Fort GreeneVille Chapter NSDAR

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Please contact us if interested in joining the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Fort GreeneVille Chapter NSDAR can be contacted by e-mail at [email protected]

Please look at our virtual cemeteries, especially Patriots buried in Darke County Ohio. WE have several soldiers who do not yet have a NSDAR Ancestor # and hope to assist someone in joining under their lineage.
Please use the MESSAGE option for the manager of our chapter's Find A Grave account.

The Chapter took the name “Fort GreeneVille” from a historical site.
During the Fall of 1793 and Spring of 1794, General Anthony Wayne erected a fort and named it “Greene Ville” in honor of General Nathaniel Greene, his friend and fellow officer in the Revolutionary War.

The celebrated “Treaty of Greenville” was signed here in 1795. The Fort was burned in 1796 and the original plot of the present City of Greenville was laid out on this site in 1808.
Our members are from Greenville and surrounding towns such as Troy, West Milton, Union, Celina, Tipp City, Brookville, Versailles, and others. We have a number of members that live outside the state.

Our chapter meets at various locations in and near Greenville, Ohio, often at the historic Garst Museum. We meet monthly on Saturdays, September through June, excluding, January.
The Fort GreeneVille Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, was organized January 21, 1922, with a membership of 16
The Chapter received its Charter on February 14, 1923"

Please contact us if interested in joining the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Fort GreeneVille Chapter NSDAR can be contacted by e-mail at [email protected]

Please look at our virtual cemeteries, especially Patriots buried in Darke County Ohio. WE have several soldiers who do not yet have a NSDAR Ancestor # and hope to assist someone in joining under their lineage.
Please use the MESSAGE option for the manager of our chapter's Find A Grave account.

The Chapter took the name “Fort GreeneVille” from a historical site.
During the Fall of 1793 and Spring of 1794, General Anthony Wayne erected a fort and named it “Greene Ville” in honor of General Nathaniel Greene, his friend and fellow officer in the Revolutionary War.

The celebrated “Treaty of Greenville” was signed here in 1795. The Fort was burned in 1796 and the original plot of the present City of Greenville was laid out on this site in 1808.
Our members are from Greenville and surrounding towns such as Troy, West Milton, Union, Celina, Tipp City, Brookville, Versailles, and others. We have a number of members that live outside the state.

Our chapter meets at various locations in and near Greenville, Ohio, often at the historic Garst Museum. We meet monthly on Saturdays, September through June, excluding, January.
The Fort GreeneVille Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, was organized January 21, 1922, with a membership of 16
The Chapter received its Charter on February 14, 1923"

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