EDUCATION
DAR GOOD CITIZENS
The DAR Good Citizens Award and Scholarship Contest, created in 1934, is intended to encourage and reward the qualities of good citizenship. This award recognizes and rewards individuals who possess the qualities of dependability, service, leadership, and patriotism in their homes, schools, and communities. These students are selected by their teachers and peers because they demonstrate these qualities to an outstanding degree. This program is only open to high-school seniors whose schools are accredited by their state Board of Education. Only one student per year may be honored as a school's DAR Good Citizen. United States citizenship is not required. Our Chapter invites several local schools to participate in this annual contest. At our February meeting, the Chapter welcomes our schools’ Good Citizens to read their essays. The student of the winning essay advances to the State level.
These 1937 Good Citizens included Grace Picton (1st row, far left), who would later become a 50+ year member of the DAR and our John McKnitt Alexander Chapter.
CHILDREN OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
The John McKnitt Alexander Society of the National Society Children of the American Revolution ↗ National Society Children of the American Revolution is sponsored by our Chapter. We are proud to encourage Patriotism early on for future generations. Several of our current members began their association with the DAR through their membership in a local C.A.R. Society.
Is your child eligible for membership in the C.A.R.? C.A.R. Membership Inquiries
TANGLEWOOD MIDDLE SCHOOL HISTORY DAY
Since 2018, the Chapter has supported History Day at Tanglewood Middle School in Houston. The school is named for the neighborhood that was developed in the 1950s by William Giddings Farrington, the father of one of our long-time members (she was reading "Tanglewood Tales" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, and she suggested naming the new neighborhood after this book).
The American History teachers at this school, in cooperation with the rest of the staff, put on an interactive and exciting History Day for their 6th, 7th, and 8th graders. American History focused activities include candle-making, baking molasses cookies, “churning” butter, and building log cabins.

LITERACY

As part of the DAR Day of Service, each year our Chapter members volunteer at Books Between Kids ↗, sorting books which at year’s end will find their way into the hands of at-risk children who generally have no other access to books.
Books Between Kids is a non-profit organization founded in 2012 to serve elementary aged children in the Houston area who have limited access to books at home, particularly over the summer months. Books Between Kids sets up "book fair" events at numerous elementary schools in May where the students are able to select books to help them build their own home libraries, all at no cost to the children.
Our Chapter is proud to have recently awarded our NSDAR Community Service Award to the founders of Books Between Kids.
WOMEN’S ISSUES – FIGHTING HUMAN TRAFFICKING

Houston is tackling the problem of sex trafficking with a partnership of city, county, and church alliances. Freedom Church Alliance ↗ – a consortium of churches dedicated to freeing victims of human trafficking – has developed a strategic, unified, and coordinated plan to assist survivors of human trafficking. Their GoBox toolkit trains volunteers with knowledge on human trafficking, empowers them to take action, and connects them with organizations where they can make a difference.
Our Chapter collects supplies and raises money to fill “Go Bags” that will be passed out to a survivor of human trafficking via law enforcement. Each Go Bag holds essentials that a survivor needs after rescue: a change of clothes (tops, bottoms, undergarments, and flip flops) plus basic toiletries (toothbrush, toothpaste, comb, shampoo, conditioner).

RICE UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP

In 1918, the members of the Chapter created a small scholarship for a student at The Rice Institute, a new college on the edge of the prairie south of “town.” Ruby Belle South, born in San Marcos in 1898, attended the Rice Institute in its earliest years, graduating in 1919. She was able to attend in part with the assistance of a $250 Scholarship provided by our chapter (over $3000 in current dollars). This was the first scholarship awarded to a woman at Rice. The Chapter continued to support her education at the UT Medical School in Galveston. Dr. Ruby Belle South Lowery served as an Ob/Gyn in the Laredo, delivering an estimated 20,000 babies over her career.
The ladies of the Chapter decided in 1919 that one student was not enough. Through Chapter member donations, “rummage sales,” and solicitations from friends in the Houston community, the Chapter raised $5000 for the first endowed scholarship at The Rice Institute. It was presented to the University at Commencement in 1922.
A recipient in later years of the Chapter’s scholarship was Fannie Bess Emory. Fannie Bess became a member of our Chapter and served as Regent. After her death, her family established a new scholarship in her memory at Rice.
Rice University continues to manage and distribute proceeds from both scholarships.
And one more note on Dr. Ruby: She too became a member of the DAR in Laredo. In 1996, at the age of 97 Dr. Ruby returned to a John McKnitt Alexander Chapter meeting to thank “us” for the helping hand she had received. After her death, her family established a new scholarship in her name at Texas A&M International in Laredo, citing the influence of the DAR scholarship on their grandmother’s life.
