"},"parts":[{"template":{"target":{"wt":"efn","href":"./Template:Efn"},"params":{"1":{"wt":"According to Collier (1920), Mrs. Gabbett returned to Georgia in 1895."}},"i":0}}]}"> [a] Gabbett returned to Georgia, and made her home in Atlanta. After her return to the U.S., Gabbett became deeply interested in the UDC. [2] She joined the UDC as soon as the Atlanta Chapter was organized and became enthusiastic in its patriotic work. [1]
In 1898, when Mrs. Erwin told Gabbett about the idea of the Southern Cross of Honor, Gabbett became excited, and urged Mrs. Erwin to prepare resolutions and have the UDC act upon them. She discussed with Mrs. Erwin and Mrs. Plane the design of the badge. According to Collier (1920), Gabbett spoke of a design after the Cross of Dannebrog which she sentimentally believed to be the same in large measure as the Cross that was adopted. [1] According to the Confederate Veteran (1911), it was said that Gabbett chose her design for the cross of honor from an old tombstone in Ireland. [2] [3] At any rate, Mrs. Erwin said that Gabbett did suggest the Deo vindice from the Seal of the Confederate States to be inscribed around the battle flag. The United Confederate Veterans (UCV) made a great deal of Gabbett, and one of the camps in Atlanta made her an honorary member of it. She always addressed them as "Comrades". In a speech delivered at Los Angeles, she assured the veterans that the Cross should be protected. Below is an extract from the speech made upon that occasion:
"I, as Custodian, desire to assure the veterans that every possible precaution shall be taken to keep the integrity of the cross inviolate. Intended as a gift of love and honor to the brave defenders of their rights, the Daughters of the Confederacy shall protect it from falling into the hands of the unworthy. To that end, a patent has been se¬ cured and certificates of eligibility, duly signed, required from every applicant for the Cross."
At the UDC Convention at Richmond, Va., in 1899, Mrs. Weed presiding, Gabbett was made Custodian of the Cross, and a committee given her to draw up the rules regulating its bestowal. Thereafter, annually, she gave her report to the convention. In 1905, she became very feeble and the work greatly taxed her, so she presented her resignation at New Orleans in 1910 and her successor was named, Mrs. L. H. Raines, of Savannah, Georgia. [4]
In her later life, she was presented with a large gold cross of honor by the UCV of Georgia. [3]
Gabbett owned a large amount of property in on Bedford Place, and her estate was considered a valuable one. One of Gabbett's possessions was a string of huge amber beads, such as was worn only by Ireland's kings. These beads were dug up on the estate of her husband. She was deeply interested in art and music, and spent several years in the music and art centers in Europe. She was an inveterate collector of curios and works of art. Her house on Bedford Place was tilled with rare pictures, handsome silverware, and yards and yards of exquisite old Irish lace which had been handed down by the Gabbett family. One of her hobbies was dogs. She had six blueblood pugs. In addition, she had some twelve or thirteen nondescript canines which she had found wandering homeless around the streets. She cared for them and they had a special yard to themselves. [2]
Sarah E. Gabbett died at her home, in Atlanta, on July 16, 1911, [3] after a few weeks of serious illness, although she had been failing in health for a year; interment was in Savannah. She was buried with military honors, many veterans attending her funeral. [4]
She had no children, and none of her brothers or sisters survived her. She left an estate of US$10,000 or more. Her jewelry was to be sold for the Home of the Friendless, and $500 was left to Episcopal Cathedral of Saint Philip, in Atlanta. The remainder went to relatives. [2]
The United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) is an American neo-Confederate hereditary association for female descendants of Confederate Civil War soldiers engaging in the commemoration of these ancestors, the funding of monuments to them, and the promotion of the pseudohistorical Lost Cause ideology and corresponding white supremacy.
The United Confederate Veterans was an American Civil War veterans' organization headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana. It was organized on June 10, 1889, by ex-soldiers and sailors of the Confederate States of America as a merger between the Louisiana Division of the Veteran Confederate States Cavalry Association; N. B. Forrest Camp of Chattanooga, Tennessee; Tennessee Division of the Veteran Confederate States Cavalry Association; Tennessee Division of Association of Confederate Soldiers; Benevolent Association of Confederate Veterans of Shreveport, Louisiana; Confederate Association of Iberville Parish, Louisiana; Eighteenth Louisiana; Adams County (Mississippi) Veterans' Association; Louisiana Division of the Army of Tennessee; and Louisiana Division of the Army of Northern Virginia.
Howell Cobb was an American and later Confederate political figure. A southern Democrat, Cobb was a five-term member of the United States House of Representatives and the speaker of the House from 1849 to 1851. He also served as the 40th governor of Georgia (1851–1853) and as a secretary of the treasury under President James Buchanan (1857–1860).
The Southern Cross of Honor was a commemorative medal established in 1899 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy to honor Confederate veterans.
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A Ladies' Memorial Association (LMA) is a type of organization for women that sprang up all over the American South in the years after the American Civil War. Typically, these were organizations by and for women, whose goal was to raise monuments in Confederate soldiers honor. Their immediate goal, of providing decent burial for soldiers, was joined with the desire to commemorate the sacrifices of Southerners and to propagate the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. Between 1865 and 1900, these associations were a formidable force in Southern culture, establishing cemeteries and raising large monuments often in very conspicuous places, and helped unite white Southerners in an ideology at once therapeutic and political.
The Confederate Memorial was a memorial in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia, in the United States, that commemorated members of the armed forces of the Confederate States of America who died during the American Civil War. Authorized in March 1906, former Confederate soldier and sculptor Moses Jacob Ezekiel was commissioned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in November 1910 to design the memorial. It was unveiled by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birth of Jefferson Davis, the President of the Confederate States of America.
The Tennessee Confederate Women's Monument, also known as the Tennessee Monument to the Women of the Confederacy or the Monument to Southern Women in War Times, is a bronze statue on the grounds of the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Rosa Louise Woodberry was an American journalist, educator, and stenographer. She was the founder and principal of Woodberry Hall, and the first woman to attend the University of Georgia.
Laura Martin Rose, known professionally as Mrs. S. E. F. Rose, was a historian and propagandist for the Ku Klux Klan employed by the United Daughters of the Confederacy.
Anna Mitchell Davenport Raines was an American philanthropist and founding Vice President of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. She later served as the organization's Honorary President General and as the Custodian of the Southern Cross of Honor.
Margaret Wootten Collier was an American writer of the Southern Renaissance era. She was the author of the seven volume Representative Women of the South, 1861-1925, and was the official biographer of the Confederated Southern Memorial Association.
Carrie Bell Sinclair was a 19th-century litterateur and poet of the American South. She published two volumes of poems, and contributed frequently to Southern papers. She was "reportedly a literary protege of Alexander H. Stephens", who served as Vice President of the Confederate States of America.
Letitia Dowdell Ross (1866–1952) was an American educator who was identified with religious, educational, philanthropic and patriotic causes. She was in close touch with the large scientific movements of the time. Ross served as the president of the Alabama Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), and president of the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs (AFWC).
Confederated Southern Memorial Association was a Neo-Confederate women's organization of unified memorial associations of the Southern United States. It was composed of 70 women's memorial associations, which had formed between 1861 and 1900. The CSMA was established at Louisville, Kentucky, on May 30, 1900. At that meeting, the women stated that they were unwilling to lose their identity as memorial associations, or to merge themselves into the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Instead, by this union of all Memorial Associations, it was believed that the women of the South would perpetuate more certainly the purposes for which each association had been individually laboring, and would more firmly cement the ties which already existed between them. An increase in membership and more intelligent knowledge of the history of the Confederate Cause would also be the natural result of annual meetings.
Margaret O'Connor Wilson was an American civic leader and philanthropist. Prominent in civic and patriotic organizations in Atlanta for many years, she was also known also for her religious and philanthropic work. Among the many positions that she held, Wilson served as President General of the Confederated Southern Memorial Association (CSMA).
Ella Thomas Foreacre Brantley was an American clubwoman and civic leader. She was one of the first members of the Atlanta chapter United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), and she served as President of the Georgia Federation of Women's Clubs (FWC).
May Faris McKinney was an American clubwoman and non-profit executive. She was the first Kentucky woman to serve as President General of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), an honor conferred upon her November 13, 1919, at the national convention at Tampa, Florida. Previously, McKinney was elected Recording Secretary-General at Little Rock, Arkansas in 1910, serving three terms. From October 1905 to October 1907, McKinney was President of the Kentucky Division of the UDC. She was at one time Regent of the Fort Jefferson Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), and also served the Paducah Woman's Club as president for two terms. During World War I, McKinney was prominently identified with Liberty loan sales and other war activities.
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