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File:New-hampshire-soldiers-home.jpg
Many of the old soldiers' homes in the United States were constructed in high Victorian style, like the New Hampshire Soldiers' Home in Tilton, New Hampshire.

An old soldiers' home is a military veterans' retirement home, nursing home, or hospital, or sometimes an institution for the care of the widows and orphans of a nation's soldiers, sailors, and marines, etc.

United KingdomEdit

In the United Kingdom the Royal Hospital Chelsea was established by King Charles II in 1682 as a retreat for veterans.<ref name=guide3>Guidebook, p. 3</ref> The provision of a hostel rather than the payment of pensions was inspired by {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in Paris.<ref name=guide3/>

The Royal Hospital Chelsea, often called simply Chelsea Hospital,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> is a retirement home and nursing home for some 300 veterans of the British Army. It is a 66-acre site located on Royal Hospital Road in Chelsea, London. It is an independent charity and relies partly upon donations to cover day-to-day running costs to provide care and accommodation for veterans.

Any man or woman who is over the age of 65 and served as a regular soldier may apply to become a Chelsea Pensioner (i.e. a resident), on the basis they have found themselves in a time of need and are "of good character". They must not, however, have any dependent spouse or family and former Officers must have served at least 12 years in the ranks before receiving a commission.

The site for the Royal Hospital was an area of Chelsea which held an incomplete building "Chelsey College", a theological college James I founded in 1609.<ref name="guide3" /> The Royal Hospital opened its doors to the Chelsea Pensioners in 1692 for "the relief and succour" of veterans. Some of the first soldiers admitted included those injured at the Battle of Sedgemoor.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The hospital maintains a 'military-based culture which puts a premium on comradeship'. The in-pensioners are formed into three companies, each headed by a Captain of Invalids (an ex-Army officer responsible for the 'day to day welfare, management and administration' of the pensioners under his charge).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

There is also a Secretary who traditionally was responsible for paying the Army pensions, but today they look after the annual budget, staff, buildings and grounds. Further senior staff include the Physician & Surgeon, the Matron, the Quartermaster, the Chaplain and the Adjutant.<ref>Annual Report, 2011</ref>

A Board of Commissioners has governed the Royal Hospital since 1702. The ex-officio chairman of the board is HM Paymaster General (whose predecessor Sir Stephen Fox was instrumental in founding the Hospital in the seventeenth century). The purpose of the Board is 'to guide the development of The Royal Hospital, ensuring the care and well-being of the Chelsea Pensioners who live there and safeguarding the historic buildings and grounds, which it owns in trust'.<ref>Corporate Information Royal Hospital Chelsea. Retrieved 24 August 2017.</ref>

Royal Hospital is also a ward of the Kensington and Chelsea Council. The population at the 2011 Census was 7,252.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Greenwich Hospital was a permanent home for retired sailors of the Royal Navy, which operated from 1692 to 1869. Its buildings were later used by the Royal Naval College, Greenwich and the University of Greenwich, and are now known as the Old Royal Naval College. The word "hospital" was used in its original sense of a place providing hospitality for those in need of it, and did not refer to medical care, although the buildings included an infirmary which, after Greenwich Hospital closed, operated as Dreadnought Seaman's Hospital until 1986. The foundation which operated the hospital still exists, for the benefit of former Royal Navy personnel and their dependents. It now provides sheltered housing on other sites.

The hospital was created as the Royal Hospital for Seamen at Greenwich on the instructions of Queen Mary II, who had been inspired by the sight of wounded sailors returning from the Battle of La Hogue in 1692. She ordered the King Charles wing of the palace—originally designed by architect John Webb for King Charles II in 1664—to be remodelled as a naval hospital to provide a counterpart for the Chelsea Hospital for soldiers. Sir Christopher Wren and his assistant Nicholas Hawksmoor gave their services free of charge as architects of the new Royal Hospital. Sir John Vanbrugh succeeded Wren as architect, completing the complex to Wren's original plans.<ref>J. Bold, P. Guillery, D. Kendall, Greenwich: an architectural history of the Royal Hospital for Seamen and the Queen's House (Yale University Press) 2001.</ref>

Construction was financed through an endowment, financed through the transfer of £19,500 in fines paid by merchants convicted of smuggling in 1695, a public fundraising appeal which brought in £9,000, and a £2,000 annual contribution from Treasury. In 1705 an additional £6,472 was paid into the fund, comprising the liquidated value of estates belonging to the recently hanged pirate Captain William Kidd.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The first of the principal buildings constructed was the King Charles Court (the oldest part dating back to the restoration), completed in 1705. The first governor, Sir William Gifford, took up office in 1708.<ref name=memorial>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

United StatesEdit

Federal homesEdit

File:Soldiers' Home - Roose's companion and guide to Washington and vicinity (1887) (14793918403) (cropped).jpg
1880's "Soldiers' Home" in Washington D.C. (Roose's companion and guide to Washington and vicinity (1887))

The first national veterans' home in the United States was the United States Naval Home approved in 1811 but not opened until 1834 in the Philadelphia Naval Yard. The Naval Home was moved to Gulfport, Mississippi in 1976.<ref name="answers.com">"US History Encyclopedia: Soldiers' Home" in Answers.com at (Retrieved 4 January 2010), and Philadelphia Area Consortium of Special Collections Libraries (PACSCL), "Views of the U.S. Naval Asylum and Hospital, Philadelphia" in Philadelphia Area Consortium of Special Collections Libraries at archives.pacscl.org (Retrieved 4 January 2010)</ref> It was subsequently opened to veterans of other services and is now the Gulfport Campus of the Armed Forces Retirement Home.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The first Army national old soldiers' home in the U.S. was established in Washington, D.C., in 1851.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> General Winfield Scott founded the Soldier's Home in Washington, D.C., and another (since fallen into disuse) in Harrodsburg, Kentucky with about $118,000 in leftover proceeds of assessments on occupied Mexican towns and the sale of captured tobacco in the Mexican–American War.<ref name="Grant2007">Template:Cite book</ref>

The Old Soldier's Home, now known as the Armed Forces Retirement Home, was the site of President Lincoln's Cottage, a 34-room Gothic Revival cottage, which served as Lincoln's summer home during the American Civil War.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is adjacent to National Cemetery, the first federal military cemetery in the United States. The Home has remained in continuous use since its establishment. It is located on a Template:Convert wooded campus overlooking the U.S. Capitol in the heart of Washington, D.C., three miles from the White House,<ref name=":0" /> and continues to serve as a retirement home for U.S. enlisted men and women. Both the Washington, D.C., and Gulfport soldiers' and sailors' homes are funded through a small monthly contribution from the pay of members of the U.S. Armed Services.

Following the American Civil War the federal government increased the number of National Military Homes, and took over a few formerly state-run old soldiers' homes. By 1933 there were 17 federally managed veterans homes. All except the first two of these homes were eventually combined with other federal government agencies to become part of what is now called the Veterans Administration, or U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs established in 1930.Template:Citation needed

State homesEdit

Caring for the disabled and elderly, and the widows and orphans of men who died in the war became a concern even before the Civil War ended. For example, in 1864 Fitch's Home for Soldiers and Their Orphans was opened with private donations in Connecticut. Various female benevolent societies pushed for the creation of a long-term care federal or state soldier home system at the end of the war.<ref name="archives.gov">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Large veterans organizations like the Grand Army of the Republic<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and United Confederate Veterans eventually also worked for the creation of federal and state homes to care for disabled or elderly veterans. In a few cases veterans organizations on their own raised the money to buy property and build veterans homes. Most of these were quickly turned over to the state government to fund and manage. The majority of state legislatures established veterans homes paid for by state monies from the start. 43 states managed 55 functioning state veterans homes before 1933. Fourteen of those states also had a federal veterans home open at the same time as their state veterans home.

Eleven states had two or more state veterans homes in operation at the same time (two of which also had a federal home). Some states simply had several homes at once. A few states admitted veterans' widows, and a few other states established separate homes for the widows and orphans. A few states had separate Union and Confederate old soldiers' homes. The first of 16 Confederate homes was opened in 1881 in Georgetown, Kentucky.<ref>R. B. Rosenburg, Living Monuments: Confederate Soldier's Homes in the New South (Chapel Hill, N.C.: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1993), 28–29, citing Georgetown Weekly Times, 13 July; 30 November 1881; 14 November 1883; "Confederate Soldiers' Home," "Subscribers to Confederate Soldiers' Home and Widows' and Orphans' Asylum," Kentucky State Archives, Frankfort; Southern Historical Society Papers, 11 (1883): 432.</ref> Confederate soldiers' homes were supported entirely by subscribers or by the states, with no funds from the federal government against which the Confederates had fought.

A few state-run old soldiers' homes were eventually folded into the federal veterans home system. As their last few Civil War veterans were dying in the 1930s, some states chose to close their old soldiers' homes, and other states began admission of veterans from more recent wars. Several of these state old soldiers' homes have been modernized and stopped serving veterans.

City homesEdit

Soldier homes in major cities were among the earliest, usually starting more as hotels for men passing through town, but increasingly taking on disabled servicemen. These were usually operated as paying businesses rather than being fully funded by the government.<ref name="archives.gov"/> Philadelphia had two soldiers' homes which were associated with nearby saloons and got their start as a part of the refreshment and lodging business.<ref>Library Company of Philadelphia, "McA 5778.F Civil War Volunteer Saloons and Hospitals Ephemera Collection 1861‐1868" ([Philadelphia, Pa.: LCP, 2006), 5. Digitized (Retrieved 16 December 2009).</ref> Women activists also helped establish disabled soldiers' homes in Boston, Chicago, and Milwaukee, or in conjunction with the U.S. Sanitary Commission in 25 other cities. The Boston home closed in 1869, the Philadelphia homes closed in 1872, the Chicago Soldiers' Home lasted until 1877, and Milwaukee turned into a federal home.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

US Sanitary Commission homes, lodges, and restEdit

During the Civil War, the US Sanitary Commission provided Union servicemen "[t]emporary aid and protection,—food, lodging, care, etc.,—for soldiers in transitn[sic], chiefly the discharged, disabled, and furloughed." By 1865 the Commission operated 18 "soldiers' homes," 11 "lodges," and one "rest" in 15 states north and south (for a list see Commission bulletin, 3:1279). Most of their homes were war-time facilities and were closed at war's end. They are not included in the following list.

List of historic old soldiers' and sailors' homes in the United StatesEdit

(By state)<ref>This list does not include soldiers' orphans' homes separate from the old soldiers' home, nor U.S. Sanitary Commission soldiers' homes.</ref>

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  • Colorado State Soldiers and Sailors Home, Homelake, Colorado<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Fitch's Home for Soldiers and Their Orphans, Darien, Connecticut<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Confederate Soldiers' Home a.k.a. Georgia Soldiers' Home, Atlanta, Georgia<ref>Rosenburg, 215 and 218, says the Georgia Dept. of Archives and History, Atlanta, has applications for admission, Board of Trustees letters received, minutes, and reports, hospital record book, invoices, list of persons subscribing contributions, payrolls, record of miscellaneous functions, record of admissions, discharges and deaths, record of donations, register of inmates, George N. Saussey Diary, and visitors' register, and the Atlanta Historical Society, Atlanta, has a Confederate veterans file.</ref>
  • Idaho State Soldiers Home, Boise, Idaho<ref>Boise Idaho Veterans Home at http://www.veteransareheroes.com/BoiseVetHomes.aspx (Retrieved 2 December 2009).</ref>
  • Soldiers' Home, Chicago, Illinois<ref>A.T. Andreas, History of Chicago: from the Earliest Period to the Present Time (Chicago: A.T. Andreas, 1884–1886; Digitized by BYU Family History Archives) 2:310-13.</ref>
  • Danville Branch National Military Home, Danville, Illinois<ref name="Ancestry">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Logan Home a.k.a. Maywood Home for Soldiers' Widows, Maywood, Illinois<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Illinois Soldiers and Sailors Home a.k.a. Illinois Veterans Home, Quincy, Illinois<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Kansas Soldiers' Home, Fort Dodge, Kansas<ref>Ford County Historical Society, "4th of July, 1890 Fort Dodge, Kansas Soldiers Home" at http://www.skyways.org/orgs/fordco/july.html (Retrieved 4 December 2009).Template:Dead link</ref>
  • Kansas State Soldiers' Home a.k.a. Western Branch National Military Home, Leavenworth, Kansas<ref name="Ancestry"/>
  • Confederate Soldiers' Home and Widows' and Orphans' Asylum, Georgetown, Kentucky<ref>Rosenburg, 216, says the Kentucky State Archives, Frankfort, has a list of Subscribers to the Confederate Soldiers' Home and Widows' and Orphans' Asylum.</ref>
  • Kentucky Confederate Soldiers' Home, Pewee Valley, Kentucky<ref>Rosenburg, 216, says the Kentucky State Archives, Frankfort, has Board of Trustees minutes, clothing issue book, commandant reports, hospital register, inmates register, miscellaneous reports, officer and employee payroll, physician and undertaker records, purchase ledgers, and rules and regulations.</ref>
  • Soldiers' Home at Harrodsburg, Kentucky<ref name="Grant2007" />
  • Soldiers' Home of Louisiana a.k.a. Camp Nicholls Soldier's Home, New Orleans, Louisiana<ref>Rosenburg, 216, says the Louisiana Historical Association Collection at the Howard-Tilton Memorial Library, Tulane Univ., New Orleans, has Board of Directors correspondence, House Committee reports, Investigating Committee reports, membership lists, minutes, President reports, reports 1886–1938, Secretary reports; clippings and pamphlets, financial reports, rules and regulations, Superintendent reports, and Surgeon reports.</ref>
  • Eastern Branch National Military Home, Togus, Maine<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Beauvoir Confederate Soldiers' Home a.k.a. Jefferson Davis Beauvoir Memorial Soldiers' Home, Biloxi, Mississippi<ref>Rosenburg, 216, says the William D. McCain Library, Univ. of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, has Board of Directors correspondence, minute books 1920–1936, and reports, and the Mississippi Dept. of Archives and History, Jackson, has the register of inmates.</ref>
  • Biloxi Home [National Home] a.k.a. VA Medical Center, Biloxi, Mississippi<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Veterans Memorial Home, Menlo Park, New Jersey<ref>Deborah Fitts, "Kearny Veterans Home Statue Will Be Replaced" in Civil War News [Internet site] at {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Home for Disabled Soldiers, Newark, New Jersey<ref>Frank John Urquhart, History of the City of Newark, New Jersey (New York: Lewis Historical Publ., 1913; digitized by Google Books, 2006), 2:719.</ref>
  • Veterans Memorial Home, Vineland, New Jersey<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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File:NationalMilitaryHomeDayton.JPG
Soldiers home in Dayton, Ohio

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  • Oklahoma Confederate Home a.k.a. Oklahoma Veterans Center, Ardmore, Oklahoma<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Oklahoma Union Soldiers' Home, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Oregon State Soldiers' Home a.k.a. Roseburg Branch National Military Home, Roseburg, Oregon<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Battle Mountain Sanitarium National Military Home, Hot Springs, South Dakota<ref>United States, National Archives, "Sample Case Files of Members, Battle Mountain Sanitarium, 1907–1934" in Selected Military Personnel Records in ARC at www.archives.gov/research/arc/topics/personnel-files (Retrieved 16 December 2009).</ref>
  • South Dakota State Soldiers' Home a.k.a. Michael J. Fitzmaurice Veterans Home, Hot Springs, South Dakota<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Texas Confederate Woman's Home, north of Austin, Texas<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Southern Branch National Military Home, Hampton, Virginia<ref name="Ancestry"/>
  • Virginia Confederate Soldiers' Home a.k.a. Lee Camp Soldiers' Home, Richmond, Virginia<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>National Trust for Historic Preservation: National Soldiers Home Historic District, NTHP List of 11 Most Endangered Historic Places (2015).</ref><ref>National Park Service: Veterans Affairs National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Northwestern Branch, Milwaukee, NPS Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary.</ref> The most intact Soldiers Home in the country and the only one with the majority of its surrounding recuperative village remaining.<ref name="Ancestry"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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