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Hope Dunmore / Chicago Old Settler's Club Collection

Hope Ives Dunmore (1890? - 1974), Chicago native and clubwoman, was a longtime member of Chicago's Old Settlers Social Club, founded by Ida McIntosh Dempsey in the early 1900s.

Distinguishing themselves from the growing number of Southern blacks migrating to Chicago in the early twentieth century, the Old Settlers Social Club limited membership to African-American men and women who could prove their families had lived in Chicago for at least thirty years. “The object of the club,” stated in its 1923 Constitution, “is to keep the Old Settlers in touch with each other in this rapidly growing Metropolis.” Linking geographic origins to status in the community, Chicago's Old Settlers created important social, cultural, and religious networks on the South Side during the first half of the twentieth century.

In May 1935, Hope Dunmore and her family published a small pamphlet titled “Dunmore Family's Magazine: Historical Sketches and Stories of Negroes in Chicago, Mostly True.” An example of the Old Settlers' interest in preserving black history, this self-published volume illustrated black life in Chicago, and profiled the city's class of African-Americans professionals.

The materials in the DuSable Museum's Hope Dunmore / Old Settlers Social Club Collection form a fascinating record of the everyday household concerns and voluntary commitments of a family that considered itself among Chicago's African-American pioneers. The collection also highlights the Dunmore family's involvement with black freemasonry and worship at St. Thomas Episcopal Church.

Selected Artifacts

Hope Dunmore's   Diploma from the Shields School, 1902. Hope Ives Dunmore was the eighth of   Anna Bumbry and Robert Dunmore's twelve children.  Born and raised on Campbell   Avenue in Chicago's South Side, Hope and her siblings soon followed in their   parents' footsteps, becoming active in a host of African-American social,   cultural, fraternal, and religious organizations. The DuSable Museum contains a   small collection of Dunmore family papers and ephemera, including five of the   Dunmore children's elementary school diplomas. Photograph of Ida   McIntosh Dempsey, ca. 1909.  Ida McIntosh Dempsey (1857-1924) held the first   meeting of Chicago's Old Settlers Social Club on May 11, 1902, although the   permanent group was not organized until two years later.  The DuSable Museum's   collection includes a small number of Hope Dunmore's records from the club's   meetings and social programs. Old Settlers Social   Club application form, 1905. The DuSable Museum's collection also includes a   number of membership applications for the Old Settlers Club from 1905-1935.   Length of residence in Chicago qualified black Chicagoans for membership in the   organization. Old Settlers Social   Club application form, 1934.  As increasing numbers of southern blacks   migrated to Chicago in the early twentieth century, members of the Old Settlers   Club took special pride in their families' long histories in the city. Dunmore Family   Magazine, 'Table of Contents,' 1935 Dunmore Family   Magazine, map of 'Negro Settlement,' 1935 Old Settlers    Social Club event ticket, 1937.  The DuSable Museum's collection documents a   variety of club gatherings that Hope Dunmore may have organized and/or   attended.  The Old Settlers Social Club picnics were frequently mentioned in   the social columns of the Chicago Defender newspaper. Heroines of   Jericho song sheet, undated.  Hope Dunmore was a longtime member and Grand   Matron of Fidelity Court #22, Heroines of Jericho, Order of the Eastern Star.   Black freemasonry has been documented as early as the American Revolution;   however, women's auxiliaries like the Order of the Eastern Star did not emerge   until the late nineteenth century. Distinguished by costume and ritual, these   fraternal groups provided another social outlet for many of Chicago's first   African-American families.  The DuSable Museum's collection documents the   events and ritual life of local and statewide freemasonry.  Membership overlap   between the Old Settlers Social Club and Chicago's black Masonic groups may   have been high - for example, Ida McIntosh Dempsey, founder of the Old Settlers   Social Club, was also an early member of the Heroines of Jericho and penned the   songs seen here. St. Thomas   Church Bulletin, 1915.  Black churches opened up further opportunities for   socializing, community development, and black leadership on the South Side.   While African Methodist, Baptist, or smaller 'storefront' churches dominate the   history of religious life of African-Americans in Chicago, the Dunmore family   worshipped at St. Thomas Episcopal Church, seen here in one of the many church   publications from the 1910s, 20s, and 30s that are preserved in the DuSable   Museum's collections.  As Chicago's first black Protestant Episcopal   congregation, St. Thomas attracted many of the 'old settlers' to its pews when   it opened in the late 1870s.


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