03466mpc 2200445 a 4500001000800000005001700008008004100025035002400066035002200090040002400112100003900136245006800175300001600243545133800259520045701597555001402054524011902068600002702187600004002214610006202254610008102316610004502397610005202442610006202494610003202556610002902588610005402617610006102671610006102732650001902793650002002812650002002832651003302852655003002885650002802915650002002943905002102963998000902984948002702993206771520010402132448.0840321i18471968nyu eng d a(CStRLIN)NYCV84A200 a(NIC)notisAKQ4516 aNICcNICeappmdNIC1 aGardiner, Elizabeth Greene,d1890-00aElizabeth Greene Gardiner papers,f1847-1968,g1910-1968 (bulk) a4 cubic ft. aElizabeth Greene Gardiner was a social worker and professor. She served as a nurse's aide with the Italian Red Cross in Imola, Italy (1915-1916) and with the British Expeditionary Force in France (1917-1919). She was involved in medical social work on Ellis Island (1919-1922) and at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital (1926-1928). From 1928 to 1938 she was assistant professor at the University of Minnesota; during 1931 she served as exchange lecturer at the University of Liverpool, England. She also served as a consultant for the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness (1939-1942), an analyst of convalescent homes for the Committee on Convalescent Care Practice, New York City (1942-1943), and as a Welfare Officer for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration in Egypt, Italy and Germany (1944-1946); also intermittently for the Citizen's Committee on Displaced Persons, New York City, the American Committee for Emigre Scholars, Writers and Artists, New York City, and the Travelers Aid Society, Nashville, Tennessee. Gardiner received her academic training at Simmons College School of Social Work, Columbia University, and the University of Chicago. She was involved in numerous professional organizations, and visited many social, health, and educational agencies in Europe and Asia. aPrimarily letters written by Elizabeth Gardiner to members of her family and friends concerning her personal life and her professional career as a social worker and professor. Also, photographs, official identification papers, her student essays, pamphlets, poems, prayers and memorabilia; and correspondence of other family members and friends, including letters written by Elizabeth Gardiner's mother, Eliza Doane Gardiner, to Ellen Parkman Vaughan.0 aBox list. aElizabeth Greene Gardiner Papers, #2996. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.10aGardiner, Eliza Doane.10aVaughan, Ellen Parkman,d1873-1912.20aCitizen's Committee on Displaced Persons (New York, N.Y.)20aAmerican Committee for Emigre Scholars, Writers and Artists (New York, N.Y.)20aTravelers Aid Society (Nashville, Tenn.)20aRed Cross.bItaly.bItalian National Red Cross.20aGreat BritainxArmed ForcesxBritish Expeditionary Force.20aUniversity of Pennsylvania.20aUniversity of Liverpool.20aNational Society for the Prevention of Blindness.20aCommittee on Convalescent Care Practice (New York, N.Y.)20aUnited Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. 0aPublic health. 0aSocial service. 0aWomenxDiaries. 0aEllis Island (N.J. and N.Y.) 7aPhotographic prints.2aat 0aWomen college teachers. 0aSocial workers. a19990825120000.0 s95542 a20010402bmdjwg6ects