70 results
- Tags: Soviet Union
- Item Type: Text
Three Efforts of Contemporary Russia to break through Current Abstractions, August 1918
Addams comments on the Russian Revolution and Russian Civil War, and the influences of Tolstoy on both.
Relief for Russian Women and Children, 1920
A pamphlet describing relief efforts in Russia and list of officers.
Frida Perlen to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Office, January 1920
Perlen and the German Section ask the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom to raise a protest against the world blockade of the Soviet Union.
Emily Greene Balch to Jane Addams, March 2, 1920
Balch forwards Addams a letter regarding conflict in Soviet-Russia, despite the rapidly changing situation and there being little that the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom can accomplish.
Emily Greene Balch to Bainbridge Colby, March 12, 1920
Balch asks Colby for clarification of the American policy towards prisoners of war in Siberia.
Oswald Garrison Villard to Jane Addams, March 15, 1920
Villard writes to Addams regarding Siberian prisoners of war and German food conditions.
Lida Gustava Heymann to Emily Greene Balch, March 16, 1920
Heymann sends Balch a request to send a Women's International League for Peace and Freedom commission of three to Russia and the Ukraine to investigate conditions.
George Vladimir Lomonosoff to Raïssa Rosen Lomonosoff, March 20, 1920
Lomonosoff writes to his wife about his health and asks her to give Addams an appeal to aid Russian children.
Appeal from the Russian Patriarch, May 1920
The Russian Patriarch, Tikhon, pleads with the American people to help feed their children.
Livingston Farrand to Bertalan Barna, May 6, 1920
Farrand tells Barna how limited the American Red Cross is in regard to the prisoners of war in Siberia.
Jane Addams to Wilbur Kelsey Thomas, May 13, 1920
Addams asks Thomas about Russian relief to the British Friends Service Committee through the American Friends.
Patrick James Gratten Mythen to Jane Addams, May 13, 1920
Abbott Patrick sends Addams an appeal by the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church to organize relief for Russian children.
James Grover McDonald to Jane Addams, May 15, 1920
McDonald asks Addams for help promoting a publication of documents on Russian-American relations.
James Grover McDonald to Jane Addams, May 27, 1920
McDonald asks Addams for help with their petition opposing a trade embargo on the Soviet Union.
Review of Russian-American Relations, ca. June 1920 (excerpt)
A review of the League of Free Nations Association's publication on Russian-American relations.
James Grover McDonald to Jane Addams, June 3, 1920
McDonald asks Addams for information on relief efforts in Soviet Russia and discusses the League's book Russian-American Relations.
Alice Kauser to Jane Addams, June 5, 1920
Kauser updates Addams on difficulties in raising funds for prisoners of war in Siberia.
Litmus Papers of the Acid Test, June 5, 1920 (excerpt)
White praises Russian-American Relations as a means of encouraging open diplomacy.
Review of Russian-American Relations, June 5, 1920 (excerpt)
The Globe praises Russian-American Relations as a way to foster understanding between the countries.
Our Russian Policy, June 5, 1920 (excerpt)
Hapgood praises Russian-American Relations as a boon to newspapermen.
Nonpartisan Light on Russia, June 6, 1920 (excerpt)
The Tribune praises Russian-American Relations as a valuable contribution to understanding the Russian situation.
Our Undeclared War, June 16, 1920 (excerpt)
Berle praises Russian-American Relations for revealing the way American foreign affairs are conducted.
James Grover McDonald to League of Free Nations Association Executive Committee, June 16, 1920
McDonald asks members to send lists of people willing to support the removal of trade restrictions on the Soviet Union.
Jane Addams to James Grover McDonald, June 21, 1920
Addams sends McDonald information about potential supporters for the League of Free Nations Association's petition to send aid to the Soviet Union.
James Grover McDonald to Jane Addams, June 22, 1920
McDonald thanks Addams for her help on efforts to bring relief to the Soviet Union.
Paul Underwood Kellogg to Jane Addams, August 12, 1920
Kellogg updates Addams on efforts to reform the Russian Committee of the League of Free Nations Association.
Wilbur Kelsey Thomas to Jane Addams, September 18, 1920
Thomas tells Addams they need contributions for Russian relief now that supplies can be sent.
Christina Merriman to Jane Addams, October 13, 1920
Merriman asks Addams about efforts to secure an American tour for Robert Cecil in support of the League of Nations and American foreign policy in the Soviet Union.
Alice Thacher Post to Marion Benedict Cothren, October 18, 1920 (fragment)
Post explains the issues facing American efforts to bring relief for prisoners of war still held in the Soviet Union.
Wilbur Kelsey Thomas to Jane Addams, January 29, 1921
Thomas tells Addams that the Soviet Union is allowing the American Friends to distribute relief supplies to Russian children and requests aid.
Jane Addams to Norman Matoon Thomas, February 25, 1921
Addams tells Thomas that she cannot travel to the Soviet Union due to her poor health.
Jane Addams to Agnes Cameron Watson, March 15, 1921
Addams writes to Watson about her views on Russia, in response to a critical letter.
Alvin J. Miller to Jane Addams, April 5, 1921
Miller asks Addams to support his efforts for relief work in the Soviet Union.
Boston Speech, ca. April 30, 1921 (excerpts)
Addams speaks in Boston about the way to solve the problem of unmarried mothers and delinquent girls and urges the lifting of the Russian blockade.
Albert Freeman Coyle to Jane Addams, May 3, 1921
Coyle tells Addams about a plan for machinists to boycott work for war materials.
Secretary of Lillian D. Wald to Jane Addams, May 10, 1921
Wald's secretary tells Addams that Clara Sheridan coming to Chicago to speak on Russian relief efforts.
Basis for the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Taking Part in the International Relief Action for Russia, August 14, 1921
Marshall explains the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's role in relief efforts, asking to be allowed to participate in the Conference on Russian Relief and to help spread word about the appeal for help.
Hilda Clark to Jane Addams, August 16, 1921
Clark updates Addams on efforts for relief in Russia and Austria and complains about Lyman Brown's work with the American Relief Administration.
Catherine Elizabeth Marshall to Jane Addams, August 17, 1921
Marshall gives Addams her take on the Russian Relief Conference.
Jane Addams to Wilbur Kelsey Thomas, August 20, 1921
Addams sends Thomas some materials that show how opposed the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom was to creating a new organization for Russian relief.
Jane Addams to Anna Ruth Fry, August 20, 1921
Addams gives Fry her version of the problems with Brent Allinson and his plans for a new international committee for relief in Russia.
Russian Developments, September 6, 1921
Chicherin reports on efforts to relieve hunger in the Soviet Union.
Jane Addams to Grace Abbott, September 7, 1921
Addams congratulates Abbott on her new post at the Children's Bureau and thanks her for her work on Russian relief.
Fridtjof Nansen to Catherine Elizabeth Marshall, September 29, 1921
Nansen thanks Marshall for the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's support for work done in Russia.
Gustave Ador to Catherine Elizabeth Marshall, September 30, 1921
Ador invites Marshall to join the International Rescue Committee, set up to coordinate Russian relief efforts.
Catherine Elizabeth Marshall to Jane Addams, October 9, 1921
Marshall asks Addams to serves as WILP representative to the International Committee for Relief in Russia and updates her on activities in Europe.
Peace and Bread: 1. A Speculation on Bread-Labor and War-Slogans, December 31, 1921
Addams discusses the causes and implications of the Russian Revolution and Civil War.
Peace and Bread: The Witness Borne by Women, February 25, 1922
Addams discusses the work that the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom has done since World War I to foster peace.
Albert Joseph Kennedy to Jane Addams, March 18, 1922
Kennedy updates Addams on efforts to raise famine relief funds for Russia and asks her to prepare a paper for the international settlement conference.
James Grover McDonald to Jane Addams, May 27, 1922
McDonald asks Addams to give a statement on The Hague proposal to bring the Soviet Union back into diplomatic relations with the world.
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