The American Girls' Club in Paris was a boarding house for young American women aged eighteen to forty located at 4 Rue de Chevreuse in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, France. The club was founded in September 1893 by the American Elizabeth Mills Reid (wife of Whitelaw Reid, the former United States Ambassador to France) ref name = "SFCall">San Francisco Call (21 November 1909), Page 4.</ref>[1] and Mrs. Helen Pert Newell (wife of Reverend William Whiting Newell II, pastor of St. Lukes Chapel, Paris).https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/01/26/104106007.html?pageNumber=3 Its purpose was to provide "place for meeting and for sociablllty for those who by reason of their unfamiliarity with the language and the people of the country must otherwise be lonely and be handicapped, by their ignorance.".[2][3][4][5]
Young women paid $30 per month for room and board.[2] The club served tea at 4pm and taught evening lessons in French for one franc per day.[2] It included libraries and an independent studio, although did not include enough space for a full bath.[2] Students often studied at the Académie Julian and Académie de la Grande Chaumière art schools. The club closed with the onset of World War I and was converted to an American Red Cross hospital.[1] The building is now owned by Columbia University as Reid Hall.[1]
Residents
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edit- ^ a b c http://www.GlobalCenters.Columbia.Edu Archived 2019-08-23 at the Wayback Machine Reid Hall History Accessed March 5, 2016 [1] Archived 2016-02-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d San Francisco Call (21 November 1909), Page 4.
- ^ <Mariea Caudill Dennison, Woman's Art Journal "The American Girls' Club in Paris: The Propriety and Imprudence of Art Students, 1890-1914" Vol. 26, No. 1 (Spring - Summer, 2005), pp. 32-37
- ^ Susan Butlin, The Practice of Her Profession: Florence Carlyle, Canadian Painter, The Bohemia of Paris 1890 - 1896
- ^ Phelps Publishing Company, 1907, Good Housekeeping, Volume 45, P.415