Bring Your Own Bell: Arkadelphia DAR chapter plans Constitution Week event

Members of Arkadelphia DAR Chapter invite public to event celebrating the U. S. Constitution. Pictured are Janice Ramsey and Terri Hagood. | Submitted photo

The Arkadelphia Chapter invites the public to its annual bell ringing ceremony Sept. 17 in downtown

Submitted information

WASHINGTON, DC — The National Society Daughters of the American Revolution urges Americans to reflect on the United States Constitution during this month’s annual observance in honor of this foundational document of national governance.

The DAR initiated the observance in 1955, when the service organization petitioned the U.S. Congress to dedicate September 17–23 of each year to the commemoration of Constitution Week. Congress adopted the resolution, and on August 2, 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed it into Public Law #915.

The celebration’s goals are threefold: to encourage the study of the historical events that led to the framing of the Constitution in September 1787; to remind the public that the Constitution is the basis of America’s great heritage and the foundation for its way of life; and to emphasize U.S. citizens’ responsibility to protect, defend and preserve the U.S. Constitution. 

The Arkadelphia Chapter invites the public to its annual bell ringing ceremony, held annually on Sept. 17 at exactly 3 p.m. Central time. Bells will ring for 1 minute. This year the ceremony will be held on Sunday afternoon at the Main Street Park Gazebo on the corner of Main and 6th streets. The group will assemble at 2:45 p.m. Everyone participating should bring their own bell. The ceremony will dismiss with a petition offered by George Washington and should be over around 3:10 p.m.

Members attending the 2022 Constitution Week Celebration included Tommie Anderson, Judy Honey, and Shirley Graham.

“We are so proud DAR led the way in making Constitution Week an official commemoration and our members enthusiastically promote the celebration annually in communities across the country by erecting community displays, sponsoring municipal proclamations, ringing bells and staging programs to raise awareness of the Constitution’s tenets and importance,” said DAR President General Pamela Rouse Wright. “We encourage all citizens to join us in celebrating this powerful document that is so important to American history and to reflect on the impact the Constitution has had on the lives of American citizens past and present.”

One of the largest patriotic women’s organizations in the world, DAR has 190,000 members in approximately 3,000 chapters across the country and several foreign countries. DAR members promote historic preservation, education and patriotism via commemorative events, scholarships and educational initiatives, citizenship programs, service to veterans, meaningful community service and more.


Discover more from

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.