A History of Veterans Organizations in the Town of DeKalb
By Bryan Thompson
The first official veterans organization formed in the town of DeKalb
was the George A. Rich Post of the G.A.R. #568. The Post was named in honor of George A. Rich, who lost his
life in the Civil War. He was born
in the Town of DeKalb December 12, 1842, the son of John C. and Sophia Rich. He
enlisted in the Union Army Co. D 106 NYS Vol. at DeKalb in August 1862. He died of disease on September 18,
1863 at Martinsburg, Virginia.
Benjamin F. Stevenson MD organized the first G.A.R. post in the United
States in 1866 in Decatur, Illinois.
Originally the organization was organized along the lines of military
rank and status. In the 1870Õs it
was reorganized as a social organization and spread quickly across the country.
In its day, the organization wielded great political strength. They were largely responsible for the
adoption of Decoration Day (Memorial Day) as a national holiday. Between 1868 and 1908,
no Republican candidate was nominated to the presidency without a GAR
endorsement.
The George A. Rich Post was chartered on March 21, 1884. The charter members were officially
mustered in on May 5,1884 at a meeting held in the Lynde House in Richville. On
May 22, 1884 the groupÕs corresponding secretary, Calvin Mitchell, posted a
notice in local newspapers calling for a mass meeting of all pensioned and
unpensioned soldiers of St. Lawrence County at DeKalb Junction on June 5, 1884
at 1 PM. The group gained many new
members from this encampment.

GAR Membership dues receipt, 1902.
In September 1884, the group held a campfire in E. A. RichÕs grove near
C.A. GardnerÕs (on the Cole Road). The event began on Thursday evening and
ended on Saturday afternoon. Various speeches by Republican dignitaries were
heard on Friday afternoon when nearly 300 citizens visited the encampment. The
post glee club sang, ŌMarching Through GeorgiaĶ, ŌJohn BrownÕs BodyĶ and other
songs. All guest were treated to a meal of hardtack and coffee.
Newspaper accounts do not list the first officers but those elected in
December 1885 were: Commander, Evan E. Griffis, Senior V.C. Orville Shipman,
Junior V.C. James Johnson, Adjutant S.C. Downing, Quartermaster E.P. Griffith,
Officer of the Day Chas. H. Clark, Officer of the Guard Albert Bosworth,
Chaplin Calvin Mitchell, Surgeon J.G. Havens, Q.M. Sergeant L.L. Haskins, Guard
M.B. Collins, Color Bearer Moses Murphy.
The group never owned a lodge hall. They met at: the Lynde House and
the ForesterÕs Hall in Richville, the Congregational Church in Old DeKalb and
after 1900 in the Odd Fellows Hall in DeKalb Junction.
The last officers for the Geo. A. Rich Post, elected in 1913 were:
James Storie Commander, A.J. Lobdell S.V.C., S. Clearwater J.V.C., E. Holland
Adj., E.P. Griffith Chaplin, W. N. Hills Quartermaster, Alvin Barber O.D., M.J.
Saunders Patriotic Instructor, John Havens A.G., John Hyland S.M., W.E. Gore
Q.M.S.. Due to an aging membership, after 1914 they no longer could muster a
quorum for their meetings. By
1917, more than half of the above listed officers were dead and their post was
officially closed.
In 1884, the National WomenÕs Relief Corps was organized as an official
wing of the GAR. The Geo. A. Rich WomenÕs Relief Corp #119 was organized in
1895. The WomenÕs Relief Corp
carried on the work of relief, charity and memorial. Among the members
mentioned in various newspaper accounts were: Miss M. Puffer, Mrs. George Miles,
Mrs. L. Stacy, Mrs. Richard Lobdell, Mrs. Seymour Lobdell, Mrs. Geo. A
Matteson, Mrs. Lizzie Hills, and Mrs. A.C. Farr.
The WomenÕs Relief Corp existed until at least 1937, as they received
$75 that year from the Town Board to decorate the graves of veterans in the
Town of DeKalb. As the number of Civil War Veterans dwindled, the group
functioned as the auxiliary for the local American Legion Post. The National WomenÕs Relief Corp is
still in existence today, dedicated to memorializing our Civil war ancestors.
Congress chartered the American Legion in 1919 as a patriotic, mutual
aid society for wartime veterans.
In 1922, the Proctor Gilson Post #949 of the American Legion was
chartered.

Lieutenant Proctor C. Gilson
The Post was named in honor of Lieutenant Proctor C. Gilson who was
born on Maple Ridge Road in the Town of DeKalb, February 8, 1891, the son of
Jared (Judd) Gilson and Etta Williams Gilson. He attended local schools in DeKalb and graduated from
Gouverneur High School in 1911 and St. Lawrence University in 1915. He was
admitted to Harvard Law School and attended until 1917, when he left to enlist
in the US Army. He married
Marjorie Phillips of Carthage in August 1917.
Lieutenant Gilson was chosen to represent his unit in a special July 4th,
1918 parade in Paris. He was killed at the battle of Marne, in France, on July
18, 1918. His body was never recovered but a memorial stone in his honor was
erected in the Old DeKalb Cemetery with a full honor guard provided by the J.C.
Malloy Post Am. Legion. Ironically, he appeared in a movie newsreel of the July
4th parade in September 1918.
Many local citizens traveled to Watertown to view the film. Gilson was
the first SLU graduate to die in World War One.
The Proctor Gilson Post #949 held itÕs meeting at the Odd Fellows Hall
over the old Post Office in DeKalb Junction. The American Legion PostÕs annual rent of $50 was paid by
the DeKalb Town Board through January 1934. One of their first tasks was to raise funds to endow a bed
in a VeteranÕs Hospital. In April
1926, they hosted a meeting of the St. Lawrence County American Legion
Committee. A banquet was served at the meeting by the Geo. A. Rich WomenÕs
Relief Corp.
Each year the American Legion cooperated with the Relief Corp to decorate the soldierÕs graves in the town. They sponsored dances at the Grange Hall and plays at ColeÕs Hall. Commander of the Post was Ernest Snyder and Adj. Was Clarence Perrin. The Post appears to have folded in 1934 at the height of the Great Depression.
The current VeteranÕs organization in the Town of De Kalb is Am Vets
Post 11. The post was officially chartered on November 2, 2000. The founding
members were: Michael Forbes,
Keith Neuroth, Ken Stowell, Jason Ferrick, John Burke, Larry Cooke, Robert
Forbes, Francis Hewlett jr., Ricky Enslow and Benj. Murcray. The Post opened
its doors in the former De Kalb Hotel at De Kalb Junction in February 2001.
The Am Vets Post 11
WomenÕs Auxiliary was charted March 12, 2001. The Post 11 SonÕs of Am vetÕs were chartered July 3, 2001
and the Junior Am Vets Post 11 was chartered January 27, 2003. The current Commander is Stephen
Luther.
The Am vetÕs Post 11Õs 68 members have been very active in the
community since their founding.
They have donated a flag and pole to the community gazebo and sponsored
numerous other activities and fund raisers. They continue the task of previous veteranÕs organizations
in the town, advocating for veterans in the community, and keeping the memory
of those who served and sacrificed alive for future generations.
Sources:
DeKalb Town Clerk Meeting
Book 3 1867-1905 DeKalb Junction, NY.
DeKalb Town Clerk Meeting
Book 4 1906-1917 DeKalb Junction, NY.
DeKalb Town Clerk Meeting
Book 5 1917-1939 DeKalb Junction, NY
Foster, W. H. (1938) History
of the James Malloy Post #65 American Legion Gouverneur,
NY.
Gouverneur Free Press Various
dates.
Luther, Stephen Interview
September 13, 2007 DeKalb Junction, NY.
Ogdensburg Advance Various
dates.