![A card memorializing Julius and Ethel Rosenberg.](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiIFfTq_tEpjrRMhSuc8MgMaOQqbj4Eyd8r1emuShlK62SNDWmOu5PNzoseZH6VM2VPJfqLpD1NywJD4G59RGOCrKe6Xf-cH61ZqsxQF7Z3flE-X_A05CYnV0x2DeKNGzlCmFoBnqf9s-s127MOEYdTY5cd8NC2WQ7zS0rqWwAURJ58GRax0gDGJsQ/w320-h240/IMG_6383.JPG)
The World Fellowship of Faiths in Albany, NH, was established in the late 1930s as a retreat focused on social justice issues. We've
written a little about the World Fellowship before, but today we'll look at their "Save and Name a Tree" campaign. Cutting of the organization's pine and maple groves for lumber was "repeatedly urged" as a source of addtional funding, until the campaign began in 1943:
"We are reliably informed that about $3.50 is all that one of the World Fellowship's noblest, old, majestic pines would net us if slaughtered for lumber... we invite our friends to contribute Ten Dollars or More to Save a Tree and to place upon it, permanently, a small, modest marker bearing the tree's name (determined by the donor) with the donor's name and the date of his contribution."
The Charles F. Weller papers include mock-ups for the markers that would go on these trees. Most function as memorials, including beloved pets, family members, historical figures, and whole groups. Going through the markers is a fascinating peek into who and what members of the World Fellowship considered important in the 1940s and 1950s.
To check out the markers, ask for
Box 5 of MS-1295, the Charles F. Weller papers.
No comments :
Post a Comment