Membership
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Membership

Admission to membership in the National Society is by invitation after an affirmative vote by the chapter or state society. Applicants shall have the endorsement of two members in good standing to whom the applicant is personally known.  You can download a worksheet here.

Membership is available to women age eighteen and over who can offer satisfactory proof that they are lineal descendants of an ancestor who, during the period of 1784-1815 inclusive, rendered civil, military, or naval service to our country, rendered material aid to the U.S. Army or Navy, or who participated in the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Junior membership is available to girls and boys from birth through age 21. Young women between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five are known as Flora Adams Darling Daughters in honor of the Society's first president.

Service may be, but not limited to the following:
star Those who signed the Oath of Allegiance or the Loyalty Test.
star All state, county and town officials and also jurors.
star A member of the Continental or Federal Congress, or a member of a State Assembly or Legislature of one of the first eighteen states.
starA delegate to the convention which framed The Constitution of the United States.
starA member of a State Convention which ratified The Constitution of the United States.
starAn elector of one of the first four Presidents of the United States.
starA legislative, executive or judicial officer of the United States of America, including such appointive officers as Treaty Commissioners, Territorial Officers, etc.

Military or Naval Service in any of the following insurrections or wars:
starWyoming Valley, Pennsylvania, 1784-1787. (A local disturbance between settlers from Connecticut and Pennsylvania in said valley.)
starShay's Rebellion, Massachusetts, 1786-1787. (Local, grew out of burdensome taxation. Confined to and suppressed by militia of the State of Massachusetts.)
starWars with Indians, 1784-1815.
starWhiskey Insurrection, Pennsylvania, 1794. (Local, arose in consequence of certain taxes on domestic spirits. Suppressed by the authority of the United States.)
starWar with France (Undeclared), 1798-1800. (Naval, carried on by the United States through its Navy and privateers.)
starSabine Expedition, Louisiana, 1806.
starAttack of British warship Leopard upon the United States frigate Chesapeake. (Disturbance growing out of attack of the British warship Leopard on the American frigate Chesapeake, as the result of the British claim to the right to search. The attack occurred at sea off Hampton Roads, Virginia. The militia was called out by the authority of the President.)
starEmbargo troubles, - Lake Champlain, 1808.
starEngagement between United States frigate President and the British ship Little Belt. (An engagement on the Atlantic, off the southern coast of the United States, resulting from the British claim of right to search.)
starExpedition against Lafitte Pirates, 1814. (Local, conducted by the authority of the United States.).
starWars with the Barbary Powers, 1801-5 and 1815. (Conducted by the authority of the United States through its Navy on the northern coast of Africa.)
starWar with Great Britain, 1812-1815. (General, covering nearly the entire territory of the United States, especially the seaboard.)
starThe Creek War, 4 October 1814 to 24 January 1815. (Local, but conducted by the authority of the United States.)
starLafitte Aides to General Andrew Jackson.
starLocal or state militia service, 1784-1815, or giving material aid to the Army and Navy.
starMember of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-6. (Military exploring expedition to find land route to the Pacific Ocean.)

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