Oral History
Jade River
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Biographical Notes

Jade RiverSamantha Jade River was born in 1950 in Bellefountaine, Ohio. Her
family moved to Louisville, Kentucky in 1952 where they owned and managed
businesses and were devoted Presbyterians. Until she graduated from high
school in 1968, Jade was folk singer and made regular appearances on a
local television program. She attended Eastern Kentucky University and
graduated in three years with a degree in Administration of Private and
Voluntary Agencies. She married, and lived in the suburbs in Louisville,
and had a son. Although she loved being a mother, her suburban life was
lonely and alienating. When Falcon River, a Girl Scout friend, now an open
lesbian came to visit, Jade left her husband and moved to an apartment
with her child and Falcon. They discovered the Louisville Lesbian Feminist
Union and through them discovered women doing magic in the Cincinnati
area.

1995: Grove dedicationIn Louisville Jade helped organize and operate the city's lesbian bar
"Mother's Brew" which also was the meeting place of the Lesbian
Feminist Union. She continued practicing magic with her circle in Ohio and
became a priestess in that circle in 1979. She met Z Budapest at a
conference called "Witches and Amazons" in Columbus, Ohio, in
the late 1970s. After that conference, she determined to "organize
for the Goddess" and to keep custody of her son and find a place for
a Goddess women's organization, she and Falcon moved to Madison, Wisconsin
in 1982.

1990: To Know publishedJade and Falcon split in 1983 and Jade began work on a newsletter, Of
A Like Mind (OALM). Lynnie Levy, an experienced editor, began working
as editor of OALM. Jade and Lynnie incorporated a national religious
organization for Goddess women called the Re-formed Congregation of the
Goddess- International (RCG-I). In 1984, RCG-I was still operating out of
Jade's home, but was producing merchandise to raise funds and had created
a national directory for Goddess women. They looked into buying land,
sponsored all manner of women's events in the Madison area, and began
hosting women's spirituality groups for the Madison community. They
developed long-range goals that included paying priestesses a salary,
owning land, continuing to publish OALM and directories, and offering a
regular ministerial training course.
RCG-I held the first, national Dianic Wicca Conference in 1986 to
"define" what Dianic Wicca was. In 1987, Jade and Lynnie went to
the National Women's Music Festival, the Pagan Spirit Gathering, and the
Michigan Women's Music Festival to present a networking workshop for
Goddess women. That September, the second conference, Women and
Witchcraft/Defining Dianic Wicca II was held with sixty-five women in
attendance. The first instruction classes, the Cella Program, also began
that fall.

1982These conferences, Madison area lesbian events, national networking and
educational opportunities expanded over the next decade. Jade began
working for the Congregation in 1988 and in 1990, Jade published, To
Know: A Guide to women's Magic and Spirituality. In 1993, RCG-I
sponsored a workshop with Starhawk and other national and Midwestern
wiccan conferences. In 1994, the LA-based Circle of Aradia became the
first chartered circle within the RCG-I umbrella. In 1996, Deb Trent was
ordained as 1st Priestess through Cella courses of the Women's Thealogical
Institute. In 2000, Z Budapest ordained Jade as a Dianic Elder
Priestess.
RCG-I bought a Mother House in Madison. Jade is a member of the
informal North American networking group of leaders from all
Wiccan/Goddess traditions. She lives with her partner Raven in Madison.
Additional Resources