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Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Wreaths Across America Schedule for December 14, 2024 at 12:00

 




This year's WAA event is scheduled for December 14, 2024, at 12:00 p.m. Come earlier to help.

Wilmington National Cemetery

2011 Market St, Wilmington, NC 28403


Please visit our Wreaths Across America tab in the top right-hand corner of this blog. We have sponsored 44 wreaths. Let's try to order a few more before the 2-for-1 sale in December. When we do that, we will get twice as many wreaths and have a great start on putting a wreath on every grave for 2025. 

Information posted by Phyllis Wilson


Sunday, May 26, 2024

Memorial Day


 

The Lord Craven Chapter of Colonial Dames Friday, May 17, 2024 Meeting

 

The Lord Craven Chapter of the National Society of Colonial Dames XVI Century held a regularly scheduled meeting on Friday, May 17, 2024 at the home of our chapter historian in Wilmington. 

Pat Gooding gave a very interesting history of the use of cockades as symbols worn during times of war to show allegiance to a social or political faction. She gave examples of their use beginning in the 1500's through the 19th century.

                                     Ribbons of Support



                                        French cockade





President Cindy Sellers and State President Pat Gooding






                       Carol Jutte and Cindy Sellers


                       Jane Johnson and Ruth-Anne Bolz

Thursday, March 28, 2024

The National Society North Carolina Colonial Dames 17th Century Lord Craven Chapter Held February Meeting in Southport

 The February meeting of Lord Craven CD17C was held held on Saturday, February 17th in Southport where VP Dale Spencer planned a fun adventure for our chapter.  We all met at 9:30 am and separated into two groups, where one group toured the Southport Historical Society’s Old Brunswick County Jail Museum, and the other group enjoyed a presentation by Carol Jutte on “Mrs Sempronius Russ, a Colonial Woman,” which across the street from the Jail in the cemetery where Sempronius is buried.  Both the Jail and the cemetery are located at the corner of Nash and Rhett Streets, conveniently across from each other.  Then we all met at the Indian Trail Meeting Hall where we held our Lord Craven meeting followed by lunch.




















Old Brunswick County Jail




Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Traveling Near and Far – Near with Michele Russell – Bath, NC and Far with Jackie LaMar – Plymouth, MA and other area locales

 Near and Far – Near with Michele Russell – Bath, NC

On Dec 30th my husband and I took a day trip to historic Bath, NC, which is located on the Pamlico River about 2 ½ hours north of Wilmington.  Bath was established in 1705 and is the oldest unincorporated town in North Carolina.  The first settlers were French Huguenots from Virginia.  John Lawson, considered the founder of Bath, and Christopher Gale, Chief Justice of the colony, were among the earliest English inhabitants.

Bath’s trade in naval stores, furs, and tobacco was the leading occupation in the beginning.  The early years had their share of turbulence.  Among these are Cary’s Rebellion in 1711, marked by political rivalry between governors, the yellow fever epidemic that same year, the Tuscarora War from 1711 through 1715, and the notorious pirate Edward Teach, known as Blackbeard.  He was the biggest draw for my husband!

Despite the turbulence, Bath has a rich history.  In 1746 Bath was being considered for capital of the colony, but New Bern was chosen.  St Thomas Episcopal Church (1734) is the oldest standing church building in North Carolina.  A library, given to St Thomas Parish in 1701 by the Rev. Thomas Bray, was the first public library in the state.  Many early 18th century political leaders resided in or near the town, and the governor’s council and the colonial assembly met there several times.

We were able to go inside the Joseph Bonner house, built about 1820. In the kitchen outbuilding we saw ladies cooking pies on the fireplace hearth using original recipes in Mrs. Bonner’s handwriting.  We ate samples too!  We also visited St Thomas Church which is still an active church. Most notable of the many historic properties is Bath’s oldest and largest colonial home dating to 1751.  A museum is located inside the old Bath high school with many displays of life in Bath from the Native Americans through the 20th century.


 










and Far with Jackie LaMar – Plymouth, MA and other area locales

As a member of the Mayflower Society, I recently went to Plymouth, Massachusetts for the first time and toured other nearby areas.  In September, I attended the triennial Mayflower Congress and witnessed the new slate of officers being sworn in.  I dressed in a mostly handmade colonial costume to walk in the Plymouth Progress from the Mayflower Society Meeting House (Edward Winslow's home) to the Mayflower Meetinghouse (the First Parish Church in Plymouth), stopping to pray at the sarcophagus in memory of those Mayflower passengers who died during the first winter.  (Their bodies had been buried on the beach, but were reburied together on higher land) I saw Plymouth Rock, Burial Hill, the National Monument to the Forefathers, the Mayflower II, the Plimoth Patuxet Museum, and its recreation of a 17th-century English village. I was there for the onsite groundbreaking of the Warren House. 

In Boston, I toured the Paul Revere House, the Boston Massacre Site, the Boston Soldiers and Sailors Monument, Faneuil Hall, and followed part of the Freedom Trail, saw the Old North Church, the statue of Paul Revere on his horse, Cobb's Hill Burying Ground where British soldiers used the gravestones for target practice, hitting the 'o's with precision.

On to Cape Cod, went to First Encounter Beach in Eastham, to the Pilgrims First Landing Park in Provincetown, ate a lobster roll, and then tried to work it off by going up the Pilgrim Monument and through the Provincetown Museum. 

Also, I took a bus tour of Newport, RI, walked along the cliffs, and then through Cornelius Vanderbilt's summer cottage, a Gilded Age mansion known as The Breakers. (I can file supplementals sometime on my Tabor line who lived nearby)  

It was a fabulous opportunity after seeing last summer where my Mayflower ancestors, William and Mary Brewster lived in Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, in England, and where they traveled with their Separatist Pilgrims seeking refuge in various towns in England, then in Leiden and Amsterdam in Holland before choosing to come to the New World. (Pics by Jackie!)

 



















Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Presidents Day

 


Presidents Day is celebrated in the U.S. on the third Monday of February, a day set aside to commemorate the birthdays of both President George Washington and President Abraham Lincoln.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Wreaths Across America 2 for 1 Sale: Let's Buy Some Wreaths for the graves of Veterans at Wilmington National Cemetery

 






Lord Craven members we have 9 wreaths purchased as of January 13, 2024. That has doubled because we are having a 2-for-1 Sale. So now we have 18 wreaths.  You have until Wednesday, January 16th at midnight to buy any wreaths. Hope you will try extra hard to buy wreaths now so that it doubles. We are never going to reach our goal of 50 wreaths unless some more members buy wreaths.

Click on the website below and carefully follow the directions. Don't pay the $3.00 fee they ask for on the order form. Enter your information carefully and be sure you are in the Lord Craven Colonial Dames site for Wilmington National Cemetery.


https://www.wreathsacrossamerica.org/pages/38524/Overview/?relatedId=14908