Modern Woodmen of America

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Modern Woodmen of America is the third largest fraternal benefits society based on assets, with more than 750,000 members[1]. Total assets passed US$8 billion in early 2007.

Contents

[edit] Fraternalism

Modern Woodmen is organized around a lodge system[2]. Called camps, these local organizations offer fellowship and community service opportunities for members. The lodge system “constitutes one of the most powerful forces for altruistic good in the United States”[3]. Modern Woodmen members are part of more than 2,300 camps nationwide and more than 700 youth clubs.

Modern Woodmen members across the country participate in Join Hands Day and Make a Difference Day. These events are national days of service. Camps and youth clubs also participate in recurring volunteer and social projects throughout the year. The organization’s Matching Fund Program matches money raised by individual camps for community members or organizations in need.

Modern Woodmen’s fraternal expenditures for member benefits and programs totalled more than $22 million in 2006(10). These programs include disaster relief, college scholarships, tree planting, volunteer programs and educational programs[4].

[edit] Products

Modern Woodmen and its subsidiaries provide life insurance, annuity, investment and banking products to the family market. Life insurance in force totaled $32.2 billion in 2006[5].

Modern Woodmen has two wholly-owned subsidiaries. MWA Financial Services Inc. distributes investment products to Modern Woodmen members. MWABank offers checking, savings and loan services as a direct bank[6].

[edit] History

Joseph Cullen Root founded Modern Woodmen of America on Jan. 5, 1883[7]. He operated a number of businesses, including a mercantile establishment, a grain elevator and two flour mills. He sold insurance and real estate, taught bookkeeping classes, managed a lecture bureau and practiced law[8]. Root was a member of several fraternal societies through the years. Root wanted to create an organization that would protect families following the death of a breadwinner[9].

During a Sunday sermon in Lyons, Iowa, Root heard the pastor tell a parable about the good that came from woodmen clearing away the forest to build homes, communities and security for their families. He adopted the term Woodmen [10]. To complete the name, Modern reflected the need to stay current and change with the times. Of America was added to symbolize patriotism[11].

Root visualized a society that was not limited to a certain religion, although membership was first restricted to rural, Midwestern, white men between the ages of 18 and 45. Certain professions were not allowed to join because of the danger present in their profession[12].

In 1884, the head office was organized in Fulton, Ill.. The first death claim was paid to Henrietta Mayer of Davenport, Iowa, in 1884. The amount was $698.58[13].

Root left Modern Woodmen in 1890 and began Woodmen of the World. He was instrumental in the growth of fraternal benefits societies throughout his life [14].

Modern Woodmen moved its home office to Rock Island, Ill. in 1897 and continues to be located in downtown Rock Island today [15].

[edit] Drill Teams

One of the most visible elements of the organization was its drill teams. These groups came to be known as Foresters and became well-known in America. The first drill team was organized in Hutchinson, Kan., in 1893[16]. The groups became nationally known for events held from 1890 to the late 1930s[17].The Foresters were even honored by Herbert Hoover at the White House. “Rainbow Parades” were hosted by cities across the nation and included 10,000 units of Forresters with more than 160,000 men participating[18]. Each group was differentiated by a different style and color of uniform. The last known “Rainbow Parade” was held in Chicago on Michigan Boulevard and halted traffic for more than two hours while thousands of spectators viewed the scene.

[edit] Modern Woodmen Tuberculosis Sanatorium

During the tuberculosis epidemic of the early 1900s, TB was the leading cause of death[19]. Between 1800 to 1870, one in five deaths was caused by TB. There was no cure for TB. Sanatoriums began sprouting up in Colorado to treat the disease with favorable climate, rest and healthy lifestyles[20]. By 1920, one in three people who came to Colorado was said to have TB.

Modern Woodmen opened a 1,000-acre (4.0 km²) facility in 1907[21]. The facility cost $1.5 million to create and was named one of the most outstanding institutions for the treatment of tuberculosis by the American College of Surgeons. Treatment was free to male members of the organization.

More than 12,000 patients were treated in 38 years. Following World War II, antibiotics became available, and TB declined in the United States. The facility in Colorado Springs closed in 1947, when TB ranked as the eighth in causes of death[22].

[edit] Other Historical Highlights

  • Membership totaled 1 million in 1910
  • Began to insure women and children in 1929
  • First youth service club formed in 1942
  • Awarded its first fraternal college scholarship in 1970
  • MWA Financial Services Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary, was opened in 2001
  • MWABank, a wholly-owned subsidiary, was opened in 2003[23]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1].
  2. ^ National Fraternal Congress of America: "What is a fraternal beneficiary society?". [www.nfcanet.org/About_NFCA/whatisafbs139pm.pdf]
  3. ^ National Fraternal Congress of America: "What is a fraternal beneficiary society?". [www.nfcanet.org/About_NFCA/whatisafbs139pm.pdf]
  4. ^ [2].
  5. ^ [3].
  6. ^ [4].
  7. ^ National Fraternal Congress of America: "What is a fraternal beneficiary society?". [www.nfcanet.org/About_NFCA/whatisafbs139pm.pdf]
  8. ^ Uzzel, R: "Joseph Cullen Root - Giant of American Fraternalism". [5]
  9. ^ Uzzel, R: "Joseph Cullen Root - Giant of American Fraternalism". [6]
  10. ^ "Chasing the Cure led to Pikes Peak Region", The Colorado Springs Gazette, 3 July 2001, [7].
  11. ^ "Chasing the Cure led to Pikes Peak Region", The Colorado Springs Gazette, 3 July 2001, [8].
  12. ^ [9].
  13. ^ "Beetle, Ax and Wedge", Time Magazine, 21 June 1937, [10].
  14. ^ Uzzel, R: "Joseph Cullen Root - Giant of American Fraternalism". [11]
  15. ^ "Modern Woodmen of America Home Office", [12]
  16. ^ [13].
  17. ^ [14].
  18. ^ [15].
  19. ^ Ingram, F, "Modern Woodmen of America", International Directory of Company Histories, 1995, [16].
  20. ^ [17].
  21. ^ [18].
  22. ^ [19].
  23. ^ [20].