Knowledge (XXG)

United States Committee for the Care of European Children

Source 📝

61:. Roosevelt, from her position of influence, continued to strongly support USCOM. In actuality, she was greatly involved in the mission to rescue mainly Jewish European children through all possible relevant agencies. In 1941 134: 31:
children who came from Continental Europe, and to evacuate them to the United States, however, most of the children were British refugees from the blitz. Since the U.S. was neutral until
211: 73: 89: 84:, also worked to save mainly Jewish children and send them to the United States. In Europe, these included the American-based 174: 146: 133:
United States Committee for the Care of European Children, Report of the Executive Director to the Board of Directors
206: 81: 24:) was a quasi-governmental American body established in June 1940, with the intent to try to save mainly 62: 54: 108: 58: 200: 36: 32: 77: 28: 88:
which worked directly in Germany, and the French Jewish organization
25: 50:, whose purpose was to bring children from Great Britain to the US. 118: 114: 85: 69: 47: 40: 109:"The United States Committee for the Care of European Children" 18:
United States Committee for the Care of European Children
113:
gwu.edu . However, this reference conflates the work of
35:
on December 7, 1941, USCOM was still able to operate in
65:
was USCOM's President or Chairman (sources differ).
68:Many other non-Governmental organisations, such as 173: 145: 121:which worked with children in mainland Europe 43:occupation of Vichy France in November 1942. 8: 212:Organizations for children affected by war 39:from its founding in June 1940, until the 100: 175:"119 child refugees here from Lisbon" 7: 53:USCOM was co-founded by First Lady 14: 117:to rescue British children, and 46:USCOM should be contrasted with 1: 228: 190:– via Times Machine. 182:. 22 June 1941. p. 19 162:– via Times Machine. 80:, and individuals such as 154:. 21 June 1941. p. 9 82:Gilbert and Eleanor Kraus 147:"132 child refugees due" 180:The New York Times 152:The New York Times 63:Marshall Field III 207:Government bodies 55:Eleanor Roosevelt 219: 192: 191: 189: 187: 177: 170: 164: 163: 161: 159: 149: 142: 136: 131: 125: 124: 105: 227: 226: 222: 221: 220: 218: 217: 216: 197: 196: 195: 185: 183: 172: 171: 167: 157: 155: 144: 143: 139: 132: 128: 107: 106: 102: 98: 12: 11: 5: 225: 223: 215: 214: 209: 199: 198: 194: 193: 165: 137: 126: 99: 97: 94: 59:Louis S. Weiss 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 224: 213: 210: 208: 205: 204: 202: 181: 176: 169: 166: 153: 148: 141: 138: 135: 130: 127: 122: 120: 116: 110: 104: 101: 95: 93: 91: 87: 83: 79: 75: 71: 66: 64: 60: 56: 51: 49: 44: 42: 38: 34: 30: 27: 23: 19: 184:. Retrieved 179: 168: 156:. Retrieved 151: 140: 129: 112: 103: 67: 52: 45: 37:Vichy France 33:Pearl Harbor 21: 17: 15: 186:29 February 158:29 February 201:Categories 96:References 76:, and the 78:Quakers 29:refugee 72:, the 26:Jewish 119:USCOM 74:Joint 22:USCOM 188:2024 160:2024 115:CORB 86:GJCA 70:HIAS 57:and 48:CORB 41:Nazi 16:The 90:OSE 203:: 178:. 150:. 111:. 92:. 123:. 20:(

Index

Jewish
refugee
Pearl Harbor
Vichy France
Nazi
CORB
Eleanor Roosevelt
Louis S. Weiss
Marshall Field III
HIAS
Joint
Quakers
Gilbert and Eleanor Kraus
GJCA
OSE
"The United States Committee for the Care of European Children"
CORB
USCOM

"132 child refugees due"
"119 child refugees here from Lisbon"
Categories
Government bodies
Organizations for children affected by war

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.