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Your Donor Story, The Impact of Your Philanthropy

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Your Donor Story THE IMPACT OF YOUR PHILANTHROPY2 023Preserving history. Honoring patriotism. Educating future leaders.In 2023, DAR donors supported a diverse range of programs that advanced our mission to preserve history, honor patriotism and educate future leaders about the importance of our founding values. Please take a moment to celebrate all that you have helped accomplish through your giving and know that we appreciate all you do for DAR.Your Donor Story THE IMPACT OF YOUR PHILANTHROPYMilitary Women’s Memorial“e Women In Military Service for America Memorial Foundation is enormously grateful to the NSDAR for its generous donation to our capital campaign which will see the first and much needed major upgrade and state-of-the art renovation of the Military Women’s Memorial in more than 25 years. anks to NSDAR, the “Defending a New Nation” gallery, which will explore women’s military service from the nation’s founding through the end of the 19th century, will be sponsored and is a step closer to being realized. “We are grateful and humbled, not only for the very generous donations of 2023, but for the decades of NSDAR support to the Military Women’s Memorial and the women it represents.”CW5 Phyllis J. Wilson USA Retired, President, Military Women’s MemorialAmerican Battlefield Trust“From the outset of the American Revolution Experience, the expertise and resources of DAR have been an integral part of the storytelling platform. But even that collaboration pales in comparison to DAR’s commitment to helping the physical exhibit travel to communities across the nation. “Your remarkable generosity in matching the entirety of the federal American Battlefield Protection Program grant allowed us to reimagine what would be possible in terms of scale as the exhibit travels the nation, adding an additional copy and significantly expanding our reach. “at’s to say nothing of the enthusiasm with which individual chapters have embraced it! We could meet our required number of sites three times over just using DAR-sponsored venues.”David DuncanPresident, American Battlefield TrustStatement of ImpactOFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT1776 D Street NW, Washington, DC 20006-5303 (800) 449-1776 • email: development@dar.orgThe Impact of Your DAR PhilanthropyBREAKDOWN OF FY2023 DONATIONS January 1, 2023–December 31, 2023President General’s Project General FundGuardian Trust EndowmentOther FundsPictured here inside Memorial Continental Hall, the American Revolution Experience Traveling Exhibit, co-created by DAR and American Battlefield Trust, educates audiences about the American Revolution in Washington, DC, and around the country.DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright presents the DAR President General’s Medallion to CW5 Phyllis J. Wilson, President of the Military Women’s Memorial, during Continental Congress 2023.A Message of Gratitude and JoyPreparing this donor impact statement for your review is one of my favorite activities as President General. Because it gives me the chance to consider in detail all the amazing work done by fellow Daughters and strategic partners around the country. As you will see, the breadth of this work—our work—is truly astonishing. And you make it all possible!In 2023, you, and thousands of donors like you, generously contributed to more than 30 funds that advanced our mission to preserve history, honor patriotism and educate future generations about the importance of our founding values. Of course, it is impossible to fully capture the total impact of your donations and the accomplishments of Daughters around the country in this (or any) document. However, I am happy to detail some of the projects and programs your generosity made possible in 2023 and share information about the people who benefited from them. Again, thank you for your generous and ongoing support of DAR. None of this is possible without you!Pamela WrightPresident GeneralDAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright during a plaque dedication ceremony at Memorial Continental Hall.29%31%36%4%

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Educating Future LeadersYour generosity helped teach future leaders about the importance of our founding values and our responsibility to extend the blessings of liberty to all.• Contributions to the President General’s Project helped DAR launch a major campaign to restore Memorial Continental Hall, the first major renovation of our House Beautiful in more than half a century. • DAR supported the 10 Million Names Project, which is recovering the names, lineages and stories of enslaved people during the American Revolution.• DAR helped fund a state-of-the-art gallery renovation for the Military Women’s Memorial, a memorial and museum dedicated to celebrating America’s female servicemembers past and present.• DAR helped build a bronze statue of Bernardo de Gálvez, the former Governor of Louisiana and a key ally to the American Revolution, in the TXDAR Plaza of Liberty.• DAR assisted the Washington Heritage Museums with the care and upkeep of its monument site dedicated to Mary Washington, the mother of our nation’s first president.• DAR’s support of the Friends of the Non-Catholic Cemetery in Rome, Italy, helped restore and care for the graves of Americans buried there.• DAR enabled the Friends of Genealogy Fund to begin digitizing the 1790–1950 Texas Cattle Claim genealogy records which will be indexed and made available through the DAR Genealogical Research System (GRS). is investment of resources are critical in opening up membership for those of Hispanic heritage. • DAR helped sponsor the virtual conference, “Hiding in Plain Sight: Recovering the erased stories of our ancestors in the United States and the Caribbean,” presented by the Afro-American Historic and Genealogical Society (AAHGS).• DAR provided support to the DAR Marian Anderson Legacy Fund to honor the memory and promote the legacy of opera singer and civil rights pioneer, Marian Anderson.• A DAR grant to the e Ticonderoga Soldiers Project helped document the thousands of people stationed at Fort Ticonderoga during the period of its active use from 1755 to 1783.• A DAR grant to the Homecoming 250 Navy Marine Corps supported the commemoration of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.• DAR supported the Military Women’s Memorial Patriot Leadership Award Gala and helped recognize “women and men of extraordinary caliber whose actions and leadership” have honored the more than 3 million women who have served our country from the American Revolution to today. • DAR’s donation to the Navy Marine Corps Relief Society provided much needed supplies for military servicemembers and their families on three military bases in Guam aected by Typhoon Mawar.• DAR helped cover daycare expenses for 19 single military mothers at the McConnell Air Force Base daycare center in Kansas.• DAR’s generosity helped the 8th & I Marine Barracks in Washington, DC, replace the outdoor cooking griddle and equipment, upgrade the facility’s recreational center, and support a food fund for the E5 and Below Club.• DAR donated recreational games and crafts for injured Marine Corps recruits rehabilitating at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Company Romeo.• rough the Junior Membership Committee, DAR provided funding to the PTSD Foundation of America/Camp Hope for the purchase of an 8–10 passenger van and to support the Camp Hope Transition Program for Veterans.• DAR supported the National Welcome Home Event to Honor Vietnam Veterans in Washington, DC.• DAR provided 102 scholarships totaling $327,000 to help high school students achieve their dream of a college degree.• DAR partnered with the American Battlefield Trust and created the American Revolution Experience Traveling Exhibit to share information on the American Revolution with audiences in Washington, DC, and across the country. • DAR issued a grant to the Museum of the American Revolution, in Philadelphia, PA, to create a Patriots of Color interactive educational digital display. • DAR awarded $100,000 through the President General’s Project to 31 NSDAR American Revolution Legacy Grants for 2023–2024 to enhance student learning focused on the theme, “Stars and Stripes Forever: e Enduring Legacy of the American Revolution.”• DAR initiated a new Marian Anderson Scholarship Fund, a $5,000 scholarship awarded annually to a student pursuing undergraduate or graduate studies in music.• DAR covered the travel and registration costs for 12 military children to be recognized for their winning entries in the Call for the Arts program at the Military Child Education Coalition 25th Anniversary Global Training Summit.• A DAR grant to the National Society Children of the American Revolution will help renovate the society’s headquarters and support other N.S.C.A.R. education programs.• rough the Friends of Genealogy Fund, DAR provided the funding for up to 10 Genealogy Department sta members to complete continuing education through the National Genealogical Society.• DAR provided student art project supplies to 1,500 military children.• e Library hosted 6 events, including updated Research Around e States lectures, and a Tea Party to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party.• e DAR Museum launched the new exhibit Pleasing Truths: Power and Portraits in the American Home, which examines the context and symbolism of early American portraits.Honoring PatriotismYour generosity helped honor, celebrate and care for our nation’s servicemembers and their families. Preserving HistoryYour generosity helped preserve sites of historic importance and connect people to their Patriot past.e Pennsylvania Foyer inside Memorial Continental Hall features marble busts of the signers of e Declaration of Independence and Martha Washington.e American Flag on display inside DAR Constitution Hall during the 2023 Continental Congress.DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright presents a certificate to student Mia Neeley, winner of DAR’s Fifth Grade American History Essay Contest during the 2023 Continental Congress.

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Educating Future LeadersYour generosity helped teach future leaders about the importance of our founding values and our responsibility to extend the blessings of liberty to all.• Contributions to the President General’s Project helped DAR launch a major campaign to restore Memorial Continental Hall, the first major renovation of our House Beautiful in more than half a century. • DAR supported the 10 Million Names Project, which is recovering the names, lineages and stories of enslaved people during the American Revolution.• DAR helped fund a state-of-the-art gallery renovation for the Military Women’s Memorial, a memorial and museum dedicated to celebrating America’s female servicemembers past and present.• DAR helped build a bronze statue of Bernardo de Gálvez, the former Governor of Louisiana and a key ally to the American Revolution, in the TXDAR Plaza of Liberty.• DAR assisted the Washington Heritage Museums with the care and upkeep of its monument site dedicated to Mary Washington, the mother of our nation’s first president.• DAR’s support of the Friends of the Non-Catholic Cemetery in Rome, Italy, helped restore and care for the graves of Americans buried there.• DAR enabled the Friends of Genealogy Fund to begin digitizing the 1790–1950 Texas Cattle Claim genealogy records which will be indexed and made available through the DAR Genealogical Research System (GRS). is investment of resources are critical in opening up membership for those of Hispanic heritage. • DAR helped sponsor the virtual conference, “Hiding in Plain Sight: Recovering the erased stories of our ancestors in the United States and the Caribbean,” presented by the Afro-American Historic and Genealogical Society (AAHGS).• DAR provided support to the DAR Marian Anderson Legacy Fund to honor the memory and promote the legacy of opera singer and civil rights pioneer, Marian Anderson.• A DAR grant to the e Ticonderoga Soldiers Project helped document the thousands of people stationed at Fort Ticonderoga during the period of its active use from 1755 to 1783.• A DAR grant to the Homecoming 250 Navy Marine Corps supported the commemoration of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.• DAR supported the Military Women’s Memorial Patriot Leadership Award Gala and helped recognize “women and men of extraordinary caliber whose actions and leadership” have honored the more than 3 million women who have served our country from the American Revolution to today. • DAR’s donation to the Navy Marine Corps Relief Society provided much needed supplies for military servicemembers and their families on three military bases in Guam aected by Typhoon Mawar.• DAR helped cover daycare expenses for 19 single military mothers at the McConnell Air Force Base daycare center in Kansas.• DAR’s generosity helped the 8th & I Marine Barracks in Washington, DC, replace the outdoor cooking griddle and equipment, upgrade the facility’s recreational center, and support a food fund for the E5 and Below Club.• DAR donated recreational games and crafts for injured Marine Corps recruits rehabilitating at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Company Romeo.• rough the Junior Membership Committee, DAR provided funding to the PTSD Foundation of America/Camp Hope for the purchase of an 8–10 passenger van and to support the Camp Hope Transition Program for Veterans.• DAR supported the National Welcome Home Event to Honor Vietnam Veterans in Washington, DC.• DAR provided 102 scholarships totaling $327,000 to help high school students achieve their dream of a college degree.• DAR partnered with the American Battlefield Trust and created the American Revolution Experience Traveling Exhibit to share information on the American Revolution with audiences in Washington, DC, and across the country. • DAR issued a grant to the Museum of the American Revolution, in Philadelphia, PA, to create a Patriots of Color interactive educational digital display. • DAR awarded $100,000 through the President General’s Project to 31 NSDAR American Revolution Legacy Grants for 2023–2024 to enhance student learning focused on the theme, “Stars and Stripes Forever: e Enduring Legacy of the American Revolution.”• DAR initiated a new Marian Anderson Scholarship Fund, a $5,000 scholarship awarded annually to a student pursuing undergraduate or graduate studies in music.• DAR covered the travel and registration costs for 12 military children to be recognized for their winning entries in the Call for the Arts program at the Military Child Education Coalition 25th Anniversary Global Training Summit.• A DAR grant to the National Society Children of the American Revolution will help renovate the society’s headquarters and support other N.S.C.A.R. education programs.• rough the Friends of Genealogy Fund, DAR provided the funding for up to 10 Genealogy Department sta members to complete continuing education through the National Genealogical Society.• DAR provided student art project supplies to 1,500 military children.• e Library hosted 6 events, including updated Research Around e States lectures, and a Tea Party to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party.• e DAR Museum launched the new exhibit Pleasing Truths: Power and Portraits in the American Home, which examines the context and symbolism of early American portraits.Honoring PatriotismYour generosity helped honor, celebrate and care for our nation’s servicemembers and their families. Preserving HistoryYour generosity helped preserve sites of historic importance and connect people to their Patriot past.e Pennsylvania Foyer inside Memorial Continental Hall features marble busts of the signers of e Declaration of Independence and Martha Washington.e American Flag on display inside DAR Constitution Hall during the 2023 Continental Congress.DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright presents a certificate to student Mia Neeley, winner of DAR’s Fifth Grade American History Essay Contest during the 2023 Continental Congress.

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Educating Future LeadersYour generosity helped teach future leaders about the importance of our founding values and our responsibility to extend the blessings of liberty to all.• Contributions to the President General’s Project helped DAR launch a major campaign to restore Memorial Continental Hall, the first major renovation of our House Beautiful in more than half a century. • DAR supported the 10 Million Names Project, which is recovering the names, lineages and stories of enslaved people during the American Revolution.• DAR helped fund a state-of-the-art gallery renovation for the Military Women’s Memorial, a memorial and museum dedicated to celebrating America’s female servicemembers past and present.• DAR helped build a bronze statue of Bernardo de Gálvez, the former Governor of Louisiana and a key ally to the American Revolution, in the TXDAR Plaza of Liberty.• DAR assisted the Washington Heritage Museums with the care and upkeep of its monument site dedicated to Mary Washington, the mother of our nation’s first president.• DAR’s support of the Friends of the Non-Catholic Cemetery in Rome, Italy, helped restore and care for the graves of Americans buried there.• DAR enabled the Friends of Genealogy Fund to begin digitizing the 1790–1950 Texas Cattle Claim genealogy records which will be indexed and made available through the DAR Genealogical Research System (GRS). is investment of resources are critical in opening up membership for those of Hispanic heritage. • DAR helped sponsor the virtual conference, “Hiding in Plain Sight: Recovering the erased stories of our ancestors in the United States and the Caribbean,” presented by the Afro-American Historic and Genealogical Society (AAHGS).• DAR provided support to the DAR Marian Anderson Legacy Fund to honor the memory and promote the legacy of opera singer and civil rights pioneer, Marian Anderson.• A DAR grant to the e Ticonderoga Soldiers Project helped document the thousands of people stationed at Fort Ticonderoga during the period of its active use from 1755 to 1783.• A DAR grant to the Homecoming 250 Navy Marine Corps supported the commemoration of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.• DAR supported the Military Women’s Memorial Patriot Leadership Award Gala and helped recognize “women and men of extraordinary caliber whose actions and leadership” have honored the more than 3 million women who have served our country from the American Revolution to today. • DAR’s donation to the Navy Marine Corps Relief Society provided much needed supplies for military servicemembers and their families on three military bases in Guam aected by Typhoon Mawar.• DAR helped cover daycare expenses for 19 single military mothers at the McConnell Air Force Base daycare center in Kansas.• DAR’s generosity helped the 8th & I Marine Barracks in Washington, DC, replace the outdoor cooking griddle and equipment, upgrade the facility’s recreational center, and support a food fund for the E5 and Below Club.• DAR donated recreational games and crafts for injured Marine Corps recruits rehabilitating at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Company Romeo.• rough the Junior Membership Committee, DAR provided funding to the PTSD Foundation of America/Camp Hope for the purchase of an 8–10 passenger van and to support the Camp Hope Transition Program for Veterans.• DAR supported the National Welcome Home Event to Honor Vietnam Veterans in Washington, DC.• DAR provided 102 scholarships totaling $327,000 to help high school students achieve their dream of a college degree.• DAR partnered with the American Battlefield Trust and created the American Revolution Experience Traveling Exhibit to share information on the American Revolution with audiences in Washington, DC, and across the country. • DAR issued a grant to the Museum of the American Revolution, in Philadelphia, PA, to create a Patriots of Color interactive educational digital display. • DAR awarded $100,000 through the President General’s Project to 31 NSDAR American Revolution Legacy Grants for 2023–2024 to enhance student learning focused on the theme, “Stars and Stripes Forever: e Enduring Legacy of the American Revolution.”• DAR initiated a new Marian Anderson Scholarship Fund, a $5,000 scholarship awarded annually to a student pursuing undergraduate or graduate studies in music.• DAR covered the travel and registration costs for 12 military children to be recognized for their winning entries in the Call for the Arts program at the Military Child Education Coalition 25th Anniversary Global Training Summit.• A DAR grant to the National Society Children of the American Revolution will help renovate the society’s headquarters and support other N.S.C.A.R. education programs.• rough the Friends of Genealogy Fund, DAR provided the funding for up to 10 Genealogy Department sta members to complete continuing education through the National Genealogical Society.• DAR provided student art project supplies to 1,500 military children.• e Library hosted 6 events, including updated Research Around e States lectures, and a Tea Party to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party.• e DAR Museum launched the new exhibit Pleasing Truths: Power and Portraits in the American Home, which examines the context and symbolism of early American portraits.Honoring PatriotismYour generosity helped honor, celebrate and care for our nation’s servicemembers and their families. Preserving HistoryYour generosity helped preserve sites of historic importance and connect people to their Patriot past.e Pennsylvania Foyer inside Memorial Continental Hall features marble busts of the signers of e Declaration of Independence and Martha Washington.e American Flag on display inside DAR Constitution Hall during the 2023 Continental Congress.DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright presents a certificate to student Mia Neeley, winner of DAR’s Fifth Grade American History Essay Contest during the 2023 Continental Congress.

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Your Donor Story THE IMPACT OF YOUR PHILANTHROPY2 023Preserving history. Honoring patriotism. Educating future leaders.In 2023, DAR donors supported a diverse range of programs that advanced our mission to preserve history, honor patriotism and educate future leaders about the importance of our founding values. Please take a moment to celebrate all that you have helped accomplish through your giving and know that we appreciate all you do for DAR.Your Donor Story THE IMPACT OF YOUR PHILANTHROPYMilitary Women’s Memorial“e Women In Military Service for America Memorial Foundation is enormously grateful to the NSDAR for its generous donation to our capital campaign which will see the first and much needed major upgrade and state-of-the art renovation of the Military Women’s Memorial in more than 25 years. anks to NSDAR, the “Defending a New Nation” gallery, which will explore women’s military service from the nation’s founding through the end of the 19th century, will be sponsored and is a step closer to being realized. “We are grateful and humbled, not only for the very generous donations of 2023, but for the decades of NSDAR support to the Military Women’s Memorial and the women it represents.”CW5 Phyllis J. Wilson USA Retired, President, Military Women’s MemorialAmerican Battlefield Trust“From the outset of the American Revolution Experience, the expertise and resources of DAR have been an integral part of the storytelling platform. But even that collaboration pales in comparison to DAR’s commitment to helping the physical exhibit travel to communities across the nation. “Your remarkable generosity in matching the entirety of the federal American Battlefield Protection Program grant allowed us to reimagine what would be possible in terms of scale as the exhibit travels the nation, adding an additional copy and significantly expanding our reach. “at’s to say nothing of the enthusiasm with which individual chapters have embraced it! We could meet our required number of sites three times over just using DAR-sponsored venues.”David DuncanPresident, American Battlefield TrustStatement of ImpactOFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT1776 D Street NW, Washington, DC 20006-5303 (800) 449-1776 • email: development@dar.orgThe Impact of Your DAR PhilanthropyBREAKDOWN OF FY2023 DONATIONS January 1, 2023–December 31, 2023President General’s Project General FundGuardian Trust EndowmentOther FundsPictured here inside Memorial Continental Hall, the American Revolution Experience Traveling Exhibit, co-created by DAR and American Battlefield Trust, educates audiences about the American Revolution in Washington, DC, and around the country.DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright presents the DAR President General’s Medallion to CW5 Phyllis J. Wilson, President of the Military Women’s Memorial, during Continental Congress 2023.A Message of Gratitude and JoyPreparing this donor impact statement for your review is one of my favorite activities as President General. Because it gives me the chance to consider in detail all the amazing work done by fellow Daughters and strategic partners around the country. As you will see, the breadth of this work—our work—is truly astonishing. And you make it all possible!In 2023, you, and thousands of donors like you, generously contributed to more than 30 funds that advanced our mission to preserve history, honor patriotism and educate future generations about the importance of our founding values. Of course, it is impossible to fully capture the total impact of your donations and the accomplishments of Daughters around the country in this (or any) document. However, I am happy to detail some of the projects and programs your generosity made possible in 2023 and share information about the people who benefited from them. Again, thank you for your generous and ongoing support of DAR. None of this is possible without you!Pamela WrightPresident GeneralDAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright during a plaque dedication ceremony at Memorial Continental Hall.29%31%36%4%

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Your Donor Story THE IMPACT OF YOUR PHILANTHROPY2 023Preserving history. Honoring patriotism. Educating future leaders.In 2023, DAR donors supported a diverse range of programs that advanced our mission to preserve history, honor patriotism and educate future leaders about the importance of our founding values. Please take a moment to celebrate all that you have helped accomplish through your giving and know that we appreciate all you do for DAR.Your Donor Story THE IMPACT OF YOUR PHILANTHROPYMilitary Women’s Memorial“e Women In Military Service for America Memorial Foundation is enormously grateful to the NSDAR for its generous donation to our capital campaign which will see the first and much needed major upgrade and state-of-the art renovation of the Military Women’s Memorial in more than 25 years. anks to NSDAR, the “Defending a New Nation” gallery, which will explore women’s military service from the nation’s founding through the end of the 19th century, will be sponsored and is a step closer to being realized. “We are grateful and humbled, not only for the very generous donations of 2023, but for the decades of NSDAR support to the Military Women’s Memorial and the women it represents.”CW5 Phyllis J. Wilson USA Retired, President, Military Women’s MemorialAmerican Battlefield Trust“From the outset of the American Revolution Experience, the expertise and resources of DAR have been an integral part of the storytelling platform. But even that collaboration pales in comparison to DAR’s commitment to helping the physical exhibit travel to communities across the nation. “Your remarkable generosity in matching the entirety of the federal American Battlefield Protection Program grant allowed us to reimagine what would be possible in terms of scale as the exhibit travels the nation, adding an additional copy and significantly expanding our reach. “at’s to say nothing of the enthusiasm with which individual chapters have embraced it! We could meet our required number of sites three times over just using DAR-sponsored venues.”David DuncanPresident, American Battlefield TrustStatement of ImpactOFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT1776 D Street NW, Washington, DC 20006-5303 (800) 449-1776 • email: development@dar.orgThe Impact of Your DAR PhilanthropyBREAKDOWN OF FY2023 DONATIONS January 1, 2023–December 31, 2023President General’s Project General FundGuardian Trust EndowmentOther FundsPictured here inside Memorial Continental Hall, the American Revolution Experience Traveling Exhibit, co-created by DAR and American Battlefield Trust, educates audiences about the American Revolution in Washington, DC, and around the country.DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright presents the DAR President General’s Medallion to CW5 Phyllis J. Wilson, President of the Military Women’s Memorial, during Continental Congress 2023.A Message of Gratitude and JoyPreparing this donor impact statement for your review is one of my favorite activities as President General. Because it gives me the chance to consider in detail all the amazing work done by fellow Daughters and strategic partners around the country. As you will see, the breadth of this work—our work—is truly astonishing. And you make it all possible!In 2023, you, and thousands of donors like you, generously contributed to more than 30 funds that advanced our mission to preserve history, honor patriotism and educate future generations about the importance of our founding values. Of course, it is impossible to fully capture the total impact of your donations and the accomplishments of Daughters around the country in this (or any) document. However, I am happy to detail some of the projects and programs your generosity made possible in 2023 and share information about the people who benefited from them. Again, thank you for your generous and ongoing support of DAR. None of this is possible without you!Pamela WrightPresident GeneralDAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright during a plaque dedication ceremony at Memorial Continental Hall.29%31%36%4%