Charlotte County
                    AMVETS
                                        Post 1999

 Gratitude is born in the hearts that recognize past and present sacrifices.
Douglas Jacobson receiving Medal of Honor
"Let us strive to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for
him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan."
                                                                                                                                                                                     - Abraham Lincoln -
The History of AMVETS, a National Organization

Truly AMVETS was born in the midst of war, for it was in August 1943, with victory still two years away,
that a new organization, later to be known as American Veterans of World War II, had its beginning.
Overseas the tide of battle was turning. Allies had swept through North Africa and Sicily. In the Pacific
fighting raged in New Guinea. Thousands of Americans had made the supreme sacrifice. Hundreds of
others were being mustered out of uniform with battle wounds and medical discharges. These men who
fought in history's greatest war found it natural to seek each other's company. They were united by similar
experiences...in jungles, in the Arctic, in deserts, in mountains, at sea, and in the skies. Thus, out of such
comradeship, AMVETS came to be.

TWO independent veterans clubs in Washington, D.C. - one formed on the campus of George Washington
University, the other among veterans employed by the government - joined together to sponsor a
servicemen's party. By September 1944 other such veterans clubs organized throughout America - in
California, Florida, Louisiana, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Texas. On November
11, 1944, Veterans Day, an article entitled "12,000,000 in Search of a Leader" appeared in Collier's
Magazine. This story, written by Walter Davenport, introduced the clubs and outlined
their mutual aims:

- To promote world peace
- To preserve the American Way of Life
- To help the veteran help himself.

In December, 18 leaders, representing these nine groups, met in Kansas City, Missouri. There a national
organization was chosen. The word AMVETS, coined by a newspaper reporter, soon became the official
name. The "White Clover," a flower which thrives in freedom throughout the world, is symbolic of the
struggle during World War II and is the adopted flower of AMVETS.
In October 1945, two months after the end of World War II, the first national convention was called in
Chicago. In 1946, AMVETS petitioned Congress for a federal charter. AMVETS, having displayed dignity and
sound approach to national problems, won the deep respect of Congress, and on July 23, 1947, President
Harry S. Truman signed the AMVETS Charter. The words of Senate Judiciary Committee echoed
throughout the land: "The Veterans of World War II are entitled to their own organization". And AMVETS
being "organized along sound lines and for worthy purposes ... having demonstrated its strength and
stability is entitled to the stability that a National Charter will afford." President Truman also commented,
"Were I a veteran of this War, I would prefer to have a veteran of World War II looking after my affairs,
than a veteran of some other war." To this day, no other World War II Veteran's Group has been so
honored.
AMVET Logo
Jeremy Birchfield receiving Purple Heart
flag shaped like North america