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Grays Armory

Cleveland Grays Armory
Cleveland Grays Armory Comprehensive.jpg
Grays Armory
Grays Armory is located in Cleveland
Grays Armory
Grays Armory is located in Ohio
Grays Armory
Grays Armory is located in the US
Grays Armory
Location 1234 Bolivar Rd., Cleveland, Ohio
Coordinates 41°29′56″N 81°40′56″W / 41.49889°N 81.68222°W / 41.49889; -81.68222Coordinates: 41°29′56″N 81°40′56″W / 41.49889°N 81.68222°W / 41.49889; -81.68222
Area 0.5 acres (0.20 ha)
Built 1894
Architect Bate, Fenimore C.
Architectural style Romanesque, Richardsonian Romanesque
NRHP reference # 73001409
Added to NRHP March 28, 1973

Grays Armory is a historic building in Cleveland, Ohio. It was built by the Cleveland Grays, a private military company which was founded in 1837. This is one of the oldest standing buildings in downtown Cleveland.

The Cleveland Grays is a social organization devoted to the promotion of patriotism and the preservation of the military heritage of Greater Cleveland. It was founded as a volunteer private military company at a time when the common or constitutional militia languished due to disinterest and neglect by state politicians.

The unit's original purpose was twofold: to provide assistance and support to the local law enforcement authorities of the time as well as to provide a first line of defense for the city in the event that the fighting in Canada's Rebellions of 1837 spilled over the border and into the United States resulting in a third war with the United Kingdom in less than a century. The unit's motto is Semper Paratus (from the Latin: "Always Ready").

The first organizational meeting was held on August 28, 1837, and on September 18, seventy-eight men joined the active company. At the time of its founding, the unit was called The Cleveland City Guards but within the next year the membership decided that their organization would be known by reference to the gray color of their uniforms. On November 29, 1838 the Grays made one of the first of their many parade appearances fully dressed in their distinctive gray uniforms and tall black bearskin caps. As the years passed, those who had earned the status of "Pioneer" for their membership of twenty-five or more years were entitled to add leather aprons to their uniforms and to carry axes when on parade.

The Grays saw military service as a unit during the Civil War and the Spanish–American War. Reforms of the country's militia system which began with the Militia Act of 1903 and continued with subsequent legislation at the state and federal levels meant that the era of private military companies' official participation in national military affairs had come to an end and while the Grays, under the leadership of Ludwig S. Connelly, were able to enlist in the Ohio National Guard (ONG) for duty during the Mexican Punitive Expedition, they essentially did so as a group of private citizens enlisting en masse and not as a private military company. Their participation in World War I, which began immediately upon their ONG unit's release from duty on the Mexican border, was the last conflict in which the Grays saw active service even as a group of enlistees. Individual members have served in subsequent conflicts.


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