American Women's War Relief Fund was an expatriate organization in the United Kingdom started by American women to fund and aid World War I support efforts. The group was made up of wealthy socialites, politicians' wives and humanitarians. Many famous and well-connected women were involved, including Lou Hoover, Consuelo Vanderbilt and Lady Randolph Churchill. Leila Paget served as president and Ava Lowle Willing was the fund's vice-president. The group, started almost immediately after the declaration of war, funded a fleet of ambulances, two hospitals, one field hospital and several employment opportunities for unemployed women in Britain.
American Women's War Relief Fund was founded on August 5, 1914. [1] Members of the organization were women from the United States who were married to Englishmen and who wanted to help in the effort to support soldiers fighting in World War I. [2] The president of the group was Leila Paget and Ava Lowle Willing served as vice-president. [1] [3] Many of the members of the group had husbands who were commanding troops during the war. [4] Paget told journalist Hayden Church that she had thought up the idea for the Relief Fund merely three days after the start of the war. [4] Winnaretta Singer and the Countess of Starfford were major donors of money to the fund. [4] Paget also raised money in both America and England for wounded soldiers of several different countries fighting in the war. [5] In 1917, there was an official request to have all American-led efforts to support the war in Europe be turned over to the American Red Cross for coordination purposes. [6] In January 1918, the Relief Fund hospitals were fully turned over to be run by the Red Cross. [7]
The fund originally was going to sponsor an ambulance ship, but were persuaded to purchase 6 motor ambulances with a seventh added later by Grace Nichols and bearing the words, "From Friends in Boston". [8] The ambulances had room enough for four stretchers and two medics. [8]
In August 1914, the American Women's War Relief Fund received the donation from Paris Eugene Singer of his Oldway House in Paignton to be used as a military hospital. [9] Lady Randolph Churchill was involved in persuading Singer to donate the house to use as a hospital. [10] The building, known as the American Women's War Hospital, was initially equipped with 200 beds, an operating theatre, radiographic studio, pathology lab and also with anesthetizing and sterilization rooms. [11] Later, an additional 20 beds were added, and an "Isolation Hut" for quarantines was built which could accommodate around 30 people. [11] The American Red Cross helped staff the hospital, providing two units. [12] [13] The hospital began treating wounded soldiers as soon as September 1914. [14] On November of that year, Queen Mary brought three hundred articles of clothes for the hospital and visited the wards. [15] [16] Anita Strawbridge solicited donations such as socks and underwear from the United States. [17] By 1916, the American Women's War Hospital had treated 3,203 soldiers, according to the New York Herald . [18] By March 1919, when the hospital closed, it had served over 7,000 soldiers. [7]
The relief fund also provided partial funding for a field hospital in Belgium run by the wife of an officer, Mrs. O'Gorman. [19] Another hospital, known as the American Women's Hospital, was located at Lancaster Gate and had been opened in 1917 by Walter Hines Page and Willa Alice Wilson Page. [3] [5] The Lancaster hospital had 41 beds and was mainly staffed with American nurses. [5] It was inspected by King George and the Queen in 1917. [20] It closed in 1919. [7]
In addition to setting up the hospital, the fund also created workrooms to teach young women new skills as part of the Economic Relief Committee of the American Women's War Relief Fund. [21] [22] The committee was headed by Consuelo Vanderbilt, who had been recruited by Lou Hoover in 1915. [23] This committee provided funds to pay the women's wages and articles of clothing, such as socks, were sent to the hospital or "given to soldiers and sailors in special need." [18] A workroom was set up in a factory building near St. Pancras between August 1914 and August 1915. [24] A knitting factory in Islington was opened in September 1914, followed by other workrooms in October at Woolwich and one at Greenwich. [25] The Woolwich factory was given to a charity to run in 1915. [23] The women employed at the workrooms were not given quotas, but instead did what they were able to do. [18] The working women were also given free tea and low cost meals in the evening. [19]
Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan was a member of the prominent American Vanderbilt family. Her first marriage to the ninth Duke of Marlborough has become a well-known example of one of the advantageous, but loveless, marriages common during the Gilded Age. The Duke obtained a large dowry by the marriage, and reportedly told her just after the marriage that he married her in order to "save Blenheim" Palace, his ancestral home.
Jennie Spencer-Churchill, known as Lady Randolph Churchill, was an American-born British socialite, the wife of Lord Randolph Churchill, and the mother of British prime minister Sir Winston Churchill.
Lou Hoover was the wife of President Herbert Hoover and served as the first lady of the United States from 1929 to 1933.
The Commission for Relief in Belgium or C.R.B. − known also as just Belgian Relief − was an international organization that arranged for the supply of food to German-occupied Belgium and northern France during the First World War.
Lady Muriel Evelyn Vernon Paget CBE DStJ was a British philanthropist and humanitarian relief worker, initially based in London, and later in Eastern and Central Europe. She was made an OBE in 1918 and promoted to CBE in 1938. She received awards in recognition of her humanitarian work from the governments of Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, and Imperial Russia. In 1916 she was invested as a Dame of Grace of the Order of St John.
Lady Dorothie Mary Evelyn Feilding-Moore, MM was a British heiress who shunned her aristocratic background to become a highly decorated volunteer nurse and ambulance driver on the Western Front during World War I. She was the first woman to be awarded the Military Medal for bravery in the field. She also received the 1914 Star, the Croix de guerre from the French and the Order of Leopold II from the Belgians for services to their wounded.
Ivan Abramson was a director of American silent films in the 1910s and 1920s.
The Almeric Paget Massage Corps was a British physiotherapy service during the First World War.
Dame Louise Margaret Leila Wemyss, Lady Paget, GBE was a British humanitarian, active in the cause of Serbian relief, beginning in World War I.
The German occupation of north-east France refers to the period in which French territory, mostly along the Belgian and Luxembourgish border, was held under military occupation by the German Empire during World War I. This entailed various impositions on the population, including malnourishment, forced labor, and requisitions of property, services, and goods.
The Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Services (SWH) was founded in 1914. They were led by Dr. Elsie Inglis and provided nurses, doctors, ambulance drivers, cooks and orderlies. By the end of World War I 14 medical units had been outfitted and sent to serve in Corsica, France, Malta, Romania, Russia, Salonika and Serbia.
Margaret (Madge) Neill Fraser known as Madge, was a Scottish First World War nurse and notable amateur golfer. She represented Scotland at international level every year from 1905 to 1914.
Violetta Thurstan, MM was an English nurse, weaver, and administrator whose work included help for refugees and prisoners of war. She knew several languages, travelled frequently and wrote a number of books. The first was about her experiences of nursing in dangerous troublespots during the First World War. She was honoured by three countries for her courage while nursing in the war, and was awarded the Military Medal.
Paris Eugene Singer was an early resident of Palm Beach, Florida. He was 22nd of the 24 children of inventor and industrialist Isaac Singer of Singer Sewing Machine Company fame, from whom he inherited money; he has been described as a "man of luxury". Born in Paris, he married Cecilia Henrietta Augusta ("Lillie") Graham, who bore him five children. He had a tempestuous romance with famous dancer Isadora Duncan, whose career he helped, and with whom he had another son, Patrick. Singer Island, Florida, is named for him.
Katherine Mary Harley was a suffragist. In 1913 she proposed and organised the Great Pilgrimage on behalf of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. During the First World War she helped to found and organise the Women's Emergency Corps.
Ruth Holden was an American paleobotanist and nurse, who died in Russia during World War I.
Clarita Vidal was an actress in Edwardian musical comedies, later known for her wartime work in Italy as Countess Chiquita Mazzuchi.
Leslie Joy Whitehead, known as Josephine, Joy, or Jo, was a Canadian female soldier during the First World War. Whitehead was one of a number of women from the western world to enter the frontline as a combatant during World War I after she enlisted as a man in the Royal Serbian Army at the age of 22. During her time on the Balkan Front, she would go on to work as a military engineer, a guard for the Scottish Women's Hospitals, and become a prisoner of war under the Bulgarian Army following the invasion of Belgrade on October 8, 1915.
The Women's Reserve Ambulance Corps was a volunteer aid organisation set up in the United Kingdom in 1915 during the First World War. Its members worked to direct people at stations, transport hospital patients and render assistance during German bombing raids. The corps sent personnel to the Dardanelles during the Gallipoli campaign and arranged the first all-female ambulance convoy to the British Army on the Western Front. The corps became a founding member of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in 1917 and continued in existence until September 1919.
Elsie Cameron Corbett was a volunteer ambulance driver and major donor to the World War One Scottish Women’s Hospital for Foreign Service in Serbia, She was a prisoner of war in 1916 and won medals from the Serbian and British governments. She was also a JP, a leading suffragist, temperance supporter, folklorist and diarist.
american women's war relief fund.