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Back again eating the food of their own country. Repatriates having their first meal in the Casino at Evian where the American Red Cross greets and cares for them

description

Summary

Title and note information from Red Cross caption card.

Group title: Rapatries.

Plate to Secretary General. Print in album.

Date based on date range for negative series.

Gift; American National Red Cross 1944 and 1952.

General information about the American National Red Cross photograph collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.anrc

Temp note: Batch 31

label_outline

Tags

american red cross france evian glass negatives photo ultra high resolution high resolution world war i wwi ww1 library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1914
place

Location

evian
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

https://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication. For information, see "American National Red Cross photograph collection," http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/717_anrc.html

label_outline Explore Evian, France, Ww 1

Chateau Hachette (S&O) General view. ARC tuberculosis sanatorium for women and children. Principally refugees

Pelky i.e., Pelkey knocked out - Public domain portrait photograph

Recruiting Parade, George Grantham Bain Collection

Trudeau Sanitarium, Hachette. A quiet hour under the pine trees. The children have a splendid place to play in the big park that surrounds the Trudeau Sanitarium at Hachette, near Paris. The manor house of Hachette is an AMERICAN RED CROSS hospital for tubercular women. In the grounds nearby barracks have been built where about 180 children are housed, each for a period of three months or more. They are under-nourished children of tubercular tendencies, many of whom have tubercular parents. They are brought from bad living conditions in the cities, and the good nourishment and outdoor life at Hachette go far to establish their health pemanently

Village women from Dartford, near London, visit American soldiers in new hospital just opened by American army there. Few of the visitors come empty-handed. They bring little gifts of all kinds for the soldiers, and the Red Cross usually commandeer their services, also for the distribution of comfort bags and other Red Cross material to distant parts of the grounds. All these things are carried about in "hospital wagons", which are sometimes pilled by the young women visitors, and sometimes by the convalescent Americans

Dr. Baldwin. Physician in charge of the Children's Hospital, Nesle

A Sorrolla come to life. Small boys who have not seen a shower bath for years splash about at Evian, where all repatriates are forced to bathe before they are allowed to enter the life of the town. This prevents the spread of disease. These baths are prepared by the French Government and the American Red Cross for the exiles returned by the Germans from their side of the line through Switzerland to France

A group of people riding in a horse drawn carriage Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information photo.

The last American wounded arriving from the front at the Salisbury Hospital, erected by the American Red Cross at Southampton, England. They are unloaded by the boys of the Kentucky unit now on duty at this base hospital

A black and white photo of a man standing in front of a barn, North Carolina. Farm Security Administration photograph

[Native American mortuary customs: row of Indians carrying bodies over their shoulders to fires, platform with skeletons hanging above and bones below on benches, and groups of Indians standing around fires and poles hung with cloth or skins]

A black and white photo of a crowd of people, North Carolina. Farm Security Administration photograph

Topics

american red cross france evian glass negatives photo ultra high resolution high resolution world war i wwi ww1 library of congress