Title and place of publication from item., Date derived from subject., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Devambez, Imp. Paris
Subject (Topic):
World War, 1914-1918, Tuberculosis, Veterans, Disabled veterans, Nurses, and Oceans
Title from item., Date derived from information about Coopération Pédagogique., and Coopération Pédagogique is also known as Éditions Rossignol, and produced educational posters. This poster appears to be from a series of scenes of everyday life produced for school children.
Title and place of publication from item., Date derived from founding of commission., In margin lower left: E. Bernard, Édit., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Commission Américaine de Préservation contre la Tuberculose en France (Fondation Rockefeller), 3, Rue de Berri, Paris
Subject (Topic):
Tuberculosis in children, Tuberculosis, Patients, Home care, Children, Sleeping, and Windows
Title and place of publication from item., Date derived from founding of commission., In margin lower left: E. Bernard, Édit., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Commission Américaine de Préservation contre la Tuberculose en France (Fondation Rockefeller), 3, Rue de Berri, Paris
Subject (Topic):
Tuberculosis in children, Tuberculosis, Patients, Home care, Nursing, Visiting nurses, Children, Mothers, Nurses, Sick children, and Medicine
Title and place of publication from item., Date derived from founding of commission., Poster text continues: Elle mène une croisade contre la tuberculose et la mortalité infantile : Soutenez-la!, and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Commission Américaine de Préservation contre la Tuberculose en France, 3. Rue de Berri, Paris. (VIIIème) and Imprimerie de Vaugirard, Paris
Subject (Topic):
Tuberculosis, Prevention, World War, 1914-1918, Tour Eiffel (Paris, France), Children, and Medical personnel
Title and place of publication from item., Date from copy in Library of Congress, website viewed 3/22/2023: https://www.loc.gov/resource/cph.3f04010/, Below title: haut patronage Poincaré la République., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
I. Lapina Imp., Paris
Subject (Name):
Poincaré, Raymond, 1860-1934.
Subject (Topic):
Tuberculosis, Nuns as nurses, World War, 1914-1918, Soldiers, Sick persons, and Nurses
Title and place of publication from item., Date derived from founding of commission., In margin lower left: E. Bernard, Édit., This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing., and Condition: Very Good; Encapsulated in mylar; 1/3 horizontal fold creases.
Publisher:
Commission Américaine de Préservation contre la Tuberculose en France (Fondation Rockefeller), 3, Rue de Berri - Paris
Subject (Topic):
Tuberculosis, Prevention, Children, Health and hygiene, Health behavior, Outdoor recreation for children, Playgrounds, Swings, Croquet, and Play (Recreation).
Title and publisher from item., Date from copy in Wellcome Collection, website viewed 8/9/2023: https://wellcomecollection.org/works/nkx6rmzs, Text within image: variole typhoïde tuberculose diphterie., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Ministère de la Santé Publique ; Centre d'Éducation Sanitaire du Sud-Est ; 66, Rue St. Sébastein - Marseille - 2, Quai St. Pierre Cannes
Subject (Topic):
Vaccination, Smallpox, Typhus fever, Tuberculosis, Diphtheria, Umbrellas, and Children
Series I contains approximately a thousand letters, primarily personal correspondence among members of Louisa Siefert's family. The majority of the letters are between Siefert and her sister, Clemy (Siefert) Bost, and between Siefert and her mother, Adele-Adrienne (Belz) Siefert. These letters mainly document social and personal activities, such as news of Clemy's husband and children and the health of their mother. Many of Louisa Siefert's letters to her sister describe her own ailing health and advancing tuberculosis, and her doctors' advice. Letters to Siefert's mother also describe the dinners Siefert attends; visits with acquaintances, including Victor Hugo, Charles Blanc, and Paul Chenevard; and operas she sees. Other correspondents in the collection include Siefert's friends such as Charles Asselineau, Chenevard, and Emmanuel des Essarts; admirers of her poetry; the Journal de Lyon concerning her publications; and family members to each other after her death. Also in the collection are Siefert's wedding announcement and death notice; several accounts and receipts; and a manuscript, with numerous corrections, of Adele-Adrienne Siefert's memoirs of her daughter and Series II contains eight volumes of poetry, primarily in Siefert's hand. Two volumes contain collections of other poets' works, one of which includes, dos-a-dos, a juvenile play by Siefert titled En Automne. Other volumes include a set of notes taken during a course on French poetry taught by Charles Asselineau, and four collections of original poetry dated between 1865 and 1872, which include many sentimental or dedicatory poems to friends and family members. The original poems are annotated with the dates of their composition, and occasionally with publication information; and laid in a volume titled Poems d'amour are two pages of comments on the poems in Asselineau's hand. Also included in the collection is a volume of reviews of Siefert's works, copied in her hand
Description:
Louisa Siefert (1845-1877), poet, was raised in Lyon as a Protestant by her parents Henry Siefert, vice-consul to Portugal, and Adele-Adrienne (Belz) Siefert. Her first book of poems, Rayons perdus, was published in 1868 to great acclaim; other collections published during her lifetime include L'Année républicaine (1869); Les Stoïques (1870); Les Saintes Colères (1871); and Comédies romanesques (1872); as well as a novel, Méline (1875). Through her friendship with Charles Asselineau, she became well acquainted with other literary and artistic figures, including Victor Hugo, Emile Deschamps, Charles Baudelaire, and Paul Chenavard. In 1876, she married Jocelyn Pene, secretary to Emilio Castelar; a year later, she died of tuberculosis in Pau, France. After her death, her mother published Souvenirs, Poésies inédites. and In French.
Subject (Geographic):
France and France.
Subject (Name):
Asselineau, Charles, 1820-1874, Blanc, Charles, 1813-1882., Castelar, Emilio, 1832-1899., Chenavard, Paul Marc Joseph, 1807-1895., Des Essarts, Alfred Emmanuel Langlois, 1839-1909., Hugo, Victor, 1802-1885., Siefert, Louisa, 1845-1877., and Siefert family.
Subject (Topic):
Artists, Authors, French, French literature, French poetry, Romanticism, Sentimentalism in literature, Tuberculosis, and Social life and customs
Series I contains approximately a thousand letters, primarily personal correspondence among members of Louisa Siefert's family. The majority of the letters are between Siefert and her sister, Clemy (Siefert) Bost, and between Siefert and her mother, Adele-Adrienne (Belz) Siefert. These letters mainly document social and personal activities, such as news of Clemy's husband and children and the health of their mother. Many of Louisa Siefert's letters to her sister describe her own ailing health and advancing tuberculosis, and her doctors' advice. Letters to Siefert's mother also describe the dinners Siefert attends; visits with acquaintances, including Victor Hugo, Charles Blanc, and Paul Chenevard; and operas she sees. Other correspondents in the collection include Siefert's friends such as Charles Asselineau, Chenevard, and Emmanuel des Essarts; admirers of her poetry; the Journal de Lyon concerning her publications; and family members to each other after her death. Also in the collection are Siefert's wedding announcement and death notice; several accounts and receipts; and a manuscript, with numerous corrections, of Adele-Adrienne Siefert's memoirs of her daughter and Series II contains eight volumes of poetry, primarily in Siefert's hand. Two volumes contain collections of other poets' works, one of which includes, dos-a-dos, a juvenile play by Siefert titled En Automne. Other volumes include a set of notes taken during a course on French poetry taught by Charles Asselineau, and four collections of original poetry dated between 1865 and 1872, which include many sentimental or dedicatory poems to friends and family members. The original poems are annotated with the dates of their composition, and occasionally with publication information; and laid in a volume titled Poems d'amour are two pages of comments on the poems in Asselineau's hand. Also included in the collection is a volume of reviews of Siefert's works, copied in her hand
Description:
Louisa Siefert (1845-1877), poet, was raised in Lyon as a Protestant by her parents Henry Siefert, vice-consul to Portugal, and Adele-Adrienne (Belz) Siefert. Her first book of poems, Rayons perdus, was published in 1868 to great acclaim; other collections published during her lifetime include L'Année républicaine (1869); Les Stoïques (1870); Les Saintes Colères (1871); and Comédies romanesques (1872); as well as a novel, Méline (1875). Through her friendship with Charles Asselineau, she became well acquainted with other literary and artistic figures, including Victor Hugo, Emile Deschamps, Charles Baudelaire, and Paul Chenavard. In 1876, she married Jocelyn Pene, secretary to Emilio Castelar; a year later, she died of tuberculosis in Pau, France. After her death, her mother published Souvenirs, Poésies inédites. and In French.
Subject (Geographic):
France and France.
Subject (Name):
Asselineau, Charles, 1820-1874, Blanc, Charles, 1813-1882., Castelar, Emilio, 1832-1899., Chenavard, Paul Marc Joseph, 1807-1895., Des Essarts, Alfred Emmanuel Langlois, 1839-1909., Hugo, Victor, 1802-1885., Siefert, Louisa, 1845-1877., and Siefert family.
Subject (Topic):
Artists, Authors, French, French literature, French poetry, Romanticism, Sentimentalism in literature, Tuberculosis, and Social life and customs