Bend Chapter DAR

Bend Chapter DAR This site is not an official NSDAR page, and the content contained herein does not necessarily represent the position of the NSDAR.

HOW TO JOIN OUR CHAPTER
Any woman who is at least 18 years of age and can prove lineal, blood line descent from an ancestor who aided in achieving American independence is eligible for membership in the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, admission to our chapter is by invitation from Bend Chapter DAR. Documentation must be provided for each statement of birth, death and marriag

e in your lineage to your patriotic ancestor. This includes the applicant's birth certificate naming her parents. This documentation can take many forms, such as census records, certificates, town records, or church records. NSDAR accepts service of an ancestor, with some exceptions, for the period between april 19, 1775 (Battle of Lexington) and November 26, 1783 (withdrawal of British troops from NY).

05/04/2026

We are wrapping up , but for DAR members, every month is an opportunity volunteer. Already in 2026, DAR members have contributed more than 800,000 volunteer hours. We are proud that DAR is a founding partner of America Gives, an initiative of the America250 Commission inviting all Americans to honor the Semiquincentennial by making 2026 a record-setting Year of Service.

Thank you to our members for strengthening communities through meaningful outreach in historic preservation, education, and patriotism. Tell us how you are volunteering on a local level to honor America’s 250th Birthday.

03/29/2026
03/03/2026

in 1913, more than 5,000 women marched down Pennsylvania Avenue in D.C. to demand the right to vote, marking the first suffrage parade and the first large, organized march on Washington for political purposes. The 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession through Washington, D.C. changed the way protests were viewed and carried out by the American public, and laid the foundation for future marches.

The Procession, unprecedented in both its scale and its tactics, was a major turning point for the woman suffrage movement in the United States. Suffrage leader Alice Paul, who was recently elected head of the National American Woman Suffrage Association’s Congressional Committee, devised the idea for a large-scale public demonstration. Paul, who had spent time in England, witnessed the more militant tactics that the British suffragists used to draw attention to their cause.

Parade organizers strategically selected March 3, 1913 for the march. Woodrow Wilson was to be inaugurated as the new President the following day, and national press was in town and idly awaiting the inaugural festivities.

Paul insisted that the parade march down Pennsylvania Avenue, deliberately following the same route that the inaugural parade would take the next day. The contrast between the two parades would prove striking. Reporters flocked to the suffrage parade, leaving Wilson to arrive at the train station unheralded.

Despite the chaos and violence that initially ensued during the parade, Paul declared the event a success. The parade made national headlines and once again captured the public’s interest in the suffrage movement. Even those who opposed votes for women acknowledged that, as citizens, the women had the right to peacefully assemble.

02/12/2026

At today's opening ceremonies for the Winter Olympic Games in Italy, the U.S. Olympic team will wear Ralph Lauren uniforms made with wool from the Shaniko Wool Company. Based near the ghost town of Shaniko — once called “the wool capital of the world” — Shaniko Wool Company is a cooperative of family ranchers across the West. No other town in Oregon has seen more rapid growth and decline than Shaniko, located about forty miles northeast of Madras in Wasco County.

In the early 1900s, Shaniko became a railway junction to ship farm goods from a “vast inland territory of varied resources, extending into California,” and its warehouses could store upwards of 4 million pounds of wool. Competing rail routes and town fires precipitated Shaniko’s decline starting in 1910 and 1911. Today, it is a tourist destination whose centerpiece is the Shaniko Hotel.

Learn more on The Oregon Encyclopedia: https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/shaniko/

Image: Hotel Shaniko is pictured in this undated photograph. OHS Research Library, Orhi56059.

Bend Chapter DAR’s 2025 Year in Review: the chapter presented JROTC medals to high school cadets; 3 children’s book driv...
01/08/2026

Bend Chapter DAR’s 2025 Year in Review: the chapter presented JROTC medals to high school cadets; 3 children’s book drives; received KTVZ news’ “Pay It Forward” award; donated 2000+books to The Giving Plate; presented our annual nursing scholarship to COCC; July 4 parade; hosted a Little Free Library for kids at The Environmental Center; Constitution Week proclamations/classes/articles; presented a Quilt of Valor; Veterans Day parade; sewed and filled holiday stockings for veterans; sent 400 holiday cards to active duty soldiers and a veterans’ home; and organized Bend’s Wreaths Across America ceremony at Deschutes Memorial Gardens. Come join us in 2026, for our nation’s 250th Birthday! Contact our membership chair at: [email protected]

Bend Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution is the largest chapter in Oregon. We are a non profit, non-political w...
12/29/2025

Bend Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution is the largest chapter in Oregon. We are a non profit, non-political women’s service organization. Celebrate America’s 250th birthday by joining us (see below). We can help you find your Patriot! Email membership chair Jill Gentry at [email protected]

Did you know that the USPS has Forever Stamps featuring Battlefields the American Revolution?
12/18/2025

Did you know that the USPS has Forever Stamps featuring Battlefields the American Revolution?

As we prepare to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States, these stamps honor the battlefields where so many sacrificed.

Address

Bend, OR
97701

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Bend Chapter DAR posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Bend Chapter DAR:

Share