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DAR Headquarters, including the DAR Museum and DAR Library, will be closed to the public on Saturday, June 13 
due to street closures and access restrictions connected with an area event. Additionally, street traffic and parking 
in the area will be significantly restricted in the days leading up to and following the weekend events.

Our American story is
yours to discover.

For 250 years, ordinary people have shaped our nation’s extraordinary story. The Daughters of the American Revolution helps you uncover your family’s connection to that legacy.

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Discover
Your Family History

 

Learn how DAR resources and tools can help you discover your own family story. Perhaps you are connected with the founding of America in ways you hadn't known before!

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Real stories
about real people

They were different from one another from the very beginning: some served in militias, while others enlisted with the Continental Army; some came from big cities and others from small towns; some were soldiers, sailors or spies, while others were civilian officials or behind-the-scenes supporters.

DAR works to increase awareness of often underrepresented Revolutionary War Patriots, including those who were African American, Native American and female. Given DAR’s purpose to perpetuate the legacy of all the men and women who achieved independence, DAR has a decided role to play in researching and promoting how diversified participants assisted in the creation of our nation. DAR is committed to better telling the stories of these Patriots, who have all too often been left out of the pages of history.

HANNAH FAYERWETHER
HANNAH FAYERWETHER WINTHROP

Hannah Fayerwether Winthrop and her husband Professor John Winthrop were ardent Patriots of the American Revolution. After her husband’s death, Hannah supported the Revolutionary War effort by making a Continental Loan on March 2, 1780. Hannah also engaged in patriotic correspondence with Mercy Warren and Abigail Adams, two other well-known Massachusetts women who, like Hannah, supported the American cause. In a letter to Mercy Warren, Hannah eloquently wrote, “And be it known unto Britain, even American daughters are Politicians & Patriots and will aid the good work with their Female Efforts.” Learn More About Hannah Fayerwether Winthrop.

Andrew Ferguson
ANDREW FERGUSON

What can be said about the life and contributions of Andrew Ferguson? His historic and, in many ways, unprecedented journey as a Black Patriot highlighted the loyalty some free Blacks felt toward America during the war. Of all the battles that Andrew the younger participated in, his role in the Battle of Kings Mountain was especially noteworthy because that conflict is considered a turning point for the Patriots during the Southern Campaign of the Revolutionary War. It was a battle between Loyalist and Patriot militias and was the first major Patriot victory following the British invasion of Charleston, South Carolina in May 1780. At least one dozen Black soldiers participated in the fighting, but only five have been identified so far, one of which, of course, was Andrew. Learn more about Andrew Ferguson.

John Glover
JOHN GLOVER

On the night of December 25, 1776, John Glover and his Marbleheaders ferried 2,400 American troops, artillery and horses across the ice-choked Delaware River in the midst of a roaring nor’easter snowstorm, then marched 8 miles to Trenton, participated in the First Battle of Trenton, marched back to the river, and ferried the victorious Continental Army and about 1,000 Hessian prisoners back to Pennsylvania. The tide of the war had turned, and the American cause went forward. Learn more about John Glover.

Louis Cook
LOUIS COOK

Colonel Louis Cook/Atayataghronghta was born in 1737 to an African father and an Abenaki mother on the Schuyler Plantation in Saratoga, New York. In 1745, Louis was captured by French and Native raiders, and the Mohawks of Kahnawake adopted him.  Learn more about Louis Cook.

Lydia Darrah
LYDIA BARRINGTON DARRAH

Lydia Barrington was born in 1728 in Dublin, Ireland. She married William Darrah on November 2, 1753. Together, they traveled to the colonies and settled in Philadelphia. Their children were Mary (1754), Charles (1755), Ann (1757) and John (1763). William, Lydia and Mary died in infancy. Lydia Darrah was a Quaker, a pacifist living in Philadelphia with her family. In 1777, the British proved victorious against the Continental forces. Washington’s troops had to retreat to White Marsh, and General Howe’s British forces set camp in Philadelphia. Learn more about Lydia Barrington Darrah.

Elizabeth Zane
ELIZABETH ZANE

Elizabeth “Betty” Zane was born around 1760 near the south branch of the Potomac River, in August County, Virginia, to William Andrew Zane and Nancy Ann (Nolan) Zane. Betty’s brothers were Ebenezer, Silas, Jonathan, Isaac and Andrew. At an early age, Betty moved to what is now Wheeling, West Virginia. This was a hostile area due to the taking of the American Indians’ land. The Zane family helped build Fort Henry in 1774. The garrison was built on a hillside overlooking the Ohio River and was practically impregnable. Learn more about Elizabeth Zane.

Caesar Rodney
CAESAR RODNEY

Caesar Rodney was born in Dover, Delaware, in October 1728. His early years were spent on his parent’s farm. As a child, he was tutored by his parents and may have attended a Parsons school. His father died when Rodney was 17. After his father’s death, Rodney was placed under the guardianship of Nicholas Ridgely, the Clerk of the Peace in Kent County Delaware. Ridgely was the inspiration for Rodney’s political and law career. Caesar Rodney never married and had no children. Learn more about Caesar Rodney

Meet the
Daughters of the American Revolution

DAR is a volunteer women’s service organization dedicated to promoting patriotism, preserving American history and securing America’s future through better education.

DAR members volunteer millions of service hours annually in their local communities and as one of the most inclusive genealogical societies in the country, DAR boasts nearly 190,000 members in 3,000 chapters across the United States and internationally. Any woman 18 years or older-regardless of race, religion, or ethnic background-who can prove lineal descent from a patriot of the American Revolution, is eligible for membership.

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Group photos
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Service to America
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HOURS DAR MEMBERS HAVE VOLUNTEERED THIS YEAR