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Defenders of Patriotism or Mothers of Fascism? The Daughters of the American Revolution, Antiradicalism, and Un-Americanism in the Interwar Period

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2013

Abstract

Focussing on the nationalist women's organization Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), this article seeks to make an important contribution to the historiography of un-Americanism by exploring its gendered dimensions as well as its ambiguities in the interwar period. By the early 1920s, the DAR boasted a membership of 140,000. It was during this period that the organization became the vanguard of a post-World War I antiradical movement that sought to protect the United States from the dangers of “un-American” ideologies, chief among them socialism and communism. Given the DAR's visibility and prominence during the interwar period, the organization constitutes a useful case study to analyze notions of un-Americanism between World War I and World War II. A thorough analysis of the Daughters' rhetoric and activities in the 1920s and 1930s reveals three things: (1) the importance of gender in understanding what patriotic women's organizations such as the DAR feared when they warned of “un-Americanism”; (2) the antimodern impulse of nationalist women's efforts to combat un-American activities, which is closely related to its gender dimension; and (3) the ambiguity of the term “un-American,” since it was used by the DAR and its liberal detractors alike to criticize each other.

Type
Un-American Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

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References

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13 Powers, 18–33.

14 Ibid., 41–78.

15 Capt. George L. Darte (Adjutant-General Military Order of the World War), “Address on Subversive Influences before the Daughters of the American Revolution Congress, Washington, D. C., April 21, 1927,” Folder “Printed Materials – Attack on Florence Kelley, 1927,” Box 12, Florence Kelley Papers, New York Public Library, Manuscripts and Archives Division, New York.

16 See, for example, Minor, “A Message from the President General,” 334–35; Mrs. William Sherman Walker, “Why Patriotic Organizations Should Protect Our American Institutions from the Menace of Radicalism,” reprint from DAR Magazine, April 1929, Folder “D.A.R. National Defense Committee Materials,” Box 17, Henry Joy Bourne Scrapbooks, Bentley Library, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI; Nellie N. Somerville, “Americanism: What It Was, Is, and Should Be,” Address to Belvidere Chapter D.A.R., Greenville, 22 Jan. 1944, Folder 45, Nellie Nugent Somerville Papers, Somerville-Howorth Family Papers, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.

17 Quoted in Myra Nye, “Radicalism in Clubs Scored,” Los Angeles Times, 17 Nov. 1926, A9.

18 Quoted in “D.A.R. Chief for Ruthless Knife on Alien Cancer,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 20 April 1920, 5.

19 On the DAR's Americanization campaigns see Medlicott, “Constructing Territory, Constructing Citizenship,” 99–120; Morgan, “Home and Country,” 219–61; McClymer, John F., “Gender and the ‘American Way of Life’: Women in the Americanization Movement,” Journal of American Ethnic History, 10 (Spring 1991), 320Google Scholar.

20 Quoted in “Thirty-First D.A.R. Congress Is Opened in Washington,” Christian Science Monitor, 17 April 1922, 2.

21 See, for example, Nye, A9.

22 Nielsen, Un-American Womanhood, 2.

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27 Quoted in “Daughters of the Revolution,” New York Times, 23 Feb. 1896, 12.

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29 For more information on the DAR's efforts to commemorate the contributions of women to American nation-building see Wendt, Simon, “Nationalist Middle-Class Women, Memory, and Conservative Family Values, 1890–1945,” in Heinemann, Isabel, ed., Gender Roles and the Family: Changing Values and Norms in 20th-Century United States (Frankfurt: Campus, 2012), 3360Google Scholar.

30 Quoted in Campbell, Amelia Day, “The Pilgrim Tercentenary at Provincetown, Mass., 1620–1920,” DAR Magazine, Dec. 1920, 705Google Scholar.

31 Quoted in “Dedication of Pilgrim Memorial Fountain at Plymouth, Massachusetts, June 24, 1925,” DAR Magazine, Sept. 1925, 535, 536 537.

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33 “Report of War Work of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution during the Great World War from August 14, 1914–November 11, 1918,” 5–6, Box 33, Papers of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Michigan Society, Bentley Library, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.

34 Mary S. Lockwood, “League of White Feather Leads Youth to Disloyalty,” Washington Post, 19 July 1915, 5; “D.A.R. Call to Colors,” Washington Post, 2 April 1917, 5.

35 “Pacifists in the D.A.R.,” Washington Post, 15 April 1928, S1.

36 Morgan, “Home and Country,” 353, 360, 405.

37 “Patriotic Work Praised by James J. Davis,” Washington Post, 19 April 1928, 1.

38 Morgan, Women and Patriotism in Jim Crow America, 137, 141; Morgan, “Home and Country,” 432–34.

39 See “D.A.R. Policy on ‘Blacklist’ Draws Censure,” Christian Science Monitor, 2 April 1928, 1; “Says Bay State D.A.R. Blacklists Liberals,” New York Times, 2 April 1928, 1; “Pamphlet Attacks D.A.R. Leadership,” New York Times, 9 April 1928, 1; “D.A.R. Head Replies to Critics of Order,” New York Times, 15 April 1928, 18; “New Signs Hint at D.A.R. Fight,” Los Angeles Times, 19 April 1928, 6; “D.A.R. Blacklist Existence Denied by Mrs. Brosseau,” Washington Post, 21 April 1928, 3; “Attacks on D.A.R. Leadership Meet Crushing Defeat,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 21 April 1928, 17; “D.A.R. Punishes Insurgent and then Adjourns,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 22 April 1928, 22; “D.A.R. Drops Mrs. Bailie, Accused of Injuring Good Name of Body in Blacklist Charges,” New York Times, 23 June 1928, 1.

40 “D.A.R. Is Urged to Give Source of ‘Red’ Warning,” Christian Science Monitor, 13 March 1928, 1.

41 “Wife of Bishop Seeks Origin of D.A.R. Blacklist,” Christian Science Monitor, 16 March 1928, 2.

42 Jones, M. Ashby, “Text and Pretext,” Atlanta Constitution, 15 April 1928, 14AGoogle Scholar. See also Sam W. Small, “Looking and Listening,” Atlanta Constitution, 10 April 1928, 10.

43 Quoted in Bullard, F. Lauriston, “Boston Minister Decries ‘Espionage,’New York Times, 1 April 1928, 55Google Scholar.

44 Mary P. MacFarland to the National Board of Management, DAR, 28 Sept. 1928, Folder 6, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection, Stanford University, Special Collections & University Archives, Stanford, CA.

45 See, for example, Oregon Lewis and Clark Chapter D.A.R. to Dear Madam, 17 April 1928, Folder 5, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection; “We, The Undersigned,” 15 May 1930, Folder 4, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection.

46 “D.A.R. Pained by Charges of Klan Leanings,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 29 March 1928, 25; “Mrs. Bailie Takes Case to Delegates,” New York Times, 15 April 1928, 28; “White Sees Klan Nightie under D.A.R. Petticoat,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 6 April 1928, 37. See also “Urges New Society to Offset D.A.R.,” New York Times, 23 April 1928, 30.

47 “Uplift of Indians Is Urged on D.A.R.,” Washington Post, 21 April 1921, 1.

48 Medlicott, Carol, “One Social Milieu, Paradoxical Responses: A Geographical Reexamination of the Ku Klux Klan and the Daughters of the American Revolution in the Early Twentieth Century,” in Flint, Colin, ed., Spaces of Hate: Geographies of Discrimination and Intolerance in the U.S.A. (New York: Routledge, 2004), 2147Google Scholar.

49 Flora A. Walker, “Confidential Memorandum for D.A.R. Members Only,” Folder “Newspaper Clippings, 1929,” Box 7, Papers of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Michigan Society – Sarah Caswell Angell Chapter, Ann Arbor, Bentley Library, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.

50 Quoted in “Loyal Americans Urged for Schools,” Washington Post, 4 Sept. 1921, 2.

51 Flora A. Walker to the Committee, 8 April 1928, Folder 5, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection. See also “D.A.R. Regent Defends Issue of ‘Blacklists,’” Christian Science Monitor, 5 April 1928, 5.

52 Elaine Goodale Eastman, “Are D.A.R. Women Exploited?”, reprint from Christian Century, 11 Sept. 1929, Folder 1, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection, University of Stanford Archives, Stanford, CA.

53 “Minutes of Regular and Special Meetings of the Denver Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution” (1927–30), entry “May 11–1928,” Denver DAR Chapter Collection, Box 1, Folder 16, Denver Public Library, Denver, CO; Elaine Goodale Eastman to Dear Member, 10 Aug. 1928, Folder 2, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection.

54 See “D.A.R. Members Quit, to Protest Its Blacklist,” Christian Science Monitor, 3 May 1928, 1; “Members of D.A.R. Resign as Protest against Blacklist,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 29 May 1928, 29; “We, The Undersigned,” 15 May 1930, Folder 4, Box 1, DAR Blacklist Controversy Collection; “D.A.R. Loses Leading Light,” Los Angeles Times, 7 June 1930, A16; “New D.A.R. Exodus in State Looming,” Daily Palo Alto Times, 20 May, 1930, 1; “D.A.R. Walkout Threatened by Californians,” San Francisco Chronicle, 20 May, 1930, 1. Previous studies on the blacklist controversy have come to similar conclusions. See Morgan, Women and Patriotism in Jim Crow America, 139–40; Morgan, “Home and Country,” 366, 372, 441–43, 447, 451.

55 “Women's Patriotic Conference Hears Cruisers Speeches,” Washington Post, 31 Jan. 1929, 22.

56 Florence H. Becker to Dear Members, 1 Sept. 1932, National Republic Records, Reel 139, Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.

57 “D.A.R. Opens New Attack on Radicals,” Christian Science Monitor, 23 April 1936, 1.

58 “Press Release for Sunday, August 9, 1936,” Folder “D.A.R. National Defense Committee Materials,” Box 17, Henry Joy Bourne Scrapbooks.

59 “D.A.R. Urges ‘More Genuine’ Americanism,” Denver Post, 23 March 1938, 1.

60 “Dies Group Hears D.A.R. Plea for ‘Revival of Americanism,’” Christian Science Monitor, 9 Dec. 1938, 2.

61 Crete Cage, “D.A.R. Vital to Dies Group,” Los Angeles Times, 19 Jan. 1939, A8.

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66 Quoted in “Mrs. Roosevelt Indicates She has Resigned from D.A.R. over Refusal of Hall to Negro,” New York Times, 28 Feb. 1939, 1.

67 Dr. S. P. Rosenthal to Mrs. Henry M. Robert Jr., 14 March 1939, Folder 1, Box II L2, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Records, Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

68 Quoted in “Marian Anderson Arouses Wide Protest,” Crisis, March 1939, 87. For a similar letter see Johnson, Robert F., “The Marian Anderson Episode,” Washington Post, 27 Feb. 1939, 8Google Scholar.

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70 Quoted in Fleming, James G., “Southern Newspaper Editorial Opinion on the Marian Anderson–D.A.R. Affair,” Negro History Bulletin, 14 (Dec. 1950), 6872, 68Google Scholar.

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73 “Shuns Anderson Protest,” New York Times, 20 March 1939, 17.

74 Quoted in “Bishop Calls D.A.R. Mother of Fascism,” Chicago Defender, 25 March 1939, 6.

75 Quoted in “Rep. Gavagan Calls Anderson Ban Fascistic,” Washington Post, 1 March 1939, 3. See also Joseph A. Gavagan to Mrs. Henry M. Robert Jr., 17 April 1939, Folder 2, Box 1, Marian Anderson–D.A.R. Controversy Collection, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University, Washington, DC.

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79 See “Mrs. Roosevelt Hears Marian Anderson Sing in D.A.R. Hall for China Relief Fund,” New York Times, 8 Jan. 1943, 24; “Charges Racial Bias,” New York Times, 1 Oct. 1945, 25; “D.A.R. to Keep Ban on Negro Use of Hall,” Washington Post, 13 Oct. 1945, 3; “DAR Demands Race Purity,” Chicago Defender, 30 March 1946, 3.

80 “Threat to Quit D.A.R. Voiced by Rep. Luce,” Los Angeles Times, 14 Oct. 1945, 3; “Protest Mounts against DAR Racist Policy,” Chicago Defender, 27 Oct. 1945, 1; “D.A.R. Head Affirms Stand of Group on Negro Issue,” Christian Science Monitor, 3 Dec. 1945, 13; Grace L. H. Brosseau to Dear Mrs. Luce, 14 Nov. 1945, Folder “D.A.R.,” Reel 471, National Republic Records; Clare Boothe Luce to Dear Mrs. (blank), 27 March 1946, Folder “D.A.R.,” Reel 471, National Republic Records; “For Release upon Delivery,” 21 Feb. 1946, Folder 7, Box 680, Clare Boothe Luce Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC; Greenbaum, Lucy, “D.A.R. Vote Orders Dissolution of the Luce Anti-bias Committee,” New York Times, 22 May 1946, 23Google Scholar; “D.A.R. Applauds Cancelling of Move for Racial Equality,” Christian Science Monitor, 23 May 1946, 3.

81 See “The DAR Racial Policy,” Daily Defender, 24 April 1963, 12; “Black Woman in Daughters of America,” New York Amsterdam News, 31 Dec. 1977, B6; “DAR Welcomes Its First Black,” Chicago Tribune, 4 Dec. 1977, 3.

82 Mrs. Talmadge, Julius Y., “Communism Spreading, Mrs. Talmadge Warns,” Atlanta Journal, 22 May 1947, 10Google Scholar.

83 Dorothea Andrews, “DAR Congress Votes War on Communism,” Washington Post, 21 April 1948, 1.

84 Ibid. “Outlaw Reds, DAR Board Asks Truman,” Washington Post, 18 Oct. 1952, 16; Coolbaugh, Osie Smith, “Our Most Powerful Weapon of Defense,” DAR Magazine, July 1953, 395Google Scholar; “Communist Spies inside U. S. Government,” DAR Magazine, Nov. 1953, 1213–16.

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86 Patton, Marguerite C., “National Defense,” DAR Magazine, March 1954, 241Google Scholar.

87 Kendall, Elaine, “The Daughters,” New York Times, 4 Aug. 1974, 241Google Scholar.

88 For more information on the role of DAR members and similarly minded conservative white women in this movement see, for example, Spruill, Marjorie J., “Gender and America's Right Turn,” in Schulman, Bruce J. and Zelizer, Julian E., eds., Rightward Bound: Making America Conservative in the 1970s (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008), 7189Google Scholar; Critchlow, Donald T., Phyllis Schlafly and Grassroots Conservatism: A Woman's Crusade (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005)Google Scholar.