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Our History

The Nolachuckey Chapter, NSDAR, was formally organized on February 22, 1921, at the home of Mrs. T. S. Rankin, under the leadership of Carrie McGaughey Clemens, Organizing Regent, and sixteen other organizing members. Twenty-seven additional ladies became charter members, totaling a membership of forty-five Daughters in the chapter’s inaugural year.

One charter member was Martha Barkley Patterson, granddaughter-in-law of President Andrew Johnson. In the initial years of the chapter, guided by Mrs. Patterson and her daughter, Mrs. Margaret Patterson Bartlett, Nolachuckey Daughters worked to preserve President Andrew Johnson’s Tailor Shop and encouraged the government to create the Andrew Johnson National Historic Site. Today the site includes President Andrew Johnson’s Early Home, Tailor Shop, Homestead, and National Cemetery. Early chapter work also included the placement of several historic markers around Greene County.

Martha "Mattie" Barkely Patterson and Margaret Johnson Patterson Bartlett
Mrs. Martha Barkley Patterson (left) & Mrs. Margaret Patterson Bartlett (right)
Mary Hurley Wells
Mrs. Mary Hurley Wells

In 1929, the chapter began contributing to a scholarship fund at what was then Tusculum College. The scholarship is still awarded to this day. In 1994, Nolachuckey Daughter Mary Hurley Wells willed $66,000 to ensure the continuation of this and other scholarships. The Mary Hurley Wells Scholarship is awarded yearly to students pursuing an undergraduate or graduate degree. The Carrie McGaughey Clemens Scholarship is awarded yearly to a young woman attending Tusculum University.

Historic preservation continued to be a central focus of the chapter in the 1950s. Nolachuckey Daughters began raising money to restore and maintain Greeneville’s oldest cemetery, Old Harmony. The chapter held a fashion show for one of these fundraising ventures. In the following decades, the chapter has restored Old Harmony, mapped it, built and maintained a brick wall around it, and placed several markers to honor the Patriots buried there. The chapter continues this preservation work today.

The Fashions of Yesteryear
"Fashions of Yesteryear" pageant held to finance the restoration and upkeep of Old Harmony Cemetery.
Nolachuckey 50th Annniversary
Nolachuckey Chapter, NSDAR regents celebrate chapter's 50th anniversary.

The 1970s marked the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Nolachuckey Chapter, NSDAR. During the same decade, Nolachuckey Daughter Goldene Fillers Burgner researched and marked twenty-four graves of American Revolutionary War servicemen. She, along with other Daughters, began a tradition of research, documentation, and writing that continues. Several Nolachuckey Daughters have undertaken research and authored books about the history of the area and its people.

Book​

Almost Forgotten and Other Stories of Greene County

Almost Forgotten II

Blue Springs Church, Community, and Colleges

Brief Biographies of Men and Women from the History of Greene County, Tennessee

Civil War Soldiers of Greene County, Tennessee

Compiled Greene County Marriage, Wills, Land Grants, and Court Records

Faces from the Past

Faces of the Civil War

Greene County Tennessee Power of Attorney Books (1866 – 1904)

Harden Community in North Carolina, Volumes I – VII

Lutherans in Greene County

Mt. Pleasant Community and (United) Methodist Church

Mt. Pleasant History of a Church and Community

Old Kingsport Presbyterian Church and Its People

Pleasant Vale Cumberland Presbyterian Church (1842 – 2002)

Reflections From the Past in Tusculum, Afton, Chuckey, and Eastern Greene County

Remembering Greene County Mills

Research and Compiled Books for 17 Ancestors

Shiloh Cumberland Presbyterian Church and Its Families (1859 – 2009)

Stories from the Civil War

Stories From the South of Greene County

Tales of the Rails

The Daddy Haynes Story: The Life of Professor Carter Landon Haynes

The History of Asbury United Methodist Church

The History of Blue Springs Lutheran Church

The History of Nolachuckey Chapter, NSDAR

The History of St. James Lutheran Church

The Southside

Translation of the German Records for St. James Lutheran Church (1811 – 1830s)

Author

Linda Townsend

Linda Townsend

Carolyn Gregg

Linda Townsend

Stevie Hughes

Goldene Fillers Burgner

Linda Townsend

Stevie Hughes

Jan Maddux, Carolyn Gregg, & Madge Walker

Carolyn Gregg

Goldene Fillers Burgner (contributor)

Linda Townsend

Linda Townsend

Carolyn Gregg

Sherry Britton

Carolyn Gregg

Carolyn Gregg

Katherine Harmon

Charline Bird Needham

Stevie Hughes

Carolyn Gregg

Carolyn Gregg

Grace Haynes

Carolyn Gregg

Carolyn Gregg

Carolyn Gregg

Carolyn Gregg

Goldene Fillers Burgner

Goldene Fillers Burgner

In recent years, the chapter has continued the rich traditions and service of the remarkable Nolachuckey Daughters that have come before us. The chapter plays an active role in the greater Greeneville community. We continue our mission of:

  • HISTORIC PRESERVATION — our chapter continues to maintain and improve local historic sites, such as Old Harmony Cemetery, earning recognition and awards for this work.
  • EDUCATION — our chapter sponsors contests, scholarships, and grants for local students and educators every year.
  • PATRIOTISM — our chapter continues the work of memorializing our patriot ancestors as well as honoring the patriotic acts of those in our community, including the naturalization of new American citizens.

As current Nolachuckey Daughters, we are excited to continue these efforts and further our mission. We would love to have you join us in this work.