Gertrude Sumner Ely (September 20, 1876 – October 15, 1970) was an American philanthropist, based in Philadelphia. She was decorated for her bravery during World War I.
Mary Noel Arrowsmith and Gertrude Sumner Ely at Field Hospital No. 3., Froissy, May 7, 1918.
During World War I Ely and her sister Henrietta worked with the YMCA and the American Red Cross in France,[5] with Gertrude Ely operating a canteen near the front. Her work was explained in Katherine Mayo's 1920 account of the YMCA's contributions in the war:
Gertrude Ely had a flivver, lucky woman. Into that flivver, on the word to move, she packed a lot of rations, a cook-stove, a boiler, chocolate, a fiddle, some maps, a Y red triangle sign, writing paper, pens, ink, candles, her own bedroll, a lot of useful odds and ends, and all the cigarettes that room remained for. Then she started out a little ahead of the column.[6]
She was believed to be the first American woman to cross the Rhine into Germany after the signing of the armistice.[7][8] She received the Croix de Guerre, twice,[3] for bravery under fire.[9][10] Ely was captain of a women's baseball team that played US army units in occupied Germany in 1919.[11] She shared a place of honor in a 1919 parade in New York, with fellow YMCA war workers Mary Noel Arrowsmith, Frances Gulick, Ethel Creighton Torrance, and Marjorie Skelding.[12]
Ely was a delegate to the 1928 Democratic National Convention. In 1934 she ran for the Pennsylvania state senate.[8] In the 1950s she took an interest in legal representation for Native American tribes;[27] she served a term on the board of the National Association of American Indian Affairs.[3] At the beginning of World War II, she served refreshments to the recruits at Camp Blanding in Florida,[9] and wrote to her friend Eleanor Roosevelt about the plight of German Jewish families.[28]
Ely served on the executive committee of UNICEF, and in 1967 hosted UNICEF's "Trick of Treat" at her home, Wyndham Barn, welcoming Halloween visitors collecting donations for the project.[4] She was a patron of the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Bryn Mawr Hospital. She received the first annual Baldwin School Alumnae Award in 1967.[29][3] In 1968 she was named a Distinguished Daughter of Pennsylvania.[30]
Personal life
Gertrude Sumner Ely died in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, on October 15, 1970, aged 94 years.[9][8] Bryn Mawr College named a fellowship for Ely.[31] She donated her family's photo album to Bryn Mawr.[32]
^Stevenson, Fay (September 10, 1919). "Five Women in the Big Parade Today". The Evening World. p. 18. Retrieved September 16, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
^Gertrude Ely to Albert Einstein (letter), Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists Records, Special Collections & Archives Research Center, Oregon State University, May 27, 1946, retrieved 2019-09-15{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)