In 1932 an oak tree was planted in Balboa Park, San Diego California, and marked with a bronze plaque inscribed:
“Dedicated in honor of Arthur E. Vest, Department Commander of the Grand Army of the Republic by the Woman’s Relief Corps Department of California and Nevada, May 16, 1932”
Arthur E. Vest, as the plaque denotes, did serve as the California and Nevada Department Commander of the Grand Army of the Republic. He oversaw all the Posts in those two States and carried on the legacy of the men that served in the American Civil War.
On December 14, 1864 Arthur was discharged and sent home a disabled veteran. Six children were born were born to Arthur and Amanda. They relocated westward, and by 1878 the family settled near Des Moines, Iowa, and eventually further west to California.
Arthur joined the first veterans’ organization–the Grand Army of the Republic, nearly as soon as it was formed in 1866. He remained very active in the GAR his entire life.