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It is a lifetime membership purchased with a lump sum payment, and assures the member of all the benefits of the Forty Eight membership with no additional payments or assessments in the future. WHO IS ELIGIBLE TO PURCHASE A PAID LIFE MEMBERSHIP IN LA SOCIETE? All Voyageurs in good standing are eligible.
La Socit des Quarante Hommes et Huit Chevaux (The Society of Forty Men and Eight Horses), is an independent, invitation only, honor society of American veterans and service members; more commonly known as The Forty and Eight. The Forty and Eight is committed to charitable and patriotic aims.
Forty-and-Eight boxcars (French: Quarante et huit), commonly referred to as Forty-and-Eights, were types of French boxcars (voiture) used by the French Army and Wehrmacht. British and American troops were transported to the Western Front in the boxcars marked with 40-8 to denote their capacity: 40 men or 8 horses.
American servicemen in France were transported to the battle front on narrow gauge French railroads (Chemin de Fer) inside boxcars (Voitures) that were half the size of American boxcars. Each French boxcar was stenciled with a 40/8, denoting its capacity to hold either forty men or eight horses.
The organization derives its name from the French Army box cars used to transport American soldiers to the western front during World War I. Each car had 408 stenciled on the side, which meant that it could carry 40 men or 8 horses.
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In fact, Psalm 40:8 says your law is within my heart. Christ has so hidden the Law of God in His heart, that His every thought, word, and action while on this earth was in complete obedience to God (John 5:19; 8:28). He was the fulfillment of the Law. He was the perfectly obedient One.
Cramped into narrow gauge boxcars, each stenciled with 40 Hommes/8 Chevaux, denoting its capacity to hold either 40 men or 8 horses. This uncomfortable mode of transportation was familiar common experience for every Doughboy that fought in the trenches; a mutual small misery among American soldiers.