List of members of the Aztec Club of 1847
This is a list of members of the Aztec Club of 1847. Rank indicated below is highest rank held in either United States or Confederate service.[1]
Original members
Original members were 160 officers who joined when the Club when it was formed in 1847. The rank indicated is the highest the officer held in Regular Army, Volunteer or Confederate service. Of the 160 original members, 72 became generals in either the United States Army or the Confederate States Army.
- General Ulysses S. Grant – President of the United States.
- General Robert E. Lee, CSA
- General P. G. T. Beauregard, CSA
- General Joseph E. Johnston, CSA
- General Edmund Kirby Smith, CSA
- Lieutenant General John C. Pemberton, CSA
- Major General Philip St. George Cooke
- Major General William H. French
- Major General Schuyler Hamilton
- Major General Joseph Hooker
- Major General Philip Kearny
- Major General George B. McClellan - Governor of New Jersey
- Major General Fitz John Porter
- Major General John A. Quitman – Governor of Mississippi
- Major General Jesse L. Reno
- Major General Charles F. Smith
- Major General George Sykes
- Major General John B. Magruder, CSA
- Major General Gustavus W. Smith, CSA
- Major General David E. Twiggs, CSA
- Brevet Major General John G. Barnard
- Brevet Major General Robert C. Buchanan
- Brevet Major General William S. Harney
- Brevet Major General Persifor F. Smith - Military Governor of California
- Brevet Major General Zealous B. Tower
- Brevet Major General William Jenkins Worth
- Brigadier General John J. Abercrombie
- Brigadier General George Cadwalader
- Brigadier General Alfred Gibbs
- Brigadier General Justus McKinstry
- Brigadier General Franklin Pierce – President of the United States.
- Brigadier General Joseph H. Potter
- Brigadier General Charles Pomeroy Stone
- Brigadier General Milledge Luke Bonham, CSA
- Brigadier General Richard C. Gatlin, CSA
- Colonel Electus Backus
- Colonel Charles John Biddle
- Brevet Colonel John Munroe - Military Governor of New Mexico
- Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Abraham Van Buren - son of President Martin Van Buren
- Major William Hawkins Polk – brother of President James K. Polk
Veteran members
In 1871 Club members agreed to accept other officers who had served in Mexico during the Mexican War as Veteran Members. Veteran Members were veterans of the Mexican War but were not among the 160 original members who formed the society in 1847.[2] As of 1895, 127 individuals had been admitted as Veteran Members – 49 of which were generals or admirals in United States or Confederate States service.
Notable veteran officers admitted under this provision include the following -
- General William T. Sherman
- Lieutenant General Simon B. Buckner, CSA – Governor of Kentucky
- Lieutenant General James Longstreet, CSA
- Major General Christopher C. Augur
- Major General Silas Casey
- Major General Darius N. Couch
- Major General Thomas L. Crittenden
- Major General William H. Emory
- Major General William B. Franklin
- Major General Samuel Gibbs French
- Major General Winfield Scott Hancock
- Major General Guy V. Henry - Governor of Puerto Rico
- Major General William W. Loring
- Major General John A. Quitman
- Major General Thomas J. Wood
- Major General Henry Heth, CSA
- Brevet Major General James Barnet Fry
- Brevet Major General George W. Getty
- Brevet Major General Henry Jackson Hunt
- Rear Admiral Theodorus Bailey
- Rear Admiral Bancroft Gherardi
- Rear Admiral Thornton A. Jenkins
- Rear Admiral Stephen Luce - founder of the United States Naval War College
- Rear Admiral Alexander C. Rhind
- Brigadier General Henry Boynton Clitz
- Brigadier General Frederick T. Dent
- Brigadier General Gustavus De Russy
- Brigadier General Henry Prince
- Brigadier General Egbert L. Viele – U.S. Representative
- Commodore Oscar C. Badger
- Colonel Charles Grymes McCawley, USMC – Commandant of the United States Marine Corps
- Lieutenant Colonel John L. Broome, USMC
Honorary members
Only two individuals were chosen as an honorary members of the Aztec Club.[1]
- Chaplain John D. McCarty
- Brevet Lieutenant General Winfield Scott
Hereditary members
In 1883 provisions were also made to allow male relatives of officers who had died during the Mexican War, prior to the Club's founding, to become members. In 1887, membership was extended to the eldest son or nearest male relative of original and veteran members as hereditary members in order to keep the club alive after the deaths of the veterans.[2] Later, this rule was extended to include direct and collateral male descendants of eligible officers.
- Brigadier General Joshua Hall Bates
- Mr. Henry L. P. Beckwith
- Major Charles J. Biddle - World War I flying ace and recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross
- Rear Admiral Norman J. Blackwood
- Justice Milledge Lipscomb Bonham – Chief Justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court
- Lieutenant General James Carson Breckinridge, USMC - Grandson of Vice President and Confederate Major General John C. Breckenridge.
- Rear Admiral Silas Casey, III
- Alfred W. Gibbs - Mechanical engineer.
- Major General Frederick D. Grant – General in the Spanish–American War
- Major General Ulysses S. Grant, III – General in World War II
- 2nd Lieutenant Loyall Farragut - son of Admiral David Farragut
- Mayor George B. McClellan, Jr. – Mayor of New York City
- Major General David Dixon Porter, USMC – Medal of Honor recipient
- John Stone Stone – pioneering electrical engineer
- Rear Admiral Montgomery Meigs Taylor, USN
- Rear Admiral Aaron Ward, USN
- Major General William Wallace Wotherspoon – Army Chief of Staff
Trivia
As the Mexican War was fought only 14 years prior to the American Civil War, many senior officers in both the Union and Confederate armies had been members of the Aztec Club. Of 287 members who joined the society by 1895, 121 were generals in the Union or Confederate armies.
Two presidents of the United States were members of the Aztec Club – Franklin Pierce and Ulysses S. Grant.
Another president who was a veteran of the Mexican War was President and Major General Zachary Taylor, who, although having served with great distinction during the war and despite some sources to the contrary, was not a member of the Aztec Club. He does not appear on the roll of the 160 original members of the society in The Constitution of the Aztec Club of 1847 and the List of Members, 1893.[3] This is because the Club was formed by officers serving in Mexico City in 1847 and Taylor served in northeastern Mexico. The Aztec Club did not expand its membership beyond the original 160 members until 1871 – 21 years after Taylor's death. [4]
John C. Breckinridge, who was Vice President of the United States from 1857 to 1861 and a candidate for president in 1860, who served with the Army of Occupation of Mexico City as the major of the 3rd Kentucky Infantry, did not join the Aztec Club before his death in 1875. He served as a major general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War.
References
- 1 2 Aztec Club of 1847. Sesquicentenial History, 1847–1997. Richard Hoag Breithaupt, Jr. 1998. pp. 950–956.
- 1 2 Breithaupt, pp. 759–854.
- ↑ The Constitution of the Aztec Club of 1847 and the List of Members, 1893. Judd & Detweiler Printers. Washington, D.C. pp. 18–23.
- ↑ The Constitution of the Aztec Club of 1847 and the List of Members. 1893. Judd and DeWeiler, Printers. pg. 12.