
Last modified: 2026-04-25 by rick wyatt
Keywords: united states | united daughters of the confederacy |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
image located by Esteban Rivera, 2 March 2026
Source:
https://www.lelandlittle.com
See also:
The United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) is a nonprofit organization
classified as a charitable, patriotic, historical, and benevolent organization
for female descendants of Confederate Civil War soldiers engaging in the
commemoration of these ancestors, the funding of monuments to them established
on September 10, 1894 in Nashville, Tennessee first as "a national 'federation
of all Southern Women's Auxiliary, Memorial, and Soldiers' Aid Societies". The
UDC is the outgrowth of numerous ladies' hospital associations, sewing societies
and knitting circles that worked throughout the South during the War Between the
States to supply the needs of the soldiers. After the War, these organizations
kept pace with the changing times and evolved into cemetery, memorial, monument
and Confederate Home Associations and Auxiliaries to Camps of Confederate
Veterans. Out of these many local groups, which for nearly 30 years rendered
untold service to the South and her people, two statewide organizations came
into existence as early as 1890: the Daughters of the Confederacy in Missouri
and the Ladies Auxiliary of the Confederate Soldier’s Home in Tennessee. The
association with these two organizations makes the UDC the oldest patriotic
lineage organization in the country.
When the organizing meeting was held
in Nashville in 1894, the ladies chose the name National Association of the
Daughters of the Confederacy. The source of inspiration for the name was Gen.
John B. Gordon’s introduction of Winnie Davis on April 30, 1886, at a train
platform in West Point, Georgia. He presented her to an applauding throng of
Confederate Veterans as “the Daughter of the Confederacy.” In 1895 in Atlanta,
Georgia, at the second meeting of the ladies, the name was changed to United
Daughters of the Confederacy.
The UDC was incorporated under the laws of
the District of Columbia on July 18, 1919. As stated in the Articles of
Incorporation, the Objects of the society are Historical, Benevolent,
Educational, Memorial and Patriotic and include the following goals:
- To
honor the memory of those who served and those who fell in the service of the
Confederate States.
- To protect, preserve and mark the places made historic
by Confederate valor.
- To collect and preserve the material for a truthful
history of the War Between the States.
- To record the part taken by Southern
women in patient endurance of hardship and patriotic devotion during the
struggle and in untiring efforts after the War during the reconstruction of the
South.
- To fulfill the sacred duty of benevolence toward the survivors and
toward those dependent upon them.
- To assist descendants of worthy
Confederates in securing proper education.
- To cherish the ties of
friendship among the members of the Organization.
Sources:
https://hqudc.org/about/history-of-the-udc
https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/united-daughters-of-the-confederacy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Daughters_of_the_Confederacy
For additional information go to HQ (Headquarters) UDC (official website): https://hqudc.org/
Esteban Rivera, 2 March 2026
image located by Esteban Rivera, 2 March 2026
Source:
https://www.invaluable.com
Hand made First National flag design 18 by 12 inches. Ida Harris Culbertson Chapter No. 596 U.D.C, Kiowa, Okla. The ancestor of Ida Culbertson was Dr. E. Poe Harris Co. C 2nd Missouri, noted Physician and Indian History writer, the flag is hand stitched to white cardboard, is very good original condition, this flag is believed to be about 1896 or earlier, while Dr. Harris was still living.
Esteban Rivera, 2 March 2026