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The Red Cross: Some Facts Concerning Clara Barton’s Work [Page 3 of 8]

1903

Clara Barton National Historic Site, National Park Service

Clara Barton National Historic Site, National Park Service
Glen Echo, MD, United States

lara Barton organized the American Red Cross in 1881 with a few followers, members and supporters. By 1903, the American National Red Cross had local auxiliaries from New York to California. Thousands were involved. The national headquarters was located in Clara Barton’s Glen Echo home and staffed by unpaid volunteers and no national administrative budget. The growing organization needed a centralized administrative restructuring that Barton recognized, yet had not yet done. The lack of a centralized administration surfaced as a problem during the Spanish-American War in 1898. Barton was in Cuba for close to a year doing war relief work. A growing faction of Red Cross auxiliary members, mostly from the New York auxiliaries drifted into their own organizational structure. Mabel Boardman emerged as Barton opposition. This power struggle and the attacks on Clara Barton as the organization’s President continued to grow over the years and led to her resignation in 1904. Walter P. Phillips had known Clara Barton since 1878. He had served as a secretary to the organization for over 20 years. He is listed in this document as the Chairman of the Executive Committee. Phillips was an ardent Barton supporter and wrote this document in her defense against attacks by Boardman supporters. Also see CLBA 4539, The Red Cross March, a recording he dedicated to Clara Barton.

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  • Title: The Red Cross: Some Facts Concerning Clara Barton’s Work [Page 3 of 8]
  • Creator: Walter P. Phillips
  • Date Created: 1903
  • Location: Bridgeport, Conn.
  • Type: Booklet
  • Contributor: Clara Barton National Historic Site National Park Service
  • Original Source: http://www.nps.gov/museum/exhibits/clba/exb/American_Red_Cross/Resignation/CLBA4497_cover.html
  • Transcript: “Every now and again there is born into the world and exceptional man or woman who seems to have been created for the specific purpose of placing a new and striking imprint upon the history of the human race. Such were Alexander, Hannibal, Napoleon, Wellington, Marlborough, Washington, Kossuth, Garabaldi, Lincoln, Joan D’Arc, Florence Nightingale, Grace Darling, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Frances Willard, and such are Susan B. Anthony and Clara Barton. Some twenty-five years ago, when the writer was at the head of the Associated Press in Washington, a lady unknown to him at that time asked, through a mutual friend, for an audience. Miss Barton came to my office and briefly told me the story of the Red Cross from its inception in Geneva down to that time. Even then every important nation of the face of the earth had given its assent and become a party to the Geneva treaty, with the solitary exception of the United States. The matter had been repeatedly presented to our Government, but it had not appealed to Secretary Seward, and his successors in the State Department were reluctant to recommend anything that had been considered and rejected by that alert and able statesman. The latest attempt to secure the adherence of the United States had been made by the Rev. Henry W. Bellows, who had finally given up the contest against precedent and prejudice and had written to Miss Barton that while her wished her success in the filed in which he had been defeated, he saw no hope in the situation for her or anybody else…”
  • Source: Clara Barton National Historic Site
  • National Park Service Catalog Number: CLBA4497
  • Measurements: W 15.5, L 22 cm
  • Materials: Paper
Clara Barton National Historic Site, National Park Service

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