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“Their house had been destroyed and they had lost all their farm possessions but one cow. They were living in one side of a dirt-floored barn that belonged to some friend, and someone else had given them a bed. But why this family was living at all, I do not know. They had rushed away ahead of the Germans with one hundred and eighty Belgian soldiers at the time of the retreat toward Antwerp, and of the one hundred and eighty soldiers only twenty got out alive. Yet this family had come out intact, and survived typhoid fever after that. There were tears in the eyes of that mother — almost the only weeping we saw in Belgium.”
–Dr. Caroline Hedger, Chicago Women’s Club
Recommended Reading:
America’s Women: 400 Years of Dolls, Drudges, Helpmates, and Heroines, Gail Collins
Credits for Primary Sources:
Diary of Mary Paxton Keeley, read with permission from the State Historical Society of Missouri
War bread; a Personal Narrative of the War and relief in Belgium, Edward Eyre Hunt
The overseas war record of the Winsor school, 1914-1919
Into the Breach, American Women Overseas in World War I, Dorothy and Carl Schneider