Travelers Aid International

The Travelers Aid movement began in St. Louis, Missouri, under the leadership of Mayor Bryan Mullanphy. Its purpose was to provide assistance to American pioneers and new immigrants who became stranded on their journeys. At his death in 1851, Mullanphy left a bequest of one half million dollars in his will to help "aid travelers going west."

By the 20th century, Travelers Aid Societies had sprung up in major cities across the country. The programs protected stranded travelers, especially women and children, from others who would use, abuse, or victimize them. The primary fear was that young women travelers, native born and immigrant alike, would be kidnapped and turned into "white slaves" (defined as white women forced into prostitution). Therefore, Travelers Aid Societies, most notably the Travelers Aid Society of New York, provided social work to vulnerable travelers at train stations and piers in order to prevent their falling victim to the white slave trade and related vices.[1][2] Although many of the Travelers Aid programs were started by religious communities, services were often provided regardless of beliefs. It is the oldest non-religious social welfare organization in the United States.

The founder of the Travelers Aid Society of New York (TAS-NY), Grace Hoadley Dodge, had hoped to unite other Travelers Aid Societies to form a national association, but she died in 1914 before this could be accomplished.[3] Due primarily to the efforts of TAS-NY General Secretary Orin Clarkson Baker, national unification was finally accomplished in 1917.[4] This national association provided a "chain of service", with one agency helping another when inter-city transportation of a client was required. Travelers Aid was one of the original "United Service Organizations" (USO) that provided assistance to traveling service men and women, operating 175 troop transit lounges. Today, Travelers Aid responds to the specific needs of the community. Although each member agency shares the original service of assisting stranded travelers, many Travelers Aid agencies provide shelter for the homeless, transitional housing, job training, counseling, local transportation assistance, and other programs.

Similar organizations were founded in other countries; in Great Britain and many other countries spelled as "Travellers' Aid Society", and originally closely associated with the YWCA.[5]

See also

References

  1. Baker, Orin (1912-10-27). "Philanthropic Effort to Save 50,000 a Year" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 6/9/2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  2. Cimino, Eric (Winter 2016). "The Travelers' Aid Society: Moral Reform and Social Work in New York City, 1907–1916". New York History. 97 (1): 35.
  3. "Grace Dodge Dead". The New York Times. 1914-12-28.
  4. McCall, Bertha (1950). History of the National Travelers Aid Association, 1911–1948. New York: National Travelers Aid Association. pp. 1–269. OCLC 23956563.
  5. "English Notes". The Queenslander. XXXIV (675). Queensland, Australia. 8 September 1888. p. 419. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via National Library of Australia.

Further reading

  • Cimino, Eric. On the Border Line of Tragedy: White Slavery, Moral Protection, and the Travelers' Aid Society of New York, 1885-1917. Ph.D. Diss., Stony Brook University, 2012.
  • Cimino, Eric (Summer–Fall 2015). "Safeguarding the Innocent: Travelers' Aid at the Panama-California Exposition, 1915". Journal of San Diego History. 61:3&4: 455–74.
  • Horan, Marion. Trafficking in Danger: Working-Class Women and Narratives of Sexual Danger in English and United States Anti-Prostitution Campaigns, 1875-1914. Ph.D. Diss., Binghamton University, 2006, Chapters 5 & 6.
  • Phillips, Richard (2006). "Unsexy Geographies: Heterosexuality, Respectability, and the Travelers' Aid Society". ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies. 5:2: 163–90.
  • Stadum, Beverly (Fall 1997). "Female Protection and Empowerment: Travelers Aid Services, 1919-1934". Affilia. 12:3: 278–96.


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