Butt led a distinguished — and varied — career before perishing during the Titanic disaster.
According to Arlington National Cemetery's website, Butt started out as a reporter, but later enlisted in the US Army during the Spanish-American War.
He served in Cuba and the Philippines. Later, he became President Theodore Roosevelt's military aide in 1908. He served Roosevelt's successor William Taft in the same capacity.
Arlington National Cemetary's website noted that Butt's "health began to deteriorate in 1912 because of his attempts to remain neutral during the bitter personal quarrel" between Roosevelt and Taft, possibly prompting his decision to travel to Europe.
There are a number of unverified accounts of Butt's behavior during the sinking — with many sensationalized stories of the military officer leading the evacuation or threatening male passengers who tried to ignore the ship's "women and children first" protocol.
"If Archie could have selected a time to die he would have chosen the one God gave him," Taft said, in a private memorial service, according to the Smithsonian. "His life was spent in self-sacrifice, serving others... Everybody who knew him called him Archie. I couldn't prepare anything in advance to say here. I tried, but couldn't. He was too near me... he had become as a son or a brother."
The president later broke down weeping while delivering the eulogy at Butt's funeral.