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The Prize Scholars of Durazzo. Here is the honor class of the school at Durazzo, Albania, the only school in the country to remain open throughout the war. Their record was maintained through the aid sent them by the boys and girls of America. They were just about to close last year from lack of supplies when the Junior Red Cross sent them pencils, paper and ink. Note that the entire class is composed of boys. Very little attention was paid to the education of girls. But now Miss Barbara Sandmere of Washington, has started a girls' school under Junior Red Cross auspices and sixty girls of Itrana are attending

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The Prize Scholars of Durazzo. Here is the honor class of the school at Durazzo, Albania, the only school in the country to remain open throughout the war. Their record was maintained through the aid sent them by the boys and girls of America. They were just about to close last year from lack of supplies when the Junior Red Cross sent them pencils, paper and ink. Note that the entire class is composed of boys. Very little attention was paid to the education of girls. But now Miss Barbara Sandmere of Washington, has started a girls' school under Junior Red Cross auspices and sixty girls of Itrana are attending

description

Summary

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card.
Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office.
Group title: Children-Albania.
On caption card: (1/2140)
Used in: Jr. Red Cross Excl. May 1, 1920
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 12

American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) encountered a multitude of orphaned children when they joined the war in 1917. Grassroots orphans’ relief efforts sprang up in France as early as 1914. A 1916 advertisement in The New York Times stated that in August of 1914, a group of drafted factory workers demanded that an organization should be formed to care for their potentially parent-less children. This first charity was founded by M. Vilta, the head of the Paris Université Populaire. It was known as the Association Les Orphelins de la Guerre, War Orphans’ Association. In 1915, the CNSA (National Relief and Food Committee) created the Oeuvre nationale des orphelins de guerre (National war orphans charity) in order to help children who had lost their parents due to the war. This section was created with the support of the very active Commission For Relief in Belgium (CRB). Across the Atlantic ocean, they were supported by a broad network of charitable donors and private citizens including philanthropist William D. Guthrie, Catholic Archbishop John Cardinal Farley, US Supreme Court Chief Justice Howard Douglass White, and French ambassador William H. Sharp, the American Society for the Relief of French War Orphans, which solicited funds from Yale University. In August of 1914, a group of New York-based philanthropists, and several former French residents including August F. Jaccacci, Mrs. Cooper Hewitt and Frederick René Coudert Jr. began the most wide-reaching orphans’ relief organizations, the Franco-American Committee for the Protection of Children of the Frontier. The Committee was assisted by the Service de Transport France-Amerique, a shipping service for transferring goods across the ocean to help the French. The Committee spread and advertisements printed in publications like the Chicago Tribune. Funds collected from the solicitation on the orphans’ behalf by the American public through the advertisements paid for ophan’s care and education that reportedly cost “16 cents a day.” In addition to relief agencies’ fundraising campaigns, the US Red Cross hosted several large-scale Child Welfare Expositions in Saint Etienne, Lyons, and Marseilles in 1917. By December 1, 1917, the Franco-American Committee for the Protection of Children of the Frontier recorded that they had aided 1,365 children. Despite the war environment, most of the children in American Red Cross photographs appear to be calm and well-fed despite their uprooting and the horrors that they may have witnessed. On April 12, 1918 Stars and Stripes newspaper reported that 38 children were adopted by Infantry companies. The Great War resulted in six million orphans across Europe.

date_range

Date

01/01/1920
place

Location

albania
create

Source

Library of Congress
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

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