Continuing with our commemoration of the 100 year anniversary of the United States entering into World War One, this “Tales from the Archives” blog highlights one of the most notable projects the DAR undertook – supporting the children of France who had lost their fathers on account of the War.
With the country engulfed in the war abroad, Americans at home turned their attention to France and what they could do for her citizens. At the 26th Continental Congress, which was held a mere 10 days after the United States declared war on Germany, President General Daisy Allen Story read a letter from former President Theodore Roosevelt, encouraging the DAR to assist France in their time of need. Roosevelt reported that half a million French children had lost their fathers in the War and that the French government “staggering under the stupendous financial burdens of the war,” could not fully support these orphaned children.

Today's DAR