24   May 1865, whose full name is Grand Review of the Armies, in Washington   DC to celebrate the end of the war. On 23 May, Major General George   Meade of the Army of  the Potomac, who had won over General Lee at   Gettysburg, led about  80,000 of its men in a six hour parade down   Pennsylvania Avenue, and  the following day Sherman led about 65,000 men   combined from the Army  of the Tennessee and the Army of Georgia in   another six hour parade,  Howard riding with Sherman and Logan leading   the Army of the  Tennessee.
Post Civil War Memorial Days.
General Logan served as a 2nd   Lieutenant with the 1st Illinois Infantry during the Mexican-American   War -- during which he learned to speak Spanish -- graduated in law   from  the University of Louisville in 1851, practiced law and rose in a   political career from county clerk to the Illinois state house of    representatives and was serving as a member of the US House of    Representatives, Democrat from Illinois, at the outset of the war. He    was a volunteer at Bull Run, or Manassas,   after which he resigned his congressional seat and organised the 31st   Illinois Volunteers, with the rank of Colonel. After the war he   switched  parties, was a Representative and then Senator from Illinois,  and ran  as the Vice Presidential candidate on the Republican ticket   with James G  Blaine in the election of 1884, which lost to Democrat   Grover   Cleveland.
There's another story. Cleveland,  whose Civil  War  service was paying a Polish immigrant to serve in his  place when  he was  drafted -- legal under the Conscription Act of 1863  -- was a  classic  liberal, "liberal" being as unrelated to what the  term means  now as  "Democrat". He opposed taxes, supported the gold  standard and  lowering   tariffs imposed on imports to protect domestic  products,  worked for  reduction and limitation of government, and  opposed  government  intervention in the welfare of individuals. In  vetoing a  measure to  provide a "bail out" for Texas farmers ruined by  drought, he  said the  veto was " to the end that the lesson should be  constantly  enforced  that, though the people support the Government,  the Government  should  not support the people. The friendliness and  charity of our  countrymen  can always be relied upon to relieve their  fellow-citizens  in  misfortune. This has been repeatedly and quite  lately demonstrated.    Federal aid in such cases encourages the expectation of paternal care  on  the part of the Government and weakens the sturdiness of our  national  character, while it prevents the  indulgence among our people  of that   kindly sentiment and conduct  which strengthens the bonds of a  common  brotherhood". Not a lot of  that kind of talk from Democrats  lately.
The    election was hard fought. The Democrats accused  Blaine of influencing   legislation to benefit railroads whose bonds he  owned, which was long  denied until letters were discovered making it a  little harder to  deny,  some of them ending "Burn this letter", which in  turn gave rise  to the  campaign slogan "Blaine, Blaine, James G Blaine,  the  continental liar  from the state of Maine". The Republicans in turn   tried to sully  Cleveland's image when a woman named him the father of   her illegitimate  child, and Cleveland admitted he did pay her child   support. She however  was known to have, so to speak, played the field,  including with  Cleveland's law partner, for whom the child was named,  and while  Cleveland himself actually did not know who the father was,  being the  only bachelor among the possibilities, took responsibility,  leading to  the campaign slogan "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa?"
And you  thought  politics only got rough and dirty lately! It gets worse.  Blaine, whose  mother was Irish Catholic, was hoping for support from   that community,  not typically known for supporting Republicans, but   then one of Blaine's  supporters denounced the Democrats as the party of  "Rum, Romanism,   and Rebellion" (the party of Lincoln not being popular in the South)   which lost him a ton of votes in swing states to Cleveland, who won  the   popular vote by less than 1%, though being swing states the  electoral   college vote was decisive. After Cleveland won, the slogan  was turned    around to "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa, gone to the White House, ha, ha, ha!".
It   gets worse yet. In 1888 he was  renominated and ran again, and the   Republicans ran Benjamin Harrison,  Republican Senator from Indiana,   against him instead of Logan -- oh  yeah, Logan, we'll get back to him --    for high tariffs and big  government -- yes, you read it right, that   was the Republican  position, big government -- and while Cleveland did   not win all the  swing states as before, what did him in was, guess what,   vote fraud by the Republicans in, guess where, Indiana, where  Cleveland   narrowly  lost, however, it gave Harrison the electoral votes  to win  although he lost the national popular vote. And you thought  politics  only got  rough and dirty lately!
Cleveland came back  though.    Harrison's high tariffs, and big budgets -- he was the first  President  to have a billion dollar budget, yes Republicans for a big  budget --  and  support for backing currency with silver as well as gold  -- why  was  that a problem, because silver wasn't worth as much as its  legal  gold  equivalent -- with taxpayers paying in silver, cheap money  to  "help the   poor", but the government's creditors required payment in   gold, the  economy went to hell. With the Republicans losing supporters  of free  silver to the new Populist Party, Cleveland was elected   President again  in 1892. He thus became the only President (so far) to  serve non   continuous terms, and will, btw, therefore have two coins in the Presidential Dollar series.
Oh   yeah, Logan. Had the Blaine/Logan ticket won, he would have died in   office. He died 26 December 1886.  Staunchly Republican, he became    Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic in 1868 and    continued in that position until 1871 when he became a US Senator. He    was always active in veteran's affairs, and public education -- the non   West Pointer. A GAR endorsement was essential to winning a Republican   nomination for President for decades.  The GAR also was influential in   the establishment of Old Soldiers' Homes, which became the basis for  the   present US Department of Veterans Affairs. At its peak in 1890,  the  GAR  had 490,000 members, but, realising numbers must eventually   decline, in  1881 the GAR founded the Sons of Union Veterans of the   Civil War (SUVCW) to eventually carry on.
And   so they did: the last encampment, as national meetings were called,   was  in 1949, and the last surviving member, named Albert Woolson,   died 2 August 1956 at age 109, it was thought, though census records   now indicate 106. There's a story there too. He was from New York  state.   His father was wounded at the Battle of Shiloh and taken to a  military    hospital in Windom,    Minnesota, where he and his mother moved, though his father later   died  of his wounds. Whereupon Albert enlisted in Company C of the 1st   Minnesota Heavy Artillery Regiment as a drummer, which is not just for   parades and stuff like now. Then, as for centuries before, there was  no   motorised transport, and drummers were key in both setting marching  pace  and boosting morale during combat. Albert enlisted 10 October  1864  just  months before the war's end and the unit did not see action. He returned to Minnesota, lived out his life as a carpenter, and died in Duluth.
General   Eisenhower, President at the time said of his passing " "The American   people have lost the last personal link  with the Union Army ... His   passing brings sorrow to the hearts of all of us who cherished the    memory of the brave men on both sides of the War Between the States".    The recognition of both sides was not new; at the  first Memorial Day    graves from both sides were decorated.
Modern Memorial Day Evolves.
With  his death, the GAR  ceased to exist. Memorial Day did not. More or   less.  The original name  was Decoration Day, from the original   proclamation for the decorating of  veterans' graves of the Civil War,   which also, in 1868, envisioned its  existence until the last survivor   was gone, which was 1956, 88 years  later. It's expanded a bit. After   World War One, it had become a Federal  holiday observed on the original  date, 30 May, and was expanded to  included the decoration of the   graves of all who died in any US military  engagement. The alternate   name for Decoration Day, Memorial Day, was  first used in 1882, and   after World War Two, which gave many more to be  remembered and whose   graves to be decorated, became the more common  name, and was made the   official name in 1967.
The  following  year, the  Uniform Holidays  Bill changed its observance along with  Veterans' Day  (11 November, on  which this blog also posts annually) and  Washington's Birthday (22  February) to create three three-day-long  weekends to  take effect in  1971. None of these observances were  instituted to give people a  three-day week-end, with an extra day off  and cook-outs and  sports and  big sales at the stores, but to remember as  a nation  particular people  and things.
Washington's Birthday  was  chosen to commemorate the  commander of the Continental Army in the war  for independence and the  unanimous choice of the Electoral  College to be  the first President, a  unifying figure for the new  nation and model for  its future Presidents,  often called "the father  of his country", on  his, well, birthday, 22  February. Veterans Day is  now called that to  commemorate all veterans,  and was originally to  commemorate the  armistice which ended World War  One starting on the 11th hour of the  11th day  of the 11th    month, 11 November. Decoration Day was chosen to commemorate Civil   War  dead on 30 May precisely because that date is not connected with   any  particular battle or other event of the Civil War.
The dates  mean  something, closing up shop for a particular commemoration  of a    particular something on a particular date, not an opportunity to take   the 3rd Monday in February, the 4th   Monday of October, and the last Monday in May off from work to do   other  things, or stay at work to boost business from big sales   attracting  those off work. The outcry over this loss of the meaning of  the day, and  acquiring meanings unrelated to it,  was enough that   Veterans Day was  moved back to its original date in 1978, but with the  provision that if  that date fell on a Sunday it could  be observed the  following Monday,  or if on a Saturday either on that Saturday or the  Friday before.
In the  1980s advertisers began the  push to boost sales on the new day  for  Washington's Birthday as  "Presidents Day" including Lincoln whose   birthday is 12 February. So  now we have Washington's Birthday, which is   still the official name of the holiday, not on Washington's birthday,   not altogether about  Washington, not generally known under its name but   an advertising  nickname, and not really about presidents either but  time  off work and buying stuff.
As to Memorial Day, it is for no   other purpose than to take time from our normal pursuits to  commemorate   those who gave their lives in the armed forces of this  country that we  might have the freedom to go about those  pursuits.  It's not for the   dead per se   -- the church provides that with All Saints Day on 1 November, and    other religions have similar observances for the dead -- not for living   veterans and current service members, both of which groups have their   own commemorations, which are observed on this blog, and certainly not   to provide a three day kick off for Summer.
Conclusion.
For us  Lutherans, and  for all others, their sacrifice has given us a  country  where we need  not wrestle with local, regional and national  governments  to hold our  beliefs, or have our services in the only  place where  services are going  to be, the state church, or at least be tolerated by  it.  We are free  to form our churches according to our  understanding  of God, as are  others according to their understandings, as are others  who choose not  to participate.  Nor do we need to  re-create here church  structure that  emerged in the old countries  where that was not the  case and church  officials were state officials  too.  What an incredibly  precious gift.
The  VFW noted in its Memorial Day statement of  2002: "Changing the date  merely to  create three-day weekends has  undermined the very meaning of  the day.  No doubt, this has contributed  greatly to the general public's  nonchalant observance of Memorial Day." Efforts continue to return  Memorial Day to its original date of observance.
But we can return the  observance itself to what it is, as General Logan   said, to commemorate  those who have died defending their country, AND   to renew our pledge to aid and assist those whom they have  left among   us a  sacred charge upon the Nation's gratitude—the soldier's  and  sailor's  widow and orphan.
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
For the basics of our faith right here online, or for offline short daily prayer or devotion or study, scroll down to "A Beggar's Daily Portion" on the sidebar.
24 May 2013
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1 comment:
Fascinating, informative, and insightful as always, Past Elder. I really enjoy all your posts.
In this one, I must say I'm a little disappointed by the lack of reference to the original Memorial Day. Confederate Memorial Day was celebrated by the women of the South beginning on April 26, 1866, and inspired General Logan to create what we now know of as the federal holiday.
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