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[[File:Pioneer Memorial Museum Salt Lake City Utah.jpg|thumb|Pioneer Memorial Museum, DUP headquarters]]
[[File:Pioneer Memorial Museum Salt Lake City Utah.jpg|thumb|Pioneer Memorial Museum, DUP headquarters, Salt Lake City, Utah]]
The '''International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers''' (ISDUP, DUP) is a women's organization dedicated to preserving the history of the original settlers of the geographic area covered by the [[State of Deseret]] and [[Utah Territory]], including [[Mormon pioneers]]. The organization is open to any woman who is:
The '''International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers''' (ISDUP, DUP) is a women's organization dedicated to preserving the history of the original settlers of the geographic area covered by the [[State of Deseret]] and [[Utah Territory]], including [[Mormon pioneers]]. The organization is open to any woman who is:
(1) A direct-line descendant or legally adopted direct-line descendant with a pioneer ancestor.
(1) A direct-line descendant or legally adopted direct-line descendant with a pioneer ancestor.

Revision as of 14:32, 9 April 2013

Pioneer Memorial Museum, DUP headquarters, Salt Lake City, Utah

The International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers (ISDUP, DUP) is a women's organization dedicated to preserving the history of the original settlers of the geographic area covered by the State of Deseret and Utah Territory, including Mormon pioneers. The organization is open to any woman who is: (1) A direct-line descendant or legally adopted direct-line descendant with a pioneer ancestor. (2) The pioneer ancestor is a person who traveled to or through the geographic area covered by the State of Deseret/Utah Territory between July 1847 and 10 May 1869 (completion of the railroad, May 10, 1869). (3) over the age of eighteen, and of good character. Travel through the geographic area covered by the State of Deseret/Utah Territory can be either east to west, west to east, north to south, or south to north. [1]

History

The Daughters of Utah Pioneers was organized 11 April 1901 in Salt Lake City. Annie Taylor Hyde, a daughter of John Taylor, president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, invited a group of fifty-four women to her home seeking to perpetuate the names and achievements of the men, women and children who were the pioneers in founding this commonwealth. (Carter, 11:329-428) The DUP (ISDUP) followed the lead of other national lineage societies, such as the Daughters of the American Revolution, in acting as a nonpolitical and nonsectarian organization. In 1925, the now International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers (ISDUP) and its local units were legally incorporated.

Achievements

In later decades, the ISDUP (DUP) has worked to conserve historical sites and landmarks, to collect artifacts, relics, manuscripts, photographs, and to educate its members and the general public. The society maintains satellite museums in the intermountain west, eighty-six of them in Utah, and manages an extensive collection in its Salt Lake City museum (Pioneer Memorial Museum). Numerous books have been published by the society, including community and family histories, cookbooks, history texts, children's stories, and a four-volume collection of biographical sketches "Pioneer Women of Faith and Fortitude" (1998).

Organizational structure

ISDUP headquarters are located in the Pioneer Memorial Museum in Salt Lake City, Utah. The international organization is administered by a board. Membership is organized into "companies," whose presiding officers oversee the activities of "camps" of ten or more members in a geographic area. In 2006, the ISDUP consisted of 185 companies overseeing 1,050 camps in the United States and Canada with a total living membership of 21,451.

See also

References

  1. ^ International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers "Membership in the DUP". Accessed 27 July 2011