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"Graham is to be commended for the superb work she has done in editing these letters and not only bringing her subject to life, but also using her as a vehicle to explore deeper issues such as the experience of war and the evolving role of women in American society at this critical moment of the twentieth century."—Journal of Military History
Publishes for the first time the World War I letters of Nora Saltonstall, a young woman from a prominent New England family who left her comfortable circumstances to volunteer for service on the Western Front.
Nora Saltonstall (1894-1919) was just twenty-three when she left behind her privileged, upper-class life in Boston for volunteer service in France during the Great War. Nora's mission began in 1917, and took her through waters prowled by German U-boats, to refugee, canteen, and dispensary work in Paris, and then, just before the decisive battles of 1918 got under way, to Mrs. Daly's autochir, a mobile surgical hospital on the Western Front, where she served as quartermaster, driver, auto mechanic, and nursing assistant.
Now Nora's war correspondence-letters she wrote home to anxious family and friends from October 1917 to March 1919-are published here for the first time. Written in a fresh, straightforward, and unpretentious voice, with an irreverent and charming sense of humor, Nora's engaging and richly detailed missives tell of securing food and medical supplies, assisting refugees, preparing wounded soldiers for surgery, and packing and moving the autochir under the threat of enemy fire. They also tell of the experiences of the many young men in Nora's circle, including her brother (and future U. S. senator) Leverett, who volunteered as ambulance drivers and soldiers, and of the momentous events during the last year of the war: the German spring offensive, the Allied counteroffensive, and the Armistice.
Judith S. Graham's incisive introductory narrative and editorial notes, which include information drawn from prewar and postwar letters and diaries from 1911 to 1919, describe Nora's Boston Brahmin roots, educational background, social, cultural, and civic activities, and her participation in war relief work on the home front. She shows how Nora's social advantages and family history, as well as her adventurous spirit, steadfastness, and robust health, prepared her for meeting the challenges of service in the war zone.
“Out Here at the Front” gives the reader an intimate view of a young woman's life in early twentieth-century Boston society and an illuminating perspective on women workers behind the lines in wartime France.
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Judith S. Graham is a graduate of Brandeis University and received her Ph.D. in history from Boston College, where she has taught American and European history. She is the author of Puritan Family Life: The Diary of Samuel Sewall, also published by Northeastern University Press. She lives in the Boston area.
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