51 results

  • Subject is exactly "peace movement, in Germany"

Addams speaks with a reporter about her impressions of German pacifists at the International Congress of Women.

Baer tells Addams about her speaking tour in Germany.

Wall asks Addams to recommend people who might support the Altar of Good-Will memorial.

Duggan asks Addams to welcome Elsa Brändström Ulich to the United States.

Baer invites Addams to come to Germany to rest and recuperate and shares her work to recruit more pacifists.

Baer invites Addams to Germany and updates her on plans for the next International Congress of Women.

Heymann updates Addams on health and work in Germany.

Baer asks Addams to lecture to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's German Sections while traveling to the Congress in Ireland.

Baer lists German chairman with dates for planned meetings in September.

Kirchhoff writes to Addams with plans for her visit to Bremen in September.

Baer asks Addams for information to plan for her visit to Germany.

Schwimmer asks Addams for Emily Balch's address and tell of her concerns about Gertrud Woker.

Detzer tells Addams about a dinner at the Women's University Club in which two German women criticized the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's German Section.

Also known as Emily Greene Balch to Jane Addams, April 1922

Balch sends Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Summer school secretaries a notice regarding the Summer school.

Addams and Bacon discuss Marianna Haenisch and her charitable work in Vienna and appeal to American women to help Austrian women.

Addams gives a statement about the role of education in Germany in fostering war and peace.

Heymann updates Addams on the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Executive Committee meeting, office, and issues in Vienna.

Muprhy details the American peace tour of Annot Robinson, Gertrud Baer, and Thérèse Pottecher-Arnould.

Baer tells Addams about her trip home the political and economic conditions in Germany.

Schurgast tells Addams her views on international politics and German women's efforts for peace.

Heyman asks Addams to confirm rumors that Gertrud Baer was arrested on arrival in the United States and expresses her concerns.

Fränkel tells Addams of her interest in the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's work in Australia and Germany.

Also known as The Peace Movement (1921)

An advertisement for a book on the Peace Movement edited by Kurt Lenz and Walter Fabian.

Adler tells Spencer that he is skeptical about Friedrich Foerster's plans for a pacifist school to be funded from outside Germany.

Marshall discusses efforts by German women to work with Polish women in Upper Silesia to foster peace.

Ebert welcomes Addams to Europe and thanks her for her efforts to relieve suffering after World War I.

Balch sends Addams the text of Lili Jannasch's letter that describes the German women's struggle against Pan-Germanism and seeks help from Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.

Balch asks Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Sections to send petitions and letters to the London Conference demanding a modification in the amount of reparation payments to be levied on Germany.

Ernst asks Addams for a meeting, telling her that she has felt alienated from American peace activists and advising on the problems in Germany.

Heymann sends Addams a resolution calling for Irish independence and tells of the situation in Europe.

Dulles thanks Addams for introducing her to German Women's International League for Peace and Freedom members.

Villard sends Addams a message from a German woman and asks her to write a leaflet for the Women's Peace Society.

Augspurg and Heymann suggest the dismissal of volunteer militias, arguing that Germany should instead focus on education to restart its economy and culture.

Addams sends Kellogg a call from the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Bavarian Branch to halt militarism.

A petition calling for an international woman's strike in the case of war.

Jordan writes to Addams about Alfred Fried's work.

Dreier offers Addams her views on several German women leaders.

Jacobs writes to explain a report that she disavowed Addams's report on the German trip and reports on her activities.

Hamilton tells Smith about Addams's activities at the International Congress of Women and of their plans to travel to Germany and Austria.

Hanfstaengl writes to Addams regarding the Woman's Congress meeting in Zurich.

Sihler tells Addams he added her name to a list of subscribers to a potential publication about Germany.

Johnson tells Addams some ideas for how to make constructive efforts for peace.

Addams explains what the National Office of the Woman's Peace Party has been doing as the United States is on the brink of war.

Selenka asks Addams if she can attend the upcoming Woman's Peace Party annual meeting to update her on the German committee of the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace.

Karsten is looking for a pamphlet that Mead needs and will pass it along when she finds it. Karsten has also been working with several librarians who are interested in peace literature.

Hyers responds for Addams, telling Pfannebecker that it would be extremely difficult to help the peace movement by contacting relatives in Germany and urging them to protest to their government.

While in Berlin to present peace resolutions, Addams comments that though the world is war-crazy, she expects the United States to remain neutral.

Schwimmer is concerned that she hasn't heard from Addams and gives her an account of their activities in Scandinavia and Germany.

Balch updates Lochner on the International Congress of Woman's delegation meetings with Denmark, Norway, Germany, and the Netherlands.
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