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Sue Braun - 1/22
Pat Everly - 1/24
Darlene Schelke - 1/27
Mary Lou Conzemius - 1/29

November 2009
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Members List:

Queen Diva:
Anita Burchard
Royal Court:
Donna Bartelt
Dee Berlino
Reisa Bland
Sue Braun
Alice Breen
Estella Bucar
Linda Bucar
Jackie Clouse
Mary Lou Conzemius
Diane Davis
Jacquita Davis
Pat Davis
Pat Everly
Barbara Fink
Linda Frederiksen
Lois Fretz
Sheila Grooms
Norene Gural
D.J. Hamby
Susan Haselmann
Ruth Hoehn
Kaye Howard
Paula Johnson
Rita Koch
Joanna Koenig
Judy Letterer
Lana Louthan
Fran Lucas
Lois Maass
Lola Maina
Marlene Marlowe
Arlene McCroy
Adrian McKechnie
Lorretta Mitchell
Sue Moss
Rosemary Postma
Loy Prado
Sue Pruim
Martha Pulkowski
Ellen Rabin
Darlene Schelke
Carol Ann Shanks
Kathie Soldoff
Judy Stebbins
Elaine Stefanisko
Cherie Thomas
Linda Verrette-Raguse
Karen Wolfin
Queen Mum, Retired:
Dawn Roney

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Red Hat Society - How It All Started
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While visiting a friend in Tucson several years ago, Sue Ellen impulsively bought a bright red fedora at a thrift shop, for no other reason than that it was cheap and, she thought, quite dashing.

A year or two later she read the poem "Warning" by Jenny Joseph, which depicts an older woman in purple clothing with a red hat. Sue Ellen felt an immediate kinship with Ms. Joseph. She decided that her birthday gift to her dear friend, Linda Murphy, would be a vintage red hat and a copy of the poem.

She has always enjoyed whimsical decorating ideas, so she thought the hat would look nice hanging on a hook next to the framed poem. Linda got so much enjoyment out of the hat and the poem that Sue Ellen gave the same gift to another friend, then another, then another.

One day it occurred to these friends that they were becoming a sort of "Red Hat Society" and that perhaps they should go out to tea... in full regalia. They decided they would find purple dresses which didn't go with their red hats to complete the poem's image.

The tea was a smashing success.

Soon, each of them thought of another woman or two she wanted to include, and they bought more red hats. Their group swelled to 18, and they began to encourage other interested people to start their own chapters (18 women don't fit well around a tea table). One of their members passed along the idea to a friend of hers in Florida, and their first "sibling" group was born.

Sue Ellen's fondest hope is that these societies will proliferate far and wide. We have now held three successful Red Hat Society conventions — entire hotels filled with women of a certain age wearing red hats and purple outfits! Could world domination be far behind?



 
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