Item #M0303-103
Price:
In bronze gilt, Spanish-style castles in the corners of the cross, each castle with an embedded glass stone indicating a past camp commander, the laurel wreath surrounding the membership cross signifying past command, measuring 46.3 mm (w) x 51.5 mm (h) inclusive of its integral ring, bronze gilt cannon/sword/anchor/rifle with "United" suspension, Colonel's rank insignia clasp on the American flag ribbon, the flag flanked by red edges, the Colonel's rank insignia clasp with a bronze gilt Department Graves Registration Officer wreath suspended from it, eagle over shield and open-ended wreath pinback hanger, the eagle with a glass stone representing its eye, the hanger with numerous handwritten inscriptions and maker marked "S.N. MEYER, WASH'N, D.C." on its reverse, extremely fine.
Footnote: The United Spanish War Veterans was an American veterans organization which consisted of veterans of the Spanish-American War, the Philippine-American War and the China Relief Expedition. Soon after the Spanish-American War ended, in early 1899, discharged veterans formed fraternal societies to keep in touch with their former comrades. These included the Spanish War Veterans, the Spanish-American War Veterans, the Servicemen of the Spanish War, American Veterans of Foreign Service, the Army of the Philippines, the Veteran Army of the Philippines, the Legion of Spanish War Veterans and other smaller organizations. At the start of the 20th Century, these groups began to merge. In 1904, the three largest groups, the Spanish War Veterans, the Spanish-American War Veterans and the Servicemen of the Spanish War joined to form the United Spanish War Veterans. They became the largest and most influential of the Spanish-American War societies. In 1906, the Legion of Spanish War Veterans would merge with the United Spanish War Veterans. The Legion existed in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New Hampshire. In 1908, the Veteran Army of the Philippines, composed of soldiers, sailors and Marines who had served in the Philippine Islands, also merged with the United Spanish War Veterans. The membership of United Spanish War Veterans thus consisted of veterans of three distinct wars: the Spanish-American War (April 1898 to February 1899, the fighting having ended by July 1898, but the Treaty of Peace was not signed until February 6, 1899), the Philippine-American War (February 1899 to July 1902, a conflict with Filipinos who refused to accept the annexation of the islands by the United States, President Theodore Roosevelt declaring the conflict at an end on July 4, 1902, though violence by Moro tribesmen continued until 1913) and the Chinese Relief Expedition (1900 to 1901, commonly referred to as "The Boxer Rebellion," the veterans who had served in it were placed with the Spanish War and Philippine Insurrection veterans on the federal government pension bills, The “Boxer Rebellion” veterans accepted into the USWV in the early 1920s). The United Spanish War Veterans existed until 1992, when the last member, Nathan E. Cook, died one month before his 107th birthday at the Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center in Phoenix, Arizona. He is often incorrectly called the last surviving veteran of the Spanish-American War. In fact, Cook was a veteran of the Philippine-American War of 1899-1902. He enlisted in the United States Navy in 1901 at the age of sixteen.