August 26, 1940
Professor and Mrs. A. V. Hill
16 Bishopswood Road
Highgate, London, N. 6
England
Dear Professor and Mrs. Hill:
Two days ago I sent you the following cable: "Pasadena Committee offers homes maintenance forty children parents paying ocean passage. Can you cable names necessary visa information fathers occupation" , and I am writing now to explain our situation here. We have in Pasadena a local branch of the Committee for the Care of European Children, which has been active for the last two months. Mrs. Schuyler Doaneis the chairman of the Committee, and my wife and Dr. Theodore Dunham, Jr. of the Mount Wilson Observatory are members of its Executive Board, Professor Milikan and I being members of the Advisory Board. The Committee has so far found homes, and sponsors in Pasadena for forty British children. The sponsors would take care of all expenses of the children after they are landed in New York, and would take responsibility for the children for their indefinite sojourn in the United States. All of the sponsors are certified by official agencies to be in good financial circumstances and to be able to provide good, homes for the children.
So far only a few children have reached Pasadena,. Dr. and Mrs. Dunham have in their home the two daughters of Professor and Mrs. Milne. The Committee has made several efforts to obtain names and information about specific children who might be brought to Pasadena, but so far with little success, and my wife and I finally decided that the best course would be to write to you. We were helped in reaching this decision through having read the letter which you sent on July 5 to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Ferry of Cambridge.
At present the arrangements must be made for specific children to be brought in by individual sponsors. We need the name of each child, his birth date and birthplace, and his parents' names and nationalities. In order to assist in assignment of the children to sponsors we would like to know the father's profession and any other pertinent information that can be easily sent. Our plan is to arrange for children to be taken into the meet suitable homes.
I trust that you will pardon me for troubling you about this matter. Please let me know whether the situation is such that you feel that it is not wise to continue with our planned arrangements, or whether there is some other way for us to obtain the information that we want. We all feel that by bringing some British children here we would be doing a bit to help, and we have been troubled by the delay in getting our local organization into effective contact with Britain.
Professor and Mrs. A. V. Hill
August 26, 1940
My wife and I haw been working on the Union Now plan for combining with the British democracies and on the Committee for the Defense of America by Aiding the Allies. There is quite a bit of defense work under way at the Institute, out in the main the scientific activities of the Institute are proceeding undisturbed.
With the best of personal wishes, I am
Sincerely yours,
Linus Pauling
LP:jr
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