Sources
Images, etc. in Part 1
The article’s “Title Block” contains a photo of Mary Keller that was digitally extracted and reworked from a family portrait in the Keller Family Collection, found online in the Hicksville Public Library’s digital images. For the image of the ship Ioaninna, see below.
“Miss Keller to Accompany Servian Unit” appeared in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle for September 4, 1914.
The picture of St. Mary’s Hospital is from the digital collection of the Brooklyn Public Library.
The image of Woman’s Hospital, New York is from Ebay; the original postcard was published c.1906 by Albertype Company.
This photo of S.S. Ioaninna is from uboat-net, a website that commemorates the careers of German submarine officers, tracking how and where they sank ships, how many lives were lost, etc. I don’t think I want to understand why someone would maintain such a website, but from it one learns that the Ioaninna was sunk in the eastern Atlantic in 1917 by a uboat. I’ll not risk perpetuating the submarine’s fame, nor that of its captain, by naming them here. Presumably all of those then aboard the Ioaninna perished. May they rest in peace.
The photo of HMS Glory comes from the George Grantham Bain Collection at the Library of Congress.
The postcard of the Corinth Canal is from ebay; the publisher is unknown.
Pages from Mary Gladwin’s diary can be found in various locations online, often not in correct sequence, or automatically scanned with uncorrected errors. Excellent images of the original can be found in the “World War I in Ohio Collection” of the Ohio History Connection, starting at ohiomemory.org/digital/collection/p16007coll51/id/3402
Images, etc. in Part 2
Two “Title Block” images need credits. The Keller Family Collection in the Hicksville Public Library’s digital images is the source of a tattered picture-only one piece of which is used here-of Mary Keller with Scottish yachtsman, philanthropist, and tea merchant Sir Thomas Lipton. He spent a lot of time in Serbia during the War, visiting hospitals to bring medical supplies, and poor villages to provide food when it was scarce. The “background” for the block is from Wikipedia; it shows some of the Austro-Hungarian fleet that the Red Cross team managed to evade.
The map of the southern Balkan region and Greece is extracted and annotated from an excellent 1914 map preserved digitally at World War I Today (wwitoday.com)
The picture of SMS Bodrog is from www.warhistoryonline.com
The portrait of Crown Prince Alexander is from “The Story of a Red Cross Unit in Serbia” by Berry, Dickinson, and Blease, et al, 1916; accessed from the Internet Archive.
The group photo outside the hospital is also from The Keller Family Collection within the Hicksville Public Library’s digital images.
The Serbian postage stamp is from Wikimedia Commons.
The quotation from Nurse Gardner is from her article “American Red Cross Work in Serbia” in The American Journal of Nursing for October 1915, available online at JSTOR.