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Salvation Army Worker Serving Donuts to the AEF; Image credit: Smithsonian Magazine
“August 10, 1917
I get my appointment and go loco w joy. It seems to me my reason for existence is explained. All my training and experience seem to have fitted me for just this. Bradford Knapp talks and I get two ideas. Unless one gives all one is not giving enough, and if one can go one should. The other thing was that to our generation has come this great chance for sacrifice. There is a joy in my heart that this has come. Everyone is awfully good about my going away. I did not know how much my work meant to me.”–Diary of Mary Paxton Keeley
Recommended Reading:
America’s Women: 400 Years of Dolls, Drudges, Helpmates, and Heroines, Gail Collins
The Women Who Fried Donuts and Dodged Bombs on the Front Lines of WWI, Smithsonian Magazine
Credits for Primary Sources:
Diary of Mary Paxton Keeley, read with permission from the State Historical Society of Missouri
Letters of Emma Young Dickson, read with permission from the Kautz Family YMCA Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries
The overseas war record of the Winsor school, 1914-1919, (Constance Cunningham’s letter)
Canteening Overseas, 1917-1919, (Memoir of Marian Baldwin)
Into the Breach, American Women Overseas in World War I, Dorothy and Carl Schneider