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The objects of the Veterans of Foreign Wars are Fraternal, Patriotic, Historical and Educational. To preserve and Strengthen Comradeship among its members, To assist worthy comrades and to perpetuate the memory and history of our dead. To assist their widows and orphans to maintain true allegiance to the government of the United States of America and fidelity to its constitution and laws. To foster true patriotism, to maintain and extend the institution of American freedom, to preserve and defend the United States from all her enemies whomsoever. Copyright© 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999. Veterans of Foreign Wars of United States. All Rights Reserved. We Welcome you to Gen. Nelson A. Miles VFW Post 80 in Steubenville, OH. The Post was named after the following individuals. General Nelson A. Miles -Birth: Aug. 8, 1839 Westminster Death: May. 15, 1925 Washington Civil War Union Major General, Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient, General in Chief of the United States Army. Born to Daniel Miles and Mary Curtis Miles, he worked on the family farm and as a clerk in the family crockery store in Boston. In 1861, he helped raise a company of Union volunteers and was named a Captain. He fought in nearly every battle in the east, during the Civil War, and was awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism at Chancellorsville, 2-4 May 1863. He was wounded four times during the war, including two that were considered fatal. Due to his courage and leadership, he rose swiftly in rank and responsibility, and at age 26, was made Commander, 2nd Corps, with the rank of Major General, in 1864. At the end of the Civil War, he joined the Regular Army, and was given the rank of Colonel, over many other more senior officers. He married Mary Hoyt Sherman on 30 June 1868; Mary 's uncles were Ohio Senator John Sherman and Army Major General William Tecumseh Sherman. For the next 15 years, he fought the Indians in the west. In 1880, he was promoted to Brigadier General, Regular Army. In 1886, he was responsible for the capture of the Apache leader, Geronimo. In 1890, he was promoted to Major General, Regular Army. During the Indian Wars, he was noted for his judicious and humane settlement of difficulties without the use of military force. On several occasions, he was responsible for preventing war, and for getting the voluntary cooperation of the Indians to settle differences. In 1894, he commanded troops that President Grover Cleveland sent to Chicago following the Pullman Strike riots. Due to his handling of the riots, he was named Commanding General of the US Army in 1895. In 1898, he personally headed the expedition to Puerto Rico, during the Spanish-American War, and afterwards, became the first military governor of Puerto Rico. In 1901, he was promoted to Lieutenant General, Regular Army, then the highest possible rank for a career officer. He immediately earned the displeasure of President Theodore Roosevelt by taking sides in a feud between admirals, and by criticizing US policy in the Philippines. He was retired in 1903, following a bitter public quarrel with the Secretary of War over a scandal involving "embalmed beef" being supplied to the Army. His remaining years were spent in Washington, DC, writing his memoirs. In the spring of 1925, he took his grandchildren to the circus. During the playing of the National Anthem, he rose and saluted the flag, and collapsed immediately with a heart attack, from which he died almost instantly. President Calvin Coolidge personally attended his funeral at Arlington National Cemetery. (Biography by Morgan Benson). Burial: Arlington National Cemetery Arlington (Arlington County) Arlington County Virginia, USA Plot: Section 3, Lot 1873 Record added: Jan 1 2001. Activities of Post 80
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