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Who鈥檚 a Daughter of the American Revolution? Answer grows more diverse.

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Evan Vucci/AP/File
Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly, the first Black woman to be installed on the national board of the Daughters of the American Revolution, poses for a photo at the Willard InterContinental Hotel, June 27, 2019, in Washington. Ms. Kelly and others in the historically white organization have been encouraging women of color to research their family roots to see if they can find a tie to the country鈥檚 founding.

When Michelle Wherry joined the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), she wasn鈥檛 trying to make a statement. She simply thought it was a perfect way to honor her mother, who always said that she and her sisters came from a free Black line.

In the decade since, Mrs. Wherry鈥檚 DAR activities have received national attention, in large part because she and many of her friends in the organization don鈥檛 fit a stereotype long associated with the 131-year-old society for people whose ancestors helped America achieve independence. 鈥淲hen you think about DAR, you think about white, Anglo-Saxon Protestants,鈥 Mrs. Wherry says. 鈥淎nd here you have women who are ... not what you think of as DAR. But they very much are.鈥

That鈥檚 more true now than ever. DAR鈥檚 membership has grown every year since 2007; it now has approximately 190,000 members throughout the United States and around the world. DAR has never tracked data on members鈥 ethnicity, but Black Daughters say it鈥檚 easy to find people who look like them at the organization鈥檚 annual Continental Congress and state events.聽

Why We Wrote This

Over the last 40 years, the Daughters of the American Revolution has broadened its membership and historical research. These shifts may hold lessons for a more accurate, inclusive view of U.S. history overall.

At a time when American history is deeply politicized, DAR seems committed not only to shaking its WASPy reputation, but also to expanding the country鈥檚 understanding of those who participated in the Revolutionary War. In fact, DAR鈥檚 diverse membership and its ongoing historical preservation work may offer a template for rethinking America鈥檚 origin story, and ultimately reveal a different side of patriotism 鈥 one that values a variety of voices and is unafraid of digging deeper into the nation鈥檚 shared past.

鈥淧atriotism is taking an active role in making sure your country is portrayed in a truthful and honest and positive light,鈥 says Nikki Williams Sebastian, a genealogist who joined DAR in 2014. 鈥淏eing truthful is not a bad thing. ... History without documentation is mythology. And we have a lot of mythology in this country.鈥澛

In a move away from mythology, leaders created the E Pluribus Unum Education Initiative in 2020, which seeks to identify and promote patriots who鈥檝e been left out of the popular historical narrative. The project includes a Patriots of Color database and exhibition titled 鈥淩emembrance of Noble Actions: African Americans and Native Americans in the Revolutionary War.鈥

AP/File
Contralto Marian Anderson performs for a crowd of thousands from the steps of Washington's Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939, after she was refused permission to perform in Constitution Hall by the hall's owners, the Daughters of the American Revolution. Seated dignitaries included Cabinet secretaries and Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black. The event focused attention on issues of discrimination.

Earning its reputation

The DAR was founded in 1890, after the Sons of the American Revolution refused to allow women to join its ranks. Initial recruits included more than 700 鈥淩eal Daughters鈥 whose fathers had fought in the American Revolution, and members were eager to promote historical preservation, education, and patriotism.

In its early decades, DAR also served to distinguish members from the immigrant populations entering their communities.聽

鈥淭hose 1920s immigration restrictions had a real racist dimension to them,鈥 says Francesca Morgan, author of 鈥淎 Nation of Descendants鈥 and an associate professor of history at Northeastern Illinois University. 鈥淪o the ability to document yourself that far back and to claim a patriotic mantle at the same time had tremendous appeal.鈥

DAR 鈥渧eered between civic and ethnic nationalism,鈥 says Simon Wendt, an associate professor of American studies at Goethe University Frankfurt and author of 鈥淭he Daughters of the American Revolution and Patriotic Memory in the Twentieth Century.鈥 They were also an overtly political organization, he adds.

鈥淭hey branded immigration a threat to the nation and rejected the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s,鈥 says Professor Wendt. 鈥淭hese things are very much in line with mainstream conservative thinking in the 20th century.鈥

In the later half of the century, Congress tightened laws limiting the political activities of nonprofits. At the same time, some DAR members started challenging racism within the organization. The first Black member of the modern DAR joined in 1977, and in 1984, the organization had to rewrite its bylaws to explicitly ban discrimination on 鈥渢he basis of race or creed鈥 after a Black applicant named Lena S. Ferguson was denied membership by a Washington, D.C., chapter.聽

In recent years, the national organization has largely stayed out of conversations that could be deemed political, including debates over monuments of colonial figures or the 1619 Project.聽

Last summer, amid movements across the country promoting racial and socioeconomic justice, the National Society reaffirming the organization鈥檚 commitment to equality. The brief message reads in part, 鈥淲e know that examining history helps us to better understand our nation鈥檚 long struggle to provide equality, justice and humanity for all Americans. 鈥 Bias, prejudice and intolerance have no place in the DAR or America.鈥

On a national level, President Denise Doring VanBuren says the DAR has two important jobs today: to continue honoring known patriots 鈥 鈥渨arts and all鈥 鈥 and to do a better job finding patriots of color and sharing their stories.聽

鈥淲e believe that as the descendants of these men and women, we have to be their voice, and we have to support and perpetuate the memory of what they achieved on behalf of our nation,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e kind of the human bridge between the patriots of the American Revolution and the generations that will follow.鈥

Family and country

Many DAR journeys begin with a desire to iron out a family tree. It鈥檚 not easy to get a stamp of approval from DAR鈥檚 genealogy board, but for some, that validation motivates them to get through hours upon hours of research.聽聽

Mrs. Wherry鈥檚 involvement with DAR has provided 鈥済reat memories鈥 of collaborating with her sisters, she says, one of whom died in 2019. But her participation also reflects a clear desire to set the historical record straight. When she had the opportunity to purchase a tree along a trail in Valley Forge National Historical Park as part of DAR鈥檚 Pathway of the Patriots campaign, she wanted it to stand for more than Ezekiel Gomer, her sixth great-grandfather who鈥檇 joined the rebellion in 1777. Instead, she dedicated to all the 鈥渕en, women and children of African heritage who were part of the American Revolution,鈥 including individuals like Sally St. Clair, who disguised herself as a man to join the Continental Army.聽

Mrs. Sebastian, the genealogist, shares this sense of duty. More than 5,000 Black men, free and enslaved, served in the Continental Army, often for much longer periods than their white counterparts. 鈥淚 want everyone to remember Black history is American history,鈥 she says.

However, Mrs. Sebastian entered DAR through a white patriot, and like other Black Daughters, her story involves a forced relationship between an enslaved woman and the men who owned her.

Rethinking the Revolution

Edward Barrett, a plantation owner from North Carolina, was already in the DAR鈥檚 patriot database when Mrs. Sebastian started investigating her family鈥檚 history, she explains in an episode of the 鈥.鈥 Mrs. Sebastian鈥檚 family used DNA testing to prove they were related to Barrett through Ellen Johnson-Mathews-Fisher, who was enslaved by Barrett鈥檚 grandson and bore his children during the 1860s.聽聽

Stories like Mrs. Sebastian鈥檚 highlight the importance of more inclusive membership policies. At one time, Mrs. Sebastian says, prospective members needed to have a legal marriage to prove descent. For families like hers, that was a difficult ask.

One of the most effective means of growing member diversity is simply studying the American Revolution, according to Yvonne Liser, DAR鈥檚 national membership chair. One Daughter, she says, is researching the expedition papers of Bernardo de G谩lvez 鈥 who led the Gulf Coast Campaign against the British 鈥 and finding potential Daughters in Mexico. Louisiana recently welcomed a wave of new Daughters from the Cane River Creole community, all descended from French-born patriot Claude Thomas Pierre M茅toyer and Marie Th茅r猫se Coincoin, who was freed from slavery and became a powerful businesswoman in colonial Louisiana.聽

This research isn鈥檛 just about expanding membership or shedding any remnants of DAR鈥檚 ethnic nationalist roots. As one of the oldest and most popular lineage societies dedicated to preserving the Revolutionary War, members say DAR could help reshape the country鈥檚 understanding of its own origins.

鈥淭he leadership recognizes we do have a role to play in sharing these stories [with everyone],鈥 says Mrs. Sebastian, 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 a more enriching story.鈥

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