Lt. Gen Grant outside his headquarters tent in Virginia (Library of Congress) |
President Joe
Biden on Friday signed the National Defense Authorization Act, which includes
the appointment. Grant’s predecessors are George Washington (promoted in 1976)
and John J. Pershing (1919).
The push for
Grant to hold the rank was led by Sen. Sherrod Brown of his native Ohio and
Sen. Roy Blunt and Rep. Ann Wagner of Missouri. The bipartisan congressional
resolution was linked to celebrations of the 200th anniversary of
the officer’s birth. General of the armies is the highest military honor in the U.S.
The resolution recognized that victories achieved under Grant’s command “were
integral to the preservation of the United States of America and that he “is
among the most influential military commanders in the history of the United
States of America.”
The general
gained famed in the Western Theater – including wins at Shiloh and
Vicksburg -- before he moved east to oversee the final campaigns to quell the Confederacy
and Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. President Abraham Lincoln
appointed him lieutenant general in March 1864.
Grant served two terms as president, from 1869 to 1877.
“Grant’s exemplary leadership on the battlefield could only
be overshadowed by his commitment to a more just nation for all Americans
during the Reconstruction Era,” Brown said earlier this year.
Although
Grant’s presidency was wrapped in scandal, he is remembered for supporting
civil rights, suppressing the Ku Klux Klan, establishing the Department of
Justice and endorsing the 15th Amendment, which granted African-American
men the right to vote.
Anne
Marshall, executive director of the Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library at
Mississippi State University, earlier this month wrote in support of the promotion.
“I believe that the promotion would be much more than a
symbolic nod to a great military general,” Marshall said in an essay on The Conversation website. “Rather, it would highlight the overlooked legacy of a
man who fought to end the last vestiges of slavery.”
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