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The Sisterhoods


We've been talking about fraternal organizations, but there is a counterpart. Up until the last few decades, the world has been a male dominated society. Everything was centered around the male head of the household, but in the late 1800's, women began to be heard. With the appearance of the Temperance movements, women raised their voices and their organizations took on a meaning well beyond the afternoon social teas and occasional croquet matches. Women made up significant portions of the temperance organizations. Because women lacked financial security, the issue of male drunkenness was predominantly a female problem. The temperance cause was an area where women could resist their husbands. The Temperance movement was the primary school for many important suffragists, which became a "legitimate," domestic place for women to enter public activities.

While Fraternal organizations were particularly aimed at the male population, they often had a women's auxiliary associated with them. In some cases, this auxiliary was formed by the wives looking for something to do while their husbands were carrying on with the boys.

Even the veterans organizations had parallel women's groups, primarily to support their male counterpart. Now, with the increased number of women in the military, these organizations, on both sides of the gender line, have had to adjust to remove the line. They now center themselves around more politically correct terms such as 'Veterans' and 'Spouses.'

Some of the 'Sororal' organizations:

The Eastern Star

When some of the Masons determined that all the good of the order shouldn't be confined to men, they founded the General Grand Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. http://www.easternstar.org/index.html

Catholic Daughters of the Americas

The Catholic Daughters of the Americas was founded in Utica, New York in 1903 by members of the Knights of Columbus as a charitable, benevolent and patriotic sororal society for Catholic ladies. It has gone through a number of name changes starting as the "National Order of Daughters of Isabella," In 1921, the name became the Catholic Daughters of America (CDA). Within ten years, they had 170,000 members in 45 states, Canada, Puerto Rico, Panama and Cuba. In 1954, the order changed its name to the Catholic Daughters of the Americas, with 1,450 local "courts" in the United States, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Saipan, Guam, and the Virgin Islands. Its international headquarters are located in New York City.

Note that the original 'Daughters of America' were the women’s branch of the Junior Order of United American Mechanics--an order known to be anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic.

The copyright of the article The Sisterhoods in North American Genealogy is owned by Mark W. Swarthout. Permission to republish The Sisterhoods in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

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