Ladies Benevolent Society (Charleston)
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Ladies Benevolent Society (LBS) was a charitable organization for women, active in the city of
Charleston, South Carolina Charleston is the List of municipalities in South Carolina, most populous city in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The city lies just south of the geographical midpoint of South Carolina's coastline on Charleston Harbor, an inlet of the Atla ...
between 1813 and remains currently active. The LBS was founded in 1813 by white, elite women of Charleston. The initial purpose was to provide help to the needy after the
War of 1812 The War of 1812 was fought by the United States and its allies against the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, United Kingdom and its allies in North America. It began when the United States United States declaration of war on the Uni ...
, but in contrast to its predecessors, it was to become the first permanent charitable organization by women in Charleston. LBS conducted charity among the “sick poor” in Charleston, founded upon the ideal of Christian charity. The foremost focus of the LBS was poor white women, although they are known to have occasionally helped free coloured women as well. LBS aimed to offer care for "anyone who did not fall within the purview of the almshouse, dispensary, or slave hospital.” The ladies cared for Blacks if they were freed and did not ask for information about how that freedom was obtained in the name of "southern tradition". The ladies would visit the ill and provide them with sugar, coffee, blankets, soaps, among other comforts. It played an important role in the life of the pre-war city. In Antebellum Charleston, there were few occupations available for uneducated poor women who needed to support themselves. Normally in the 19th century, this category of women would be working as domestic servants, but in the Antebellum South, the planter aristocracy owned enslaved people and did not employ free domestic maids, and consequently, poor uneducated white women were, to a large degree, dependent upon charity. The LBS played a pioneering role as one of the first public organisations in Antebellum South Carolina which was managed by women. In Antebellum South, where women's public participation in society was controversial, LBS was an important organisation founded and managed by women which played an active part in society and managed its own independent finances. It was the local version of a number of local organisations of the same kind, also called "Ladies Benevolent Society", which was founded around the United States at that time. It was the first of the three leading women's organisations in Antebellum Charleston, the other being Ladies Fuel Society (LFS) from 1830 and Female Charitable Association (FCA) from 1824. The Ladies Benevolent Society provided an estimated 10% of charity proceeds in Charleston at the time. With the rise of other charitable groups such as the Sisters of Charity of Our Lady of Mercy and the Methodist Benevolent Society during the mid-19th century, the Ladies Benevolent Society’s workload diminished. LBS has remained an active society contributing to the sick poor of Charleston since it was founded. Buoyed by an inheritance from the Dill Sisters, the Society continues its work into the twenty-first century with grants to support the salaries of nurses at agencies serving indigent residents, as well as purchasing needed supplies.


References

* Cynthia M. Kennedy:
Braided Relations, Entwined Lives: The Women of Charleston's Urban Slave Society
' * Walter B. Edgar:
South Carolina: A History
' * http://www.scencyclopedia.org/sce/entries/female-benevolent-societies/ {{Authority control 19th century in Charleston, South Carolina Women's organizations based in the United States 1813 in South Carolina 1813 establishments in the United States History of women in South Carolina