131 results
- Tags: Disarmament
- Item Type: Text
Address of Miss Jane Addams before Resolutions Committee, Democratic National Convention, June 24, 1932
Addams asks the Democratic National Convention to adopt ap peace plank that includes participation in the League of Nations, global disarmament, the cancelling of war debts, and recognition of the Government of the Soviet Union.
Joseph Beale Howie to Jane Addams, June 13, 1929
Howie asks Addams to participate in the World Disarmament Movement and help spread word in the United States.
Interview with Effie Leese Scott, February 14, 1929
Scott interviews Addams for the Tucson Daily Citizen on international relations and the future of the peace movement.
Salmon Oliver Levinson to Jane Addams, November 3, 1928
Levinson gives Addams his opinion of Samuel Colcord and James Shotwell's value to the peace movement.
George Gordon Battle to Jane Addams, October 17, 1928
Battle asks Addams for support for this program to promote the prohibition of war.
Eleanor May Moore to Jane Addams, October 4, 1928
Moore tells Addams about her return to Australia and activities taken after the Pan-Pacific Women's Conference.
Women Discuss World Peace, September 29, 1928
The Age reports that the Australian Federation of Women Voters resolved to call on its government to support disarmament.
World Peace, September 29, 1928 (excerpt)
The Argus reports on the Australian Federation of Woman Voter's meeting and discussion of a resolution calling for disarmament.
Speech to the Honolulu Branch of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, August 22, 1928 Also known as Governmental Efforts Towards World Peace, August 22, 1928
Addams discusses international organization for peace and world betterment.
Questions and Answers from the Daughters of the American Revolution, August 22, 1928
Addams responds to the Daughters of the American Revolution's prepared questions about the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, disarmament, and other current events. This event was held at Mission Memorial Hall in Honolulu.
Joseph Beale Howie to Jane Addams, June 12, 1928
Howie invites Addams to a disarmament conference in Australia.
Statement on Disarmament, April 4, 1928
Addams discusses disarmament and recent efforts for world peace.
Governmental Efforts Towards Disarmament, March 27, 1928 (excerpts)
Addams argues that disarmament is a slow process towards progress in a speech to the Twentieth Century Club.
Salmon Oliver Levinson to Jane Addams, March 14, 1928
Levinson sends Addams a donation and provides his ideas of the Kellogg movement.
Jane Addams to Dorothy Detzer, January 29, 1928
Addams tells Detzer to halt any efforts to get her appointed to the Disarmament Conference.
World Defense Plan Referred by League to 'Security' Board, November 30, 1927
Wood describes the peace proposals brought up in the League of Nations disarmament commission.
Kathleen D'Olier Courtney to Jane Addams, August 4, 1927
Courtney tells Addams why it might be the wrong time for the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom to undertake the China trip.
Third Draft Pact Offered By Dr. Francis B. Sayre, June 3, 1927
News report of the draft of a plan to outlaw war drafted by Francis Sayre.
Sayre Has Treaty in Reply to Briand, June 3, 1927
News report of the draft of a plan to outlaw war drafted by Francis Sayre.
Problem of Crime Unsolved, Let Us Start at It Anew, May 30, 1927
Addams discusses the increasing rate of juvenile crime and the efforts to combat it at a meeting of the American Crime Study Commission.
Problem of Crime Unsolved, Let Us Start at It Anew, May 30, 1927
Addams discusses the increasing rate of juvenile crime and the efforts to combat it at a meeting of the American Crime Study Commission.
Miss Addams Would Fix It, May 19, 1927
An editorial criticizes Jane Addams for wanting to disarm policemen.
Elizabeth Kennedy Nicol Hutton to Jane Addams, May 19, 1927
Hutton asks Addams for advice in combating the attacks of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Americal Legion.
Dorothy Detzer to Calvin Coolidge, May 19, 1927
Detzer asks Coolidge to add a disarmament expert to the upcoming Naval Conference.
Study of Public Record of Miss Jane Addams, May 17, 1927
Fay paints Addams as a Bolshevist using quotes and other records.
Dorothy Detzer to Calvin Coolidge, May 12, 1927
Detzer asks Coolidge to add Theodore Burton to the American delegation to the upcoming Naval Conference.
Jane Addams to Harold Hitz Burton, May 2, 1927
Addams provides Burton information defending the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom against charges of communism.
Refutation of charges against Jane Addams made by the Daughters of the American Revolution, March 31, 1927
Balch defends Addams against accusations made by the Daughters of the American Revolution and other organizations.
Ernest Lafont to Madeleine Zabriskie Doty, March 28, 1927
Lafont thanks Doty for sending information about war mobilization and plans to read it to the French parliament.
Memorandum on the World Court Conference in New York, October 27, 1926
McDonald summarizes a meeting of the World Court Conference that discusses the United States's reaction to the World Court and whether or not unity of action was desirable.
Speakers' Conference on Present Tendencies in International Cooperation for World Peace, June 10 and 11, 1926
The Alliance provides the aims and program for a conference on world Peace held in Chicago.
Jane Addams to Hugh Simons Gibson, May 17, 1926
Addams sends Gibson a petition opposing conscription and calling for World Disarmament.
Dorothy Detzer to Jane Addams, April 12, 1926
Detzer sends Addams details of the work she is doing at the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Washington office.
Dorothy Detzer to Jane Addams, April 10, 1926
Detzer asks Addams to participate in the Conference of Peace Organizations in Washington.
Jane Addams to Martha Helen Elliott, June 25, 1925
Addams praises Elliott's response to Grace Johnson and argues that striving for total disarmament may not be realistic, but it is the overall goal.
Eleanor May Moore to Kathleen D'Olier Courtney, March 13, 1925
Moore tells Courtney her views on the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's acceptance of many kinds of pacifists.
Peace Groups Strife Renewed in Two Centers in Capitol, January 20, 1925
The Evening Star reports on the strife over the peace movement at the Conference on the Cause and Cure of War.
"Il Faut Organiser L'Enseignement de la Paix," January 17, 1925
Percin discusses the importance of education about peace to contrast warmongering.
Vilma Glücklich to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Executive Committee, December 25, 1924 Also known as Vilma Glücklich to Jane Addams, December 25, 1924
Glücklich sends Addams three Women's International League for Peace and Freedom issues asking for her opinion on them.
Kathleen D'Olier Courtney to Jane Addams, November 20, 1924
Courtney tells Addams that some Women's International League for Peace and Freedom members oppose the pacifist doctrines sent out after the Washington meeting and asks that they be formally ratified at the next international congress.
Vilma Glücklich to Jane Addams, October 29, 1924 Also known as Vilma Glücklich to Women's International League for Peace and Freedom National Sections and Correspondents, October 29, 1924
Glücklich asks Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Sections and leaders to support the League of Nations's Protocol for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes, and discusses plans to better promote disarmament.
Emily Greene Balch to Daughters of the American Revolution - Kaskia Chapter, July 10, 1924
Balch tells the Kaskia Chapter that Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's position ion disarmament has been misrepresented and hopes that even if they disagree, they are both working for the nation's best interests.
Erna Jüllig-Broda to Jane Addams, April 17, 1924
Jüllig asks Addams if her organization can speak on disarmament at the International Congress of Women.
The Difference between Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle-Dee, April 7, 1924
Addams claims that the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom does not require a pledge from its members.
International Union for Voluntary Disarmament on a Reciprocity Basis Pledge Form, April 1924
The Union seeks pledges to renounce military service.
Amy Woods to Jane Addams, February 23, 1924
Woods tells Addams about differences of opinion over the theme for the International Congress of Women and efforts to secure delegates from Europe.
A Christmas Message for 1923, December 25, 1923
Addams argues for peace and international understanding to help bring Europe out of the devastation of war.
A Christmas Message for 1923, December 25, 1923
Addams argues for peace and international understanding to help bring Europe out of the devastation of war.
A Christmas Message for 1923, December 25, 1923
Addams argues for peace and a spiritual awakening at Christmas.
Christmas Message for 1923, December 25, 1923
Addams argues for peace and international understanding to help bring Europe out of the devastation of war.
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