
Mary Ingles Chapter
Fort Thomas,
Campbell County, Kentucky
The Chapter was named for Mary Ingles the first white woman known
to enter
any part of Kentucky. She was captured by Shawnees at her
home in Draper
Meadows, in what is now West Virginia, and brought
to Kentucky as a prisoner
in 1755. She escaped while on a salt making
trip at Big Bone Lick in present
day Boone County Kentucky.
Our meetings are held the first Wednesday of each month,
except January, July and
August.
| Regent | Deanna Beineke |
| Vice Regent | Beth Healy |
| Chaplain | Betsy Evans |
| Recording Secretary | Joyce Morgan |
| Corresponding Secretary | Martha Gibson |
| Treasurer | Jill Steller |
| Registrar | Phyllis VonStrohe |
| Historian | Carol Medicott |
| Librarian | Sue Norris |
Mary Draper
Ingles
An Extraordinary Woman, And equal to Any Emergency
by Joan
Vannorsdall Schroeder
The Campbell County Kentucky Historical and Genealogical Society

Webmaster:
Valeria Amburgey
This page created on 18 February 2000
Page
Updated 2 June 2012
The DAR Insignia is the property of, and is copyrighted by, the National
Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Web hyperlinks to
non-DAR sites are not the responsibility of the NSDAR, the state organizations,
or individual DAR chapters.