Monuments as Mobilization? The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Memorialization of the Lost Cause
Published online on January 25, 2021
Abstract
["Social Science Quarterly, Volume 102, Issue 1, Page 125-139, January 2021. ", "\n\nObjective\nThe United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) played an important role in constructing monuments commemorating the Civil War. Memorialization of the “Lost Cause” and preserving southern heritage are often cited as reasons for monument construction. Here, we study whether these monuments were also used as tools to mobilize potential members.\n\n\nMethod\nWe use data on Confederate monuments and UDC membership to empirically test if monument construction mobilized women to join the UDC.\n\n\nResults\nStates with more Confederate monuments tended to have more UDC members. Confederate monument construction, especially courthouse monuments, was also predictive of the annual growth in UDC membership in a state. However, membership in individual chapters was not consistently affected by building a monument in a community\n\n\nConclusion\nConfederate monuments could be a boon to UDC membership, underscoring how memorials can be used as catalysts for interest group mobilization.\n\n"]