Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter 1: On the Front Lines
Mary Boyle O’Reilly, “Woman Writer Sees Horrors of Battle,” The Seattle Star
Mary Roberts Rinehart, “For King and Country, No Man’s Land,” The Saturday Evening Post
Edith Wharton, “In Lorraine and the Vosges,” Scribner’s Magazine
Chapter 2: Reporting from France
Madeleine Zabriskie Doty, “War Cripples,” The New Republic
Jessica Lozier Payne, “Soldiers’ Graves Dot Farms on Marne Battlefield,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Mary Heaton Vorse, “The Sinistrées of France,” The Century Magazine
Maude Radford Warren, “Madame, C’est la Guerre!” The Outlook
Chapter 3: Women’s Role
Ellen Adair, “Women and the War,” Evening Public Ledger
Sophie Treadwell, “Women in Black,” Harper’s Weekly
Mary Boyle O’Reilly, “Baby’s Value in Europe,” Bismarck Daily Tribune
Jessica Lozier Payne, “Women Work Tirelessly Making Shells for the Front,” What I Saw in England and France
Ruth Wright Kauffman, “The Woman Ambulance-Driver in France,” The Outlook
Chapter 4: Reporting the Central Powers
Alice Rohe, “Once Gay Vienna Now City of Gloom,” The Washington Times
Nellie Bly, “Paints Horrors of War’s Work,” Tensas Gazette
Eleanor Franklin Egan, “Behind the Smoke of Battle,” The Saturday Evening Post
Madeleine Zabriskie Doty, “War’s Burden Thrown on Poor of Germany as Food Supply Dwindles,” New York Tribune
Chapter 5: Pacifists
Madeleine Zabriskie Doty, “At The Hague,” Short Rations: Experiences of an American Woman in Germany
Mary Chamberlain, “The Women at The Hague,” The Survey
Alice Hamilton, “At the War Capitals,” The Survey
Helen Ring Robinson, “Confessions of a Peace Pilgrim,” The Independent
Chapter 6: Wartime Adventures
Mildred Farwell, “Americans Try a Big Bluff to Save Serb Food” and “Bulgars Seize Serb Food Left with Americans,” Chicago Tribune
Eleanor Franklin Egan, “In the Danger Zone,” The Saturday Evening Post
Mary Boyle O’Reilly, “Star Woman Runs Blockade,” Seattle Star
Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant, Shadow-Shapes: The Journal of a Wounded Woman, October 1918–May 1919
Chapter 7: Russian Revolution
Louise Bryant, “From the Frontier to Petrograd,” Six Red Months in Russia
Rheta Childe Dorr, “Women Soldiers of Russia May Rescue the Republic,” The Sunday Star
Bessie Beatty, “The Rise of the Proletariat,”Asia: Journal of the American Asiatic Association
Chapter 8: Americans in France
Dorothy Canfield Fisher, “The Sammies in Paris,” Everybody’s Magazine
Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant, “America Meets France,” The New Republic
Rheta Childe Dorr, A Soldier’s Mother in France: “‘A.P.M.’ Magic Letters that Help Our Boys in Straight Path Abroad,” The Courier-Journal
Clara Savage, “The First Word from France,” Good Housekeeping
Chapter 9: Americans in the Fight
Clara Savage, “Behind the Scenes in France,” Good Housekeeping
Mary Brush Williams, “When Mothers Ask News of Their Boys in France,” New York Tribune
Maude Radford Warren, “We Took the Hill,” The Saturday Evening Post
Chapter 10: After the Fighting
Peggy Hull, “Allied Troops Unpopular Now in Vladivostok,” The Tampa Times
Peggy Hull, “Peggy Hull Tells ‘Death Train’ of Russian Bolshevik,” Battle Creek Enquirer
Maude Radford Warren, “The First Invasion,” Good Housekeeping
Elizabeth Frazer, “The Signature,” The Saturday Evening Post
Appendix
Bibliography
Index