Grande Voiture de Maryland













Home | 40 & 8 Programs | Grande Officers | Grande Committees | Cheminot and Locaux | Locaux Information | Membership | Membership Renewal information | Youth Sports





La Societe des Quarante Hommes et Huit Chevaux

Charles County Law Officer 'Hero of the Year'
 

408clean3.gif

2006-2007 Administrative Calendar

macpodium.jpg

2006-2007 Grande Chef de Gare
Sanford McGuire

Grande Promenade 2005 photos








































wpe3b.gif
Click to learn more.

 
 
 
 
 
 

To download the Forty and Eighter you will need Acrobat Reader. If you don't have it click the icon below and download it.

getacro.gif

2004 Petite Communique
 
Forty and Eighter for
 
 






 

La Societe des Quarante Hommes et Huit Chevaux, an independent fraternal organization of veterans, popularly known as the FORTY & EIGHT, was organized in 1920 by American Legionnaires as a fun and honor society. Now composed of veterans of both World Wars and the Korean, Vietnam and Desert Storm conflicts, it draws its origin from World War I when young Americans were sent to France to fight a war to end all wars. The narrow gauge railroads of France had boxcars (Voitures) that carried little more than half the capacity of American boxcars and these voitures were used to transport the men and horses to and from the fighting fronts. On the side of these little boxcars was stenciled the capacity of each, holding either forty men or eight horses, and these voitures became the trademark of our organization. If one could laugh at the train ride from the coast of France to the trenches crowded in these little boxcars only recently vacated by eight horses, one could surely adapt to the changes in his life when he returned home. Membership in the Forty & Eight is by invitation only for recognition of service to the American Legion and/or its programs.

From Grande Chef de Gare Donald E. Fellows
bz.jpg
Inside the guest book.






Maryland Merci Car
md_mb_01.jpg
The Baltimore & Ohio Museum, 901 W. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD, 21223, (410) 752-2490

The Merci Train was a train of 49 French railroad box cars filled with tens of thousands of gifts of gratitude from at least that many individual French citizens.  They were showing their appreciation for the more than 700 American box cars of relief goods sent to them by (primarily) individual Americans in 1948.  The Merci Train arrived in New York harbor on February 3rd, 1949 and each of the 48 American states at that time received one of the gift laden box cars.   The 49th box car was shared by Washington D.C. and the Territory of Hawaii.








































publiciste.jpg

Historien, Photographe', Publiciste (webmaster) Phil Jorgensen email