While this collection is only 1.66 linear feet in size, it packs a whollop as far as being incredible. Alma A. Clarke was an American who volunteered in France during World War I, working with French children orphaned by the war through the Committee France-America for the Protection of the Children of the Frontier and as an auxiliary nurse serving the American Red Cross Military Hospital No. 1 in Neuilly-sur-Seine. She was clearly a collector and her materials result in one of the most intimate portraits of World War I that I have ever seen.
The real treasures in the collection are her two scrapbooks which document her experiences and the experiences of those around her. They are full of photographs, clippings, post cards, letters, memorabilia, sketches by the children and soldiers for whom she cared, and writings by the wounded in her ward. Of the more amazing aspects of her scrapbooks are the pages which contain the wounded soldiers’ accounts of the way in which they were wounded.
I love this collection not only because it provides a fascinating window into an event that changed our world, but also because it shows, by its content, the apparent selflessness of its creator. I know almost nothing of Alma A. Clarke, but I know a lot about how the cities, countryside, art and architecture of France suffered during the war, about the children who were orphaned, and about the soldier wounded in battle. I know how the American home front knitted, dried fruits and vegetables, and worked together for victory. In trying to write a biographical note on Ms. Clarke, I came up with almost nothing–her collection is full of amazing documents including travel documents, passports and ration cards, but while these records deliver some vital statistics, they do not provide a glimpse into who she was. There is a fair amount of correspondence glued into the scrapbooks which I did not have the chance to read and which may provide a more complete picture of this person. My research outside the scope of the collection similarly yielded very little information on her. However, despite all this, Ms. Clarke’s scrapbooks and collected papers have guaranteed her a place in history.

























































































