Paul End, Penn.—Thanks him for his kind letter (on the death of Flora Murray).
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Comments on his letters from the United States. Asks him to help find work for Miss Kerr and to provide introductions for Mrs Balfour Duffus, who is going to America to raise money for the London School of Medicine for Women. Recalls his contribution to the suffrage movement.
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Transcript
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.
28 Dec. 25.
Dear Mr Lawrence
How good of you to find time to write to me—also to send me a copy of y[ou]r v. interesting “letters” from U.S.A. I read them with great interest as I had travelled over a large part of y[ou]r route—& especially the conclusion interested me. How are we to bridge the mental gap between ourselves & the American people?
They think us effete.
We find them extraordinarily youthful—crude—conservative etc. etc. all the things that the young are.
Yet civilization demands that America & England shd understand one another—hold together & lead the advance. How is it to be done? It is difficult to bridge a gap of years in individuals—& in peoples the difficulty is far greater.
I wonder if you & Mrs Lawrence have kept in touch with {1} Miss Kerr or if she has seen you lately. If so please forgive me for butting in. You will remember her in the General Office in the great days of the Union. Afterwards she lived in Cornwall with her friend, Mrs May, who now has died. {1}
Together, they managed with Mrs Mays small income—but with her death, it is imperative that Miss Kerr shd. obtain paid work. Before she joined the Union she had a typerwriters office in the city. She is an educated woman[,] an excellent organizer & a good secretary but no longer young.
Her temporary address is Miss Harriet R Kerr at 21 Osnaburga Street London WC.2. If you or Mrs Lawrence shd. be able to help her to find a post it w[oul]d be v. nice.
Then there is another point—the London School of Medicine for Women celebrated its jubilee last year & collected enough money to endow one chair, Physiology, I think. It badly needs endowment for two others i.e. another £40.000 or thereabouts as scientific work ever becomes more costly & it is not possible for the students to meet the expense.
The council of the School is going to send Mrs Duffus to America in February or March of this next year. She is a very agreeable person & is genuinely keen about women’s status & education etc. She is in need of introductions to suitable people—i.e. those who might themselves give her donations or might pass her on to others who could.
She is not going to hold meetings or to appeal for small sums, but she wants to try & find people like Miss Doty who could & would give on a big scale if they really cared.
The chair for which she is appealing is to be Named after the first Medical Woman, Elizabeth Blackwell, an American. {1}
Again can you or Mrs Pethick Lawrence help us with introductions.
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I rejoice that you shd be in the H. of C. & that you shd find it so interesting & well worth while. As you do it, I am sure it is.
In the days of struggle, you & the few other men who sacrificed with both hands to help, helped more than any women were able to, for your comradeship wiped out the sense of bitterness that must have come in if the struggle had been “women against men”. Luckily it never was allowed to be that.
I shall remember to the end of my life, & with deepest gratitude, all that you personally did & were during those very active years.
Please forgive this long letter. {1}
With my greeting
Yrs sincerely
L G Anderson
My affectionate remembrances to Mrs Lawrence please
L.G.A.
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The word 'with' is generally represented by a shorthand symbol. Letters omitted from words abbreviated by superscript letters have been supplied in square brackets.
{1} Full stop supplied.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks him for his letters from America and India (see 6/122–30). Is about to go Ceylon and Palestine, where she will meet her aunts.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Praises his letters and speeches about the India Commission.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks him for his letter about her aunt (Millicent Garrett Fawcett), and reflects on her life and death.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks him for his letters from Egypt and Palestine. Has been reminiscing with Miss Kerr about the WSPU.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks him for his letters from Palestine. Hopes he has recovered from his accident.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks him for a letter describing his visit to Denmark.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks them for a photograph of themselves. Comments on the abdication crisis.
Paul End, Penn, Bucks.—Thanks him for reading her book (Elizabeth Garrett Anderson).
56 Russell Square, W.C.1.—Sends a paper by her brother on post-war policy.
56 Russell Square, W.C.1.—Transmits Dame Helen Gwynne-Vaughan’s reply to an inquiry about Lady Busk, and relates her own memories of the latter.