»^*«B»» M:fC€:'- Hp'^.'?*' 'i-^ r>m i'ikit' •'*«., igitMgggBBSstggaasigKaaagec; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, 3 ■ f 1^ Chap. Shelf -A F AMEI i UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. ^ '/^^-Of tj^fWAZHW^^^t' ^y OF WASHlH^ The True Story of the Origin of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revoli/tion. Several incorrect statements concerning the origin of the Daughters of the American Revolution having been published, it is deemed proper that a true account should now be given. The Society cannot be considered as a safe custodian of the records of the past if it allows to pass un- challenged faise-]»ierepresentations in regard to the present. On the 13th of July, 1890, a letter appeared in the Washington Post, written by Mrs. Mary S. Lockwood, giv- ing an account of Hannah Arnett and her patriotic acts during the darkest days of the Revolution. Referring to the fact that the " Sons " had excluded women from their Society, she asked why that was done in a society founded to commemorate events in which women had so bravely borne their part.K On July 21st a letter from William 0. McDowell, of New Jersey, was published, in which he said that he was the great-grandson of Hannah Arnett, and called on the women of America to form a society of tlieir own since they had been excluded from the Society of the Sons of the American Revolution at a meeting held in Louisville, Ky., April 30th, 1