Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081 U.S.A.

American School Citizenship League
Records, 1908-1930
The SCPC is not the official repository for the records of the ASCL

Document Group: CDGA

Size: 15 linear inches

Provenance: Unknown

Restrictions: None

Microfilm: None

Finding Aid: Checklist prepared by Anne Yoder, January 2000

This checklist is the property of the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.


Introduction

Founded in 1908 by Fannie Fern Andrews, the American School Peace League was intended to promote peace by introducing principles of international justice and fraternity into the curricula of U.S. schools. By 1915, it had branches in 40 states, primarily because of the energy of Andrews and her fellow peace workers, including Lucia Ames Mead.

The National Education Association urged all teachers to cooperate with the League, and in 1912, the U.S. commissioner of education, Philander Claxton, invited Andrews to serve as special advisor to his bureau. The movement spread to Europe, with French teachers organizing a similar league. On a trip to England in 1914, Andrews helped organize the School Peace League of Great Britain and Ireland.

The League distributed circulars, leaflets and booklets for classroom use. The material included poetry, endorsements for peace from statesmen and military leaders, accounts of peace activity, information regarding other peoples and cultures, and a series of programs, including pageants and essay contests, that were designed to further the message of international peace. Following the outbreak of World War I, the League changed its name to the American School Citizenship League. Although it was most active as an organization in its early years, the League continued to function until the death of Fannie Fern Andrews in 1950.

[Source:"The ABC-CLIO Companion to the American Peace Movement in the 20th Century"]


Contents of Collection

Box 1
American School Peace League, 1908-1912
American School Peace League: report by Fannie Fern Andrews, 1912
American School Peace League, 1913-1918
American School Peace League: correspondence re: publicizing essay contest, 1918
American School Peace League: correspondence re: essay contest, Nov. 1918
American School Peace League: correspondence re: essay contest, Dec. 1918

Box 2
American School Peace League: correspondence re: judging essays for contest, 1918-1919
American School Peace League, 1919
American School Peace League: correspondence re: essay contest, Jan. 01-15, 1919
American School Peace League: correspondence re: essay contest, Jan. 16-31, 1919
American School Peace League: correspondence re: essay contest, Feb. 1919
American School Peace League: correspondence re: essay contest, March - Sept. 1919
American School Peace League: correspondence with Mary & Helen Seabury re: essay contest, 1919
American School Peace League: letters stating results of essay contest, July - Sept. 1919
American School Peace League: lists of contestants and winners of essay contest, 1919
American School Peace League, n.d.

Box 3
American School Citizenship League, 1919-1924
American School Citizenship League: correspondence re: publicity for essay contest, 1923-1924
American School Citizenship League: correspondence re: judging essays for contest, 1923-1924
American School Citizenship League: correspondence re: essay contest, Jan. - Feb. 1924
American School Citizenship League: correspondence re: essay contest, March - May 1924
American School Citizenship League: letters stating results of essay contest, 1924-1925
American School Citizenship League, 1925-1930

 
See also:
Papers of Fannie Fern Phillips Andrews (CDGA)

 
 
 
 

Swarthmore College Peace Collection

For more information, contact Wendy Chmielewski, Curator, at
wchmiel1@ swarthmore.edu
or call 610-328-8557.

For other resources, see the college's online library catalog (Tripod).
 

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