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What is the UDC?
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The
United Daughters of the Confederacy is the outgrowth of many local
memorial, monument, and Confederate home associations and auxiliaries
to camps of United Confederate Veterans that were organized after
the War Between the States. It is the oldest patriotic organization
in our country because of its connection with two statewide organizations
that came into existence as early as 1890- The Daughters of the Confederacy
(DOC) in Missouri and the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Confederate Soldiers
Home in Tennessee.
The National
Association of the Daughters of the Confederacy was organized in Nashville,
Tenn., on September 10, 1894, by founders Mrs. Caroline Meriwether
Goodlett of Nashville and Mrs. Anna Davenport Raines of Georgia. At
its second meeting in Atlanta, Ga., in 1895, the Organization chagned
its name to United Daughters of the Confederacy. The United Daughters
of the Confederacy was incorporated under the laws of the District
of Columbia on July 18, 1919.
Membership
is open to women no less than 16 years of age who are blood descendents,
lineal or collateral, of men and women who served honorably in the
Army, Navy, or Civil Service of the Confederate States of America,
or gave Material Aid to the Cause.
For
more information regarding the history of the organization, please
visit our General website, www.hqudc.org
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