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The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America (NSCDA) is an American organization composed of women who are descended from an ancestor "who came to reside in an American Colony before 1776, and whose services were rendered during the Colonial Period." The organization has 44 corporate societies. The national headquarters is Dumbarton House in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. Edith Laurencin is the acting director since Carol Cadou's departure.
The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America | |
Abbreviation | NSCDA |
---|---|
Founded | April 8, 1891 |
Type | Non-profit, lineage society |
Focus | Historic preservation, education, patriotism |
Headquarters | Dumbarton House |
Membership | 15,000[citation needed] |
none, Edith Laurencin (Acting Director) | |
Publication | Dames in Uniform |
Website | nscda |
History
editThe organization was founded in 1891, shortly after the founding of a similar society, the Colonial Dames of America (CDA), which was created to have a centrally organized structure under the control of the parent Society in New York City.
The NSCDA was intended as a federation of State Societies in which each unit had a degree of autonomy.[1] Another society formed around the same time was the Daughters of the American Revolution. Organized following the United States Centennial of 1876 and a Centennial of the US Constitution in New York in 1889, the NSCDA has worked in historic preservation, restoration and the interpretation of historic sites since its New York Society first undertook the preservation of the Van Cortlandt House in 1897.
The organization includes 44 corporate societies. Its headquarters is located at Dumbarton House, in Washington, D.C. In addition to its activities in museum work, the Society sponsors scholarship programs and other historic preservation, patriotic service and educational projects. Historic house museums owned or operated by the NSCDA include:
- Andrew Low House, Savannah, Georgia
- Burgwin-Wright House, Wilmington, North Carolina
- Henry B. Clarke House, Chicago, Illinois
- Dumbarton House, Washington, DC, the Society's national headquarters
- Governor Stephen Hopkins House, Providence, Rhode Island
- Gunston Hall, Mason Neck, Virginia
- Haywood Hall, Raleigh, North Carolina
- Old Indian Agency House, Portage, Wisconsin (www.agencyhouse.org)
- Hoover-Minthorn House, Newberg, Oregon
- Liberty Hall, Frankfort, Kentucky
- McElroy Octagon House, San Francisco, California
- Plum Grove Historic House, Iowa City, Iowa
- Stenton, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Ximenez-Fatio House, St. Augustine, Florida
- Mount Clare, Baltimore, Maryland
- McAllister House Museum, Colorado Springs, Colorado
- Webb-Deane-Stevens Museum, Wethersfield, Connecticut
- Hotel de Paris Museum, Georgetown, Colorado
- Joel Lane Museum House, Raleigh, North Carolina
- Old First Presbyterian Church of Wilmington, Wilmington, Delaware
- Tate House, Portland, Maine
- Moffat-Ladd House, Portsmouth, New Hampshire
- Whitehall Museum House, Middletown, Rhode Island[2]
- William Hickling Prescott House, Boston, Massachusetts
- Wilton House Museum, Richmond, Virginia
- Peachfield, Westampton, New Jersey
Notable members
edit- Helen Gilman Noyes Brown (1867–1942), philanthropist
- Carol Cadou, museum curator and administrator, former executive director of the society from 2021 - 2024
- Sarah Johnson Cocke (1865–1944), writer and civic leader
- Alice Creelman (1858–1952), artist and art dealer
- Mary Mayo Crenshaw (1875–1951), author
- Ella Loraine Dorsey (1853–1935), author, journalist, and translator
- Marion Moncure Duncan (1913–1978), businesswoman and lineage society leader
- Anne Lyon Haight (1891–1977), author, essayist, and collector
- Mary Hilliard Hinton (1869–1961), painter, historian, and anti-suffragist
- Jane Tunstall Lingo (1924–2007), journalist and socialite
- Anne Hazen McFarland (1868–1930), physician and medical journal editor
- Florence MacKubin (1857–1918), portrait painter
- Mary Martha Presley Merritt (died 1994), politician
- Mary Lane Morrison (1907–1994), writer, historian and preservationist
- Theodora Agnes Peck (1882–1964), author and poet
- Isabel Weld Perkins (1876–1948), heiress, author, and society hostess
- Delia Lyman Porter (1858–1933), author, social reformer, and clubwoman
- Sara Agnes Rice Pryor (1830–1912), writer and community activist
- Sarah Corbin Robert (1886–1972), authority on parliamentary procedure
- Eron Rowland (1861/2–1951), historian and author
- Marion Margery Scranton (1884–1960), women’s suffrage activist
- Sarah Logan Wister Starr (1873–1956), humanitarian
- Lilian Carpenter Streeter (1854–1935), social reformer and author
- Presley Merritt Wagoner, 40th President General of the DAR
- Eva Ingersoll Wakefield (1892–1970), writer and poet
- Margaret Anderson Watts (1832–1905), social reformer
- May Rogers Webster (1873–1938), naturalist
- Anne Hollingsworth Wharton (1845–1928), writer and historian
- Helen M. Winslow (1851–1938), editor, author, publisher, and journalist
- Anna Wolcott (1868–1928), educator
- Frances Fisher Wood (1852–1938), educator, lecturer, and scientist
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America, Pennsylvania Headquarters Archived 2008-07-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Whitehall Museum House, c.1729". Visit Historic NSCDA Museums. Colonial Dames of America. Retrieved 1 August 2022.