Contents
Collection Overview
Biographical Note
Scope and Contents of the Collection
Organization of the Collection
Search Terms
Contents: finding aid
SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS (Rosika Schwimmer)
SERIES II. FRIENDS AND ASSOCIATES
SERIES III. SUBJECT FILES
SERIES IV. PEACE
SERIES V. OVERSIZE MATERIALS
BOOKS ON SHELF
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Schwimmer-Lloyd Collection, 1912-1950
Finding Aid
Finding aid prepared by mnsss.
Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
2003
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Creator:
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Schwimmer, Rosika, 1877-1948 |
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Title:
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Schwimmer-Lloyd Collection |
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Dates:
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1912-1950 |
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Abstract:
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Suffragist; feminist; pacifist; organizer, Ford Peace Expedition; and diplomat. The collection documents primarily the peace activism of Rosika Schwimmer, but also include some material on co-activist and friend, Lola Maverick Lloyd. Biographical materials are included for a number of friends and associates including Lola Maverick Lloyd, Jane Addams, Carrie Chapman Catt, Henry Ford, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Harvey O'Connor, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Franciska Schwimmer. Other materials include clippings, correspondence, writings, personal memorabilia, subject files, and photographs.
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Extent:
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4 boxes, 1 poster(1.25 linear ft.) |
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Language:
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English. |
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Identification:
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MS 141 |
Rosika Schwimmer (1877-1948) was born in Budapest, Hungary, the oldest child of Max B. Schwimmer, a grocer and horse dealer, and Bertha Katscher Schwimmer, member of a distinguished Jewish literary family. She married in 1911 but divorced two years later. An accomplished linguist, fluent in more than half a dozen languages, Schwimmer initially devoted herself to the cause of woman suffrage. She attended the 1904 Berlin meeting of the International Council of Women at which the International Women's Suffrage Alliance was founded. She settled in London in 1911 as press secretary of the Alliance. With the outbreak of World War I, Schwimmer focused her efforts on peace. In 1914 she traveled to the U.S. to speak with President Wilson and Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan on behalf of the Alliance's endorsement of neutral mediation of the war. Her flamboyant personality and ardent peace advocacy provided the spark that kindled sentiment for the Woman's Peace Party. She was also influential in organizing the 1915 Congress of Women at The Hague and establishing the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace (later Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF)). The Ford Peace Ship, the ocean liner sponsored by Henry Ford that sailed to Europe in 1915-16 carrying an unofficial mediation commission, brought its passengers, including Schwimmer, a notoriety that led to her resignation from WILPF in 1918. Upon her return to Hungary, Schwimmer was appointed ambassador to Switzerland. In 1921 she returned to the U.S. where her attempts to resume her career and gain citizenship were thwarted by accusations that she was a spy. Her final citizenship application was denied in 1924 when she refused to affirm her willingness to bear arms in defense of the United States. She remained in the U.S. as an alien for the rest of her life, supported by her old friend and co-worker for peace, Lola Maverick Lloyd.
Lola Maverick Lloyd (1875-1944) graduated from Smith College in 1897. A pioneer suffragist and pacifist, in 1915 she co-founded with Jane Addams the Women's Peace Party, and later the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. She was also a delegate to the Congress of Women at the Hague in 1915 and sailed on Henry Ford's Peace Ship. Lloyd and Schwimmer co-chaired the Campaign for World Government.
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This collection consists of duplicates from the Schwimmer-Lloyd Collection at the New York Public Library. The material contained here documents primarily the peace activism of Rosika Schwimmer. It includes biographical articles, clippings, correspondence, writings, personal memorabilia, subject files, and photographs. It also includes biographical materials on numerous friends and associates including Lola Maverick Lloyd, Jane Addams, Carrie Chapman Catt, Henry Ford, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Harvey O'Connor, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Franciska Schwimmer.
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Return to the Table of Contents
This collection is organized into five series:
Return to the Table of Contents
Box
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Folder
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1 |
1 |
Contents: finding aid
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SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS (Rosika Schwimmer)
Box
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Folder
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1 |
2 |
About Schwimmer-Lloyd Collection at the New York Public Library Annex,
1974-79, n.d.
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3 |
Rosika Schwimmer,
1934-38
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4 |
Biographical articles,
1915-59
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6-9 |
Newspaper clippings,
1912-48
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10 |
Articles by F. Marvin,
1924
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14 |
Mission carrying Wilson's message to Hungary (A Year as a Government Agent, by Vira B. Whitehouse),
1920
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Nobel Peace Prize candidate,
1948
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Photographs of Rosika Schwimmer at home,
1946, n.d.
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SERIES II. FRIENDS AND ASSOCIATES
Box
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Folder
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2 |
1 |
Addams, Jane,
1935
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Anthony, Susan B. (II),
1936
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3 |
Balch, Emily Greene,
1915
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Bayen, Malaku Emmanuel,
1937
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Catt, Carrie Chapman,
1939-47
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Caesar, Irving,
1939, n.d.
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12 |
Einstein, Albert,
1933
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14 |
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins,
1935-36
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Holmes, Oliver Wendell,
1941
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Holtby, Winifred,
1935
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Lloyd, Lola Maverick,
1931-41
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Lloyd, William B., Jr.,
1940
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Maverick, Maury (cousin of Lola Maverick Lloyd),
1935-39
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O'Connor, Harvey,
1931-53
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Roosevelt, Eleanor R.,
1940-46
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Schwimmer, Franciska,
1944, n.d.
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Streit, Clarence K.,
1939-41
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Villard, Oswald Garrison,
n.d.
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26 |
Wynner, Edith,
1945-50
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SERIES III. SUBJECT FILES
Box
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Folder
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1 |
Atomic energy,
1945
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Marvin, Fred: court case,
1928
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The Magnificent Yankee (play about Rosika Schwimmer), inscribed by F. Schwimmer to the Smith College Library,
1946
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Citizenship case,
1927-32, n.d.
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Lusitania sinking,
1935
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Miscellaneous foreign publications,
1915-42
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World Center for Women's Archives,
1935
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Race problems,
1937-46
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Rosika Schwimmer's libel case vs. Fred R. Marvin and Commercial Publishing Company: transcripts,
1924-28
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SERIES IV. PEACE
Box
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Folder
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1 |
Miscellaneous domestic articles,
1924-41
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Miscellaneous foreign articles,
1916-42
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League of Nations,
1938-39
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Pacifism,
1916-45, n.d.
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Einstein (on peace),
1935
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Miscellaneous peace publications,
1915-44
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Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
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Correspondence,
1935-56
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10a |
Newspaper clippings,
1919-31
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Church and youth groups on peace,
1928-44
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United Nations,
1944-46
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World government,
1924-44
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War Resister's League,
1940-48
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SERIES V. OVERSIZE MATERIALS
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World War I anti-war poster,
circa 1914
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BOOKS ON SHELF
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Tisza Tales by Rosika Schwimmer (Garden City, NY: Doubleday,
1928)
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