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We Answered With Love: Pacifist Service in World War I

We Answered With Love: Pacifist Service in World War I

$ 20.00

“Out there alone by the river I was unutterably happy, for it seemed as though all my ideals were possible and not far away after all.”   -- Mary Peabody, December 9, 1918

How did pacifists experience World War I?  We Answered with Love: Pacifist Service in World War I. The Letters of Leslie Hotson and Mary Peabody, gives the story of two young people corresponding during this turbulent time.

In 1918, the United States government required that all universities provide military training in order to prepare sufficient officers for a nation at war. When Harvard made military training mandatory for all students during World War I, John Leslie Hotson, a pacifist, took a leave of absence from his studies and went to France with a group of Quakers to do relief and reconstruction work. This project, the Friends Reconstruction Unit, was started by Quakers from Haverford College and Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. His dear friend Mary May Peabody, a socialist and political activist, remained at Radcliffe College. During the thirteen months he was overseas, Leslie and Mary wrote more than a hundred letters to each other. Their correspondence offers a delightful and compelling story of two young people caught up in the struggle, sacrifice, and adventure of participating in a noble cause (and, incidentally, falling in love.)

Leslie writes of living alongside refugees in devastated French villages, the work of the Quakers in rebuilding some of the destruction, the conditions of conscientious objectors in America under the atmosphere of fervent militarism, and his joy in experiencing art and culture in Paris. Mary’s letters tell of finishing her senior year at Radcliffe, sharing the campus with thousands of men from the Naval Radio School, the devastating Spanish influenza, the labor strikes at the local textile mills, and the disturbing rise of political conservatism after the Armistice. They struggle to define what it means to live a life of service and how they might be called to serve in the future.  They also talk about poetry, literature, friends from Harvard and Radcliffe College, and their day-to-day activities. The letters are a romantic story of their friendship turning into a love which lasted for more than seventy years. In this book, I have edited their letters and provided additional material that puts their experiences in a broader historical context.

Their story is timely. In 2017 the American Friends Service Committee, which had its beginnings at Haverford College and in the Quaker relief work in France, will celebrate its one hundredth birthday. The organization now has dozens of programs throughout the United States and in thirteen other countries. Leslie and Mary’s appeal, however, will extend beyond students of Quaker history. This book will also be of interest to readers who are seeking an alternative and accessible look at the effects of the First World War and its immediate aftermath as experienced by two highly observant young people.

Author: Nancy Learned Haines. A life-long Quaker, Haines is also the author of Approved: A Story about Quaker Meeting for Business.

Publisher: Pleasant Green Books

ISBN: 978-0-9979848-0-4 

3/11/2017 JBB


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