• Read Object 63: Disabled Union Veterans 

    History of VA in 100 Objects

    Object 63: Disabled Union Veterans 

    The North’s victory in the Civil War came at an enormous cost to the more than two million men who fought for the Union cause. Over 350,000 lost their lives due to battle or disease. Almost as many were wounded in action. According to Northern medical records, Union surgeons performed just under 30,000 amputations during the war. For these disabled Union Veterans, Congress made provisions to provide monetary compensation. In July 1861, lawmakers hastily passed a law for Union recruits making them eligible for the same pension allowances as soldiers in the Regular Army. Later in 1862, for the first time, a pension law explicitly granted benefits not just for men wounded in battle but also to those suffering from “disease contracted while in the service of the United States.”

  • Read Object 50: Commissioner of Pensions Annual Report

    History of VA in 100 Objects

    Object 50: Commissioner of Pensions Annual Report

    In 1832, the federal government found itself with a pension problem largely of its own making. In June, Congress passed a law granting a pension to all surviving Revolutionary War Veterans who had served for at least six months, but the increased applications overwhelmed the staff handling claims. A Commissioner of Pensions was then appointed to address the issues.

  • Read Object 16: War of 1812 Widow’s Pension Claim

    History of VA in 100 Objects

    Object 16: War of 1812 Widow’s Pension Claim

    In 1776, the fledging American government passed the first national law compensating soldiers and sailors disabled in the Revolution, but it was slower to make any provisions for widow's pension claims.

  • Read Object 2: Bounty land warrant

    History of VA in 100 Objects

    Object 2: Bounty land warrant

    For a nation with limited financial resources, bounty land warrants were an appealing tool to encourage military enlistments. The promise of free 160 acres was the country's second benefit authorized for Veterans. However, the measure had devastating effect on the Indian nations that were dispossessed from the land.