United Daughters of the Confederacy

The United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) is an American hereditary association of women engaging in the commemoration of Confederate Civil War soldiers, the funding of monuments to them, and the promotion of the pseudo-historical Lost Cause ideology and white supremacy.[1][2][3][4][5][6] It was established in 1894 in Nashville, Tennessee. In the early 1900s the organization often applauded the Ku Klux Klan and funded the building of a monument to the Klan in 1926.[6][7][8] The UDC has been labeled as neo-Confederate by the Southern Poverty Law Center.[9]

United Daughters of the Confederacy
Official badge, depicting the "Stars and Bars", the first flag of the Confederacy
AbbreviationUDC
EstablishedSeptember 10, 1894 (1894-09-10)
Founders
Founded atNashville, Tennessee, U.S.
Type501(c)(3), charitable organization
54-0631483
HeadquartersRichmond, Virginia, U.S.
Coordinates37.5571518°N 77.4738453°W / 37.5571518; -77.4738453
Membership (2015)
19,000
Nelma Crutcher
PublicationUDC Magazine
SubsidiariesChildren of the Confederacy
Websitehqudc.org
Formerly called
National Association of the Daughters of the Confederacy

The group's headquarters are in the Memorial to the Women of the Confederacy building in Richmond, Virginia, the former CSA capital. In May 2020, this building was damaged by fire during the George Floyd protests.[10][11]

Formation and purpose

The group was founded on September 10, 1894, by Caroline Meriwether Goodlett and Anna Davenport Raines as the National Association of the Daughters of the Confederacy. The first chapter was formed in Nashville.[12] The name was soon changed to United Daughters of the Confederacy.[2] Their stated intention was to "tell of the glorious fight against the greatest odds a nation ever faced, that their hallowed memory should never die." Their primary activity was to support the construction of Confederate memorials.[13] The UDC argues that its members also support U.S. troops and honor veterans of all U.S. wars.[1]

In 1896, the organization established the Children of the Confederacy to impart similar values to younger generations through a mythical depiction of the Civil War and Confederacy. According to historian Kristina DuRocher, "Like the KKK's children's groups, the UDC utilized the Children of the Confederacy to impart to the rising generations their own white-supremacist vision of the future."[14] The UDC denies assertions that it promotes white supremacy.[15]

The communications studies scholar W. Stuart Towns notes the UDC's role "in demanding textbooks for public schools that told the story of the war and the Confederacy from a definite southern point of view." He adds that their work is one of the "essential elements [of] perpetuating Confederate mythology."[16]

The UDC was incorporated on July 18, 1919. Its headquarters is in the Memorial Building to the Women of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia, built in the 1950s.[17][18]

History

Early work

Monument dedicated by the UDC on August 8, 1908, Bentonville, Arkansas
Battlefield memorial dedicated by the UDC on September 19, 1928

Across the Southern United States, associations were founded after the Civil War, chiefly by women, to organize burials of Confederate soldiers, establish and care for permanent cemeteries, organize commemorative ceremonies, and sponsor impressive monuments as a permanent way of remembering the Confederate cause and tradition.[19]

Confederate Memorial Day observance in front of the Monument to Confederate Dead, Arlington National Cemetery, on June 8, 2014

The organization was "strikingly successful at raising money to build monuments, lobbying legislatures and Congress for the reburial of Confederate dead, and working to shape the content of history textbooks."[20] They also raised money to care for the widows and children of the Confederate dead. Most of these memorial associations gradually merged into the United Daughters of the Confederacy, which grew from 17,000 total members in 1900 to nearly 100,000 by World War I.[21]

Monuments, memorials, and charity

The UDC was influential primarily in the early twentieth century across the South, where its main role was to preserve and uphold the memory of the Confederate veterans, especially those husbands, sons, fathers and brothers who died in the Civil War. Memory and memorials became the central focus of the organization.[1][22]

Historian Jacquelyn Dowd Hall notes that the UDC had a particular interest in the position of Southern (Confederate) women, with "a commitment to bolstering vanquished and disheartened veterans and keeping the memory of the dead alive. But it was also committed to immortalizing the heroism of Confederate women, whose valor, its leaders believed, had been every bit as important as men's." The UDC's methods were wide-ranging and ahead of their times:

UDC leaders were determined to assert women's cultural authority over virtually every representation of the region's past. This they did by lobbying for state archives and museums, national historic sites, and historic highways; compiling genealogies; interviewing former soldiers; writing history textbooks; and erecting monuments, which now moved triumphantly from cemeteries into town centers. More than half a century before women's history and public history emerged as fields of inquiry and action, the UDC, with other women's associations, strove to etch women's accomplishments into the historical record and to take history to the people, from the nursery and the fireside to the schoolhouse and the public square.[23]

"The number of women's clubs devoted to filiopietism and history was staggering," says historian W. Fitzhugh Brundage, noting that women were much more likely to be involved in a variety of (historical) organizations than men, who devoted their energies to fraternal societies. Brundage notes that after women's suffrage came in 1920, the historical role of the women's organizations eroded.[24]

After 1900 the UDC became an umbrella organization coordinating local memorial groups.[25] The UDC women specialized in sponsoring local memorials. After 1945, they were active in placing historical markers along Southern highways.[26] The UDC has also been active in national causes during wartime. According to the organization, during World War I, it funded 70 hospital beds at the American Military Hospital on the Western front and contributed over US$82,000 for French and Belgian war orphans. The homefront campaign raised $24 million for war bonds and savings stamps. Members also donated $800,000 to the Red Cross. During World War II, they gave financial aid to student nurses.

In 1933 the Tennessee branch of UDC donated $50,000 for the construction of a Confederate memorial hall on the campus of the George Peabody College for Teachers which merged with Vanderbilt University in 1979.[27][28] A university effort to remove the inscription "Confederate" from the building, resisted by the UDC, led to a 2005 Tennessee appeals court ruling that the inscription could be removed only if the UDC donation was returned at present value. In 2016 an anonymous source donated $1.2 million to the university specifically for that purpose, and the inscription was removed.[27][28]

During the George Floyd protests, multiple Confederate statues were vandalized and destroyed in Birmingham and Richmond.[29]

Memoirs

The UDC encouraged women to publish their experiences in the war, beginning with biographies of major southern figures, such as Varina Davis's of her husband Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy. Later, women began adding more of their own experiences to the "public discourse about the war," in the form of memoirs, such as those published in the early 1900s by Sara Pryor, Virginia Clopton, Louise Wright and others. They also recommended structures for the memoirs. By the turn of the twentieth century, a dozen memoirs by southern women were published. These memoirs were part of the growing public memory about the antebellum years and the Lost Cause narrative, which critics have described as white supremacist, as they vigorously defended the Confederacy and its founding principles (which included the enslavement of African-Americans).[30][31]

Southern Cross of Honor

The Southern Cross of Honor was a commemorative medal established by the United Daughters of the Confederacy for members of the United Confederate Veterans. It was proposed at a meeting in 1898, with 78,761 crosses issued by 1913.[32][33] The medal was never authorized to be worn on the United States army, navy, or Marine Corps uniform.[34]

Scholarships

During the first decades of their existence, the UDC focused on caring for Confederate soldiers and their widows. When the numbers of Confederate veterans began to dwindle, they focused on their remaining objectives.  Education of the descendants of those who served the Confederacy became one of the key interests of the organization.[35] Some state divisions within the UDC built dormitories and sponsored scholarships, but there was no coordinated support for education by the national organization.  The divisions were responsible for scholarships and building dormitories for women.  At the 1907 General Convention, Caroline Meriwether Goodlett spoke of the shift in the UDC's focus.  As monuments were erected, she "sat by ... thinking that the monument fever would abate." She believed that "the most thoughtful and best educated women" in the organization should have realized that the "grandest monument (they) could build in the South would be an educated motherhood."[36]

The UDC combined education with support of the military during World War II by establishing a nurses' training fund. Each scholarship provided approximately $100 per year for a three-year nursing program.  When a scholarship was offered, local Chapters were encouraged to contact local schools to locate students who needed assistance to fund their education.[37]

In addition, the UDC sponsors essay and poetry compositions, in which the participants are not to use the phrase "Civil War," "War Between the States" being the preferred term.[38]

Children of the Confederacy

The Children of the Confederacy, also known as the CofC, is an auxiliary organization to the UDC. The official name is Children of the Confederacy of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. It comprises children from birth through the time of the Children of the Confederacy Annual General Convention following their 18th birthday. All Children of the Confederacy chapters are sponsored by UDC chapters.[39][17] Children are taught Lyon Gardiner Tyler's "Catechism on the History of the Confederate States of America, 1861–1865," which says that Northerners did away with slavery because the climate was unsuitable, that they had no intention of ever paying the South for its slaves after abolition, that slaves in the South were faithful to their owners, who were caring and gentle people: cruel slave owners existed only in the North.[38]

Before 2015, the "Creed" of the CofC read:

Because we desire to perpetuate, in love and honor, the heroic deeds of those who enlisted in the Confederate Services and upheld its flag through four years of war, we, the children of the South, have united in an Organization called the "Children of the Confederacy," in which our strength, enthusiasm and love of justice can exert its influence. We therefore pledge ourselves to preserve pure ideals, to honor the memory of our beloved Veterans, to study and teach the truths of history (one of the most important of which is that the War Between the States was not a rebellion, nor was its underlying cause to sustain slavery), and always to act in a manner that will reflect honor upon our noble and patriotic ancestors.

The phrase "nor was its underlying cause to sustain slavery" was deleted by the UDC General Convention of 2015.[40][2]

Meredith College history professor and former CofC member Daniel L. Fountain states that organisations like the UDC have deeply "implanted the Lost Cause’s falsified version of history" in the South. "Rallying behind powerful women such as Mildred Lewis Rutherford, the UDC relentlessly lobbied legislatures for public school textbooks that presented a pro-Confederate version of regional history and successfully blacklisted" other books. "By targeting the region’s middle- to upper-class children, they ensured an army of future teachers and leaders would carry forward and defend their message for decades to come. Embedding their version of Confederate history into the sacred spaces of Southern society (the home, cemeteries, churches, city squares, street names, colleges and schools) made erasing it physically difficult and personally painful." [41]

George Floyd protests

During the early morning hours of May 31, 2020, the Memorial to the Women of the Confederacy headquarters building in Richmond was vandalized with graffiti and set ablaze during a chain of protests across the city in the wake of the killing of George Floyd.[42] The Richmond Fire Department extinguished the fire using nine fire trucks.[43] The President-General of the UDC reported that the building's windows had been broken and fire was set to the curtains hanging in the building's Caroline Meriwether Goodlett Library.[44] The fire was largely contained to the library, but there was extensive smoke and water damage throughout the building and charring on the building's Georgia marble façade.[44][45] Staff reported that all the books in the building's library had incurred some damage and that library shelving had been destroyed.[45]

Lost Cause and Neo-Confederate views

During the period 1880–1910, the UDC was one of many groups that celebrated Lost Cause mythology and presented "a romanticized view of the slavery era" in the United States.[3] The UDC promoted white Southern solidarity, allowing white Southerners to refer to a mythical past in order to legitimize racial segregation and white supremacy.[46] The UDC worked to "define southern identity around images from an Old South that portrayed slavery as benign and slaves as happy and a Reconstruction that portrayed blacks as savage and immoral."[47] In 1919 their lost cause narrative was codified in Mildred Rutherford's "Measuring Rod to Test Text Books and Reference Books,"[48] which the UDC endorsed and successfully used in debates over history textbooks across the South.[49] More recently, historian James M. McPherson has said that the UDC promotes a white supremacist and neo-Confederate agenda,[50]

I think I agree a hundred percent with Ed Sebesta, though, about the motives or the hidden agenda not too deeply hidden I think of such groups as the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Sons of the Confederate Veterans. They are dedicated to celebrating the Confederacy and rather thinly veiled support for white supremacy. And I think that also is the again not very deeply hidden agenda of the Confederate flag issue in several Southern states.[51]

The Southern Poverty Law Center considers the UDC as part of the Neo-Confederate movement that began in the early 1890s, which the Center states is "a reactionary conservative ideology that has made inroads into the Republican Party from the political right, and overlaps with the views of white nationalists and other more radical extremist groups."[52][53] In August 2018, its website still stated that "Slaves, for the most part, were faithful and devoted. Most slaves were usually ready and willing to serve their masters."[54]

Ku Klux Klan

According to lawyer Greg Huffman, writing in Facing South, "[p]erhaps nothing illuminates the UDC's true nature more than its relationship with the Ku Klux Klan. Many commentators have said the UDC simply supported the Klan. That is not true. The UDC during Jim Crow venerated the Klan and elevated it to a nearly mythical status. It dealt in and preserved Klan artifacts and symbology. It even served as a sort of public relations agency for the terrorist group."[6] At its 1913 annual national convention, the UDC unanimously endorsed The Ku Klux Klan, or The Invisible Empire,[55] a book written by UDC historian Laura Martin Rose, then president of the UDC's Mississippi Division, which alleged that the Klan had rescued the South from carpetbagger-inspired racial violence.[56] Published near the height of the UDC's Confederate statue-installation and textbook-vetting efforts, the book became a supplementary reader for Southern school children.[57][58] A local chapter of the UDC funded a now-vanished[6] memorial to the Klan erected in 1926 near Concord, North Carolina.[59] As late as 1936, the UDC's official publication featured an article which lauded the role of the Ku Klux Klan.[60]

Notable members

See also

Notes

  1. Mills & Simpson 2003.
  2. Elder, Angela Esco (2010). "United Daughters of the Confederacy". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
  3. Murrin et al. 2014, p. 425.
  4. Lampen, Claire (August 17, 2017). "White women helped build the Confederate statues sparking conflict across the South". Mic (media company). Retrieved September 16, 2018.
  5. Cox, Karen L. (August 16, 2017). "The whole point of Confederate monuments is to celebrate white supremacy". Washington Post. Archived from the original on August 20, 2017. Retrieved September 16, 2018.
  6. Huffman, Greg (June 8, 2018). "The group behind Confederate monuments also built a memorial to the Klan". Facing South. The Institute for Southern Studies.
  7. Cox 2003, p. 2.
  8. Holloway, Kali (November 3, 2018). "Time to Expose the Women Still Celebrating the Confederacy". The Daily Beast.
  9. "Neo-Confederate". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved June 24, 2020.
  10. Robinson, Lynda (May 31, 2020). "Robert E. Lee statue and Daughters of Confederacy building attacked by Richmond protesters". Washington Post.
  11. Cox, Karen L. (August 6, 2020). "Setting the Lost Cause on Fire". Historians.org. American Historical Association. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  12. Simpson 2003, pp. 75–76.
  13. Muller, Matthew G.; McLellan, Corey W.; Irons, Charles F. (1996). "Shades of Gray: United Daughters of the Confederacy". Charlottesville: University of Virginia. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  14. DuRocher 2011, p. 88-89.
  15. Kutner, Max (August 25, 2017). "As Confederate Statues Fall, The Group Behind Most of Them Stays Quiet". Newsweek. Retrieved September 16, 2018.
  16. Towns 2012, p. xi.
  17. UDC Handbook (6th ed.). Richmond, Virginia: United Daughters of the Confederacy. March 2013. pp. 3–5.
  18. Minutes of the One Hundred and Twenty-first Annual General Convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, Incorporated, Held in Richmond, Virginia, November 6-10, 2014. p. 12.
  19. Mills & Simpson 2003, p. .
  20. Faust 2008, p. 237–247.
  21. Blight 2001, p. 272–273.
  22. Boccardi, Megan B. (2011). Remembering in black and white : Missouri women's memorial work 1860-1910 (Thesis). doi:10.32469/10355/14392. hdl:10355/14392.
  23. Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd (September 1998). "'You Must Remember This': Autobiography as Social Critique". The Journal of American History. 85 (2): 439–465. doi:10.2307/2567747. JSTOR 2567747.
  24. Brundage, W. Fitzhugh (2000). "White Women and the Politics of Historical Memory in the New South, 1880–1920". In Dailey, Jane; Gilmore, Glenda Elizabeth; Simon, Bryant (eds.). Jumpin' Jim Crow: Southern Politics from Civil War to Civil Rights. Princeton University Press. pp. 115–139. ISBN 978-0-691-00193-7.
  25. Janney 2012, p. .
  26. Gulley 1993, p. .
  27. Tamburin, Adam (August 15, 2016). "Vanderbilt to remove 'Confederate' from building name". The Tennessean. Retrieved August 15, 2016. Anonymous donors recently gave the university the $1.2 million needed for that purpose; the Vanderbilt Board of Trust authorized the move this summer.
  28. Koren, Marina (August 15, 2016). "The College Dorm and the Confederacy". The Atlantic. Retrieved August 15, 2016. Vanderbilt will return $1.2 million to the Tennessee chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the present value of the $50,000 the group donated to the school in 1933 for the construction of the dorm. ... The $1.2 million payment will come from anonymous donors who gave specifically for the removal of the inscription, the school said.
  29. Blest, Paul (June 1, 2020). "Confederate Statues and Other Symbols of Racism All Over the Country Were Destroyed by Protesters This Weekend". Vice. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  30. Blight 2001, p. 259.
  31. Gardner 2006, p. 128–130.
  32. Butler, Douglas J. (2013). North Carolina Civil War Monuments: An Illustrated History. McFarland. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-4766-0337-7.
  33. Knight, Lucien (2006). Georgia's Landmarks, Memorials, and Legends: Volume 1, Part 1. Pelican Publishing. pp. 222–223. ISBN 978-1-4556-0481-4.
  34. Tucker, Spencer C. (September 30, 2013). American Civil War: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection [6 volumes]: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection. ABC-CLIO. p. 2202. ISBN 978-1-85109-682-4.
  35. Cox 2003, p. 73-74.
  36. Cox 2003, p. 90.
  37. "News about Nursing". The American Journal of Nursing. 42 (7): 820–844. 1942. JSTOR 3415840.
  38. Woodruff, Juliette (1985). "The Last of the Southern Belles". Studies in Popular Culture. 8 (1): 63–70. JSTOR 23412915.
  39. The History of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Volume I and II: 1894–1955. Raleigh, N.C.: United Daughters of the Confederacy. 1956. pp. 181–189. LCCN 94135238. OCLC 1386401 via Edwards & Broughton Company.
  40. Conner, Laura (2015–2016). "Director General's Message" (PDF). The Courier (2).
  41. Fountain, Daniel L. (May 16, 2019). "Why young Southerners still get indoctrinated in the Lost Cause". Washington Post.
  42. Vogelsong, Sarah; Oliver, Ned (May 31, 2020). "Confederate memorial hall burned as second night of outrage erupts in Virginia". WWBT. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  43. MORENO, SABRINA. "UPDATED: Daughters of Confederacy headquarters on fire, 2 Capitol Police officers injured as violence erupts during second night of protesting in Richmond". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  44. Confederate Broadcasting (May 31, 2020). "Latest update". Facebook. Facebook. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  45. United Daughters of the Confederacy. "Memorial Building". United Daughters of the Confederacy. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  46. Janney 2012, p. 12–13, 139.
  47. Johnson, Joan Marie (2000). "'Drill into us... the Rebel Tradition': The Contest over Southern Identity in Black and White Women's Clubs, South Carolina, 1898-1930". The Journal of Southern History. 66 (3): 525–562. doi:10.2307/2587867. JSTOR 2587867.
  48. Rutherford, Mildred (1920). "A Measuring Rod to Test Text Books and Reference Books". Internet Archive. Archived from the original on June 6, 2012. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  49. Huffman, Greg (April 10, 2019). "TWISTED SOURCES: How Confederate propaganda ended up in the South's schoolbooks". Facing South. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  50. Angela Esco Elder, "United Daughters of the Confederacy" in New Georgia Encyclopedia (Georgia Humanities Council/University of Georgia Press: original entry July 23, 2010; last updated October 12, 2016).
  51. Goodman, Amy (November 3, 1999). "Democracy Now – interview with James McPherson, Ed Sebesta". Pacifica Radio Network.
  52. "The Neo-Confederates". Southern Poverty Law Center. September 15, 2000.
  53. Hague, Euan (January 26, 2010). "The Neo-Confederate Movement". Southern Poverty Law Center.
  54. Breed, Allen G. (August 10, 2018). "'The lost cause': the women's group fighting for Confederate monuments". The Guardian. Associated Press.
  55. Rose, Laura Martin (1914). The Ku Klux Klan, or Invisible Empire. New Orleans, Louisiana: L. Graham Co., Ltd. ISBN 978-1-333-65820-5.
  56. Lowery, J. Vincent. "Laura Martin Rose (1862–1917) Author". Mississippi Encyclopedia.
  57. Minutes on the Twentieth Annual Convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Raleigh, North Carolina: Edwards and Broughton Printing Company. 1914. p. 39.
  58. Cox, Karen L. (2003). Dixie's Daughters: The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Preservation of Confederate Culture. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. pp. 106–110. ISBN 978-0-8130-6413-0.
  59. Smith, Blanche Lucas (1941). North Carolina's Confederate Monuments and Memorials. North Carolina Division, United Daughters of the Confederacy. p. 35.
  60. Cook, Walter Henry (July 1936). "Secret Political Societies in the South During the Period of Reconstruction" (PDF). The Southern Magazine. III: 3–5, 42–43.
  61. Gardner, Sarah E. (2006). Blood & Irony: Southern White Women's Narratives of the Civil War, 1861-1937. Univ of North Carolina Press. pp. 128–130. ISBN 978-0-8078-5767-0.
  62. Binheim, Max; Elvin, Charles A (1928). Women of the West; a series of biographical sketches of living eminent women in the eleven western states of the United States of America. Retrieved August 8, 2017. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  63. McLemore, Laura (2016). Adele Briscoe Looscan: Daughter of the Republic. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-87565-630-4.
  64. McRae, Elizabeth Gillespie (2018). Mothers of Massive Resistance: White Women and the Politics of White Supremacy. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-19-027171-8.
  65. Ziker, Ann. "Florence Sillers Ogden". Mississippi Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
  66. Simpson, John A. "Edith Drake Pope". The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Tennessee Historical Society and the University of Tennessee Press. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
  67. "Twitty, Panthea Massenburg – NCpedia". Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  68. Glaser, Emily. "Kitty O'Brien Joyner, First Lady of Aeronautics". PorterBriggs. Retrieved June 10, 2019.

References

Further reading

  • Poppenheim, Mary B. (1956). The History of the United daughters of the Confederacy. Raleigh, North Carolina: Edwards & Broughton Co. OCLC 1572673.
  • The History of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Volume III: 1956–1986. Raleigh, N.C.: United Daughters of the Confederacy. 1988 via Edwards & Broughton Company.
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