Today is Memorial Day in the United States, which originated as a day of remembrance for Union soldiers who died in the American Civil War. (It’s also a federal holiday, so please excuse the late post!) Not too many comic book characters go back to the Civil War, but there is at least one character who participated in it, namely Wolverine. While the mainstream continuity version of Wolverine was born in the late 1880s, the film version—as shown in X-Men Origins: Wolverine—was born in 1845 and fought in the Civil War on the side of the Union.

Naturally, Wolverine didn’t die in the Civil War, so he doesn’t quite fit the bill for Memorial Day. But his Civil War veteran status raises an interesting question: could he qualify for a pension?

The Civil War marked a major expansion in military pensions with the passage of a new military pension act on July 14, 1862. However, pensions were initially only available to soldiers who had been injured or disabled in the line of duty. 17 Stat. 566-69 (1863). Given his healing factor, Wolverine wouldn’t qualify. The Dependent and Disability Pension Act of 1890 removed the battlefield injury requirement but still limited pensions to veterans who had become unable to perform manual labor. Once again, Wolverine is out of luck.

Finally, in 1907, the McCumber bill expanded pensions to include all Civil War veterans who served at least 90 days and were at least 62 years old. 34 Stat. 879 (1907). Born in 1845, Wolverine would qualify beginning the same year the bill was passed. Under the new law, he would collect $12/month at 62, $15/month at 70, and $20/month at 75. That $20 would be $462 in today’s money, or $5500/year. Later laws increased the pension amounts somewhat but they were never indexed to inflation.

So could Wolverine have collected that pension in perpetuity? He probably could have. The government continued to pay pensions to Civil War veterans and their families long after the war ended. Gertrude Janeway, a widow of a Civil War veteran, collected a widow’s pension until she died in 2003. As of 2009 there were still two children of Civil War veterans drawing veterans’ benefits.

On the other hand, a few hundred dollars a year hardly seems worth exposing his immortal status over, not to mention that attracting the attention of the military is probably pretty low on his list of priorities. Still, it’s nice to know that, as a veteran, Wolverine would continue to be supported for his service to the US government.