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Helene Lecher

Helene Lecher (née von Rosthorn; 8 September 1865 – 4 October 1929) was an Austrian women's rights activist and philanthropist. During World War I she served as a nurse and later as a hospital kitchen administrator, establishing nutrition protocols for patients. Born into a well-to-do family in Vienna, she was tutored at home, learning English, French, German and Italian, as well as art and music. After both her parents died when she was young, she moved with a sister to Prague around 1890 to live with an older brother. There, she was involved with the German School Association and participated in cultural events. She married a physics professor and had a daughter in 1899 but continued to perform in theater and sing at events.

Helene Lecher
Lecher in her nursing habit, c. 1915
Born
Helene von Rosthorn

(1865-09-08)8 September 1865
Died4 October 1929(1929-10-04) (aged 64)
Vienna, Austria
Other names
  • Frau Hofrath Lecher
  • Frau Hofrath von Lecher
  • Helene Lecher-Rosthorn
Occupations
  • Hospital kitchen administrator
  • nurse
  • women's rights activist
  • philanthropist

In 1909, the Lechers moved to Vienna, when her husband was appointed to head the physics department at the University of Vienna. She became involved in the faculty wives' cultural programs and joined the Allgemeiner Österreichischer Frauenverein (AÖF, General Austrian Women's Association). She represented the organization at the 1915 Women at the Hague Congress, which resulted in the formation of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). During the war, she worked first as a nurse and then administered the kitchens for two different hospitals, establishing dietary standards for patients. When the war ended, she converted two of the former hospital barracks in the Grinzing District of Vienna into a facility for children which provided housing for orphans, a children's play garden, a clinic, and a distribution center for food and clothing. She also campaigned for another barracks to be rehabilitated into housing for university students.

A committed pacifist, Lecher attended the 1921 WILPF Congress in Vienna, wrote articles and urged government officials to adopt policies that would maintain peace and expand women's spheres of interest. She was involved in drafting recommendations for the professionalization of social welfare workers and encouraged the government to develop policies which allowed citizens to present their grievances. She died after being injured in a hit-and-run accident with a bicycle in 1929 and was memorialized for her philanthropic work.

Early life and education Edit

Helene von Rosthorn was born on 8 September 1865 in Vienna, within the Austrian Empire, to Baroness Josefine von Mandorff and Josef von Rosthorn [de].[1][2] Her father was the head of the Iron and Brass Factory in Oed, but lived in Vienna. The Rosthorn Family [de] were industrialists who had created the brass industry in Austria.[3] Her maternal grandmother descended from the Esterházy families of Hungary, who provided support for Joseph Haydn and other musicians.[4][5][6] The couple had seven children – Alfons (1857–1909), Gisela (1859–1862), Emil (1860–1878), Arthur (1862–1945), Maria (1863–1951), Helene, and Carl (1868–1888).[2][7][8] All of the children were tutored at home and learned to read, write and speak English, French, German and Italian.[9] Their primary tutor was Adolf Lorenz, who with his wife, Emma Lecher, were the parents of future Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine winner, Konrad Lorenz.[9][10] They were also taught drawing and painting, deportment, and music.[9]

After their father's death in 1886, Josefine took the younger children to her family estate in Arad County, Hungary.[9][11] From a young age, Rosthorn was influenced by a caretaker on her mother's estate over the importance of diet in assisting recovery from illness.[1] Josefine died in July 1890,[12][13] and in accordance with local custom, upon her death the two surviving daughters, Helene and Marie, went to live with their oldest brother in Prague. Alfons was an obstetrician and gynecologist, who cared for the girls, and in turn, they kept his house.[9] From 1895, Rosthorn was involved in theater productions with the Deutscher Schulverein (German School Association) of Prague. The group staged plays, recited poetry, and gave humorous lectures.[14] Around this time, she married Ernst Lecher, a widower, whose first wife, Nathalie Heymann died in 1896.[15] Lecher was the brother of her former tutor's wife, Emma.[16] In 1899, the couple had their only child Grete, who later married Herbert Magg, a cellist for the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.[7][17][18] Lecher continued to perform, and earned praise for singing with Auguste V. Ludovici the duet of Frau Fluth and Frau Reich in a 1902 presentation of The Merry Wives of Windsor.[19] In 1909, the family moved to a villa at Cottagegasse 30, Vienna, when Ernst was appointed as head of the physics department at the University of Vienna.[20]

Career Edit

By 1913, Lecher had become an active member of several faculty wives' committees which organized social events for various departments at the university.[21][22] She also joined the Allgemeiner Österreichischer Frauenverein (AÖF, General Austrian Women's Association).[23] At the outset of World War I, Lecher began working as a nurse, specializing in patients' dietary needs.[24] Thanks to family connections, she won a position to organize the hospital kitchen at the 500-bed facility of the American Red Cross in the Meidling District of Vienna.[25][26] Although she had little time for meetings, when she read about the peace congress planned for 1915, she made arrangements to attend.[27] She was one of the five Austrian delegates at the International Congress of Women at the Hague.[23] The congress established the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace, subsequently known as the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).[28] Lecher's presentation, which Mary Heaton Vorse called the "most moving speech of all the Congress", urged peace and pointed out the absurdity of waging war as a pretense of protection, when in reality it was destroying families. She had wanted to talk about supply and food shortages, but the press committee refused to allow her to disclose those details.[26]

When the delegates returned, Lecher, along with Leopoldine Kulka, Rosa Mayreder, Olga Misař, and Francis Wolf-Cirian [de] gave a presentation on world peace to the members of the AÖF.[29] Later that year, she published "Ein Frauenwort" ("A Woman's Word") in the journal Para Pacem (Prepare Peace).[30] The article questioned why women's social roles were limited to helping the poor and nursing. She asked whether man's intent was to force women to build international networks and to stop populating the world.[30][31] When Arnold Durig became head of a 6,000-bed hospital for the Grinzing District barracks, Lecher established nutrition standards for the patients and specialty food services for those with dietary conditions.[1][25][32]

After the war, in 1919 Lecher turned two of the Grinzing barracks into a day care and clinic for abandoned children.[33] Initially, the center allowed children to come for a nutritious noon meal and remain so that health officials could check them or they could play until twilight. Lecher announced in February 1919 that she hoped to be able to provide lodging for those with severe needs.[34] After receiving a 100,000K donation from the Wittgenstein family, the former hospital barracks were renovated in 1920. Accommodations, a children's play garden, and a convalescent and health care area with specialized equipment were established.[35] Lecher operated the center, which served around 200 children, solely on private donations, which were raised in Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United States with the help of Hermine Wittgenstein [wikidata] and Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein.[1][25][35] Food and clothing were donated by the Austrian and Danish Red Cross organizations and by international hospital relief networks,[35] and distributed to children in need.[25]

In 1921, Lecher attended the WILPF Congress of Vienna and spoke about her work in the children's hospital. She reported that as part of their care, she tried to educate children about the importance of internationalism.[36] That year, she took part in the discussions of the Neuen Wiener Frauenklub (New Vienna Women's Club) to make recommendations to the Bundesamt für Sozialverwaltung (Federal Office for Social Administration) to professionalize the ranks of social welfare workers, including nurses, infant and youth workers, employees of non-profit organizations, and other social workers. They recommended that educational standards and references be met before securing posts as carers, and guidelines be established for fair compensation and reasonable working hours.[37] She became a mediator representing homeless university students in 1922, urging authorities to convert one of the barracks which had not been repurposed into a student hostel.[38] Lecher was part of a delegation representing the Society of Friends and Versöhnungsbundes (Union of Reconciliation) who urged the Chancellor of Austria in 1928 to develop a policy which allowed peasants to present their grievances, as a means of avoiding marches which led to social unrest and disrupted the peace.[39]

Death and legacy Edit

Lecher was killed after a hit-and-run accident, when she was struck by a cyclist and incurred a skull fracture on 1 October 1929. Taken to the hospital,[40] she died from her injuries on 4 October in Vienna.[41] She was remembered in the obituary which appeared in Die Österreicherin for her care of the wounded during the war and her dedication to youth and the poor.[42] Her work with the children at the Retreat for Weak Children was the basis for a setting in the novel Faber, oder die verlorenen Jahre (Faber or the Lost Years, 1924) by novelist Jakob Wassermann.[43]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Korotin 2016, p. 1933.
  2. ^ a b Kaminski 2000, p. 8.
  3. ^ Janik & Veigl 1998, p. 33.
  4. ^ Bacon 1989, p. 1.
  5. ^ Tweddell 1927, p. 37.
  6. ^ Wigmore 2011, p. 82.
  7. ^ a b Ucik & Geyer 2008, p. Stammtafel der Familie.
  8. ^ The Chicago Tribune 1951, p. 36.
  9. ^ a b c d e Bacon 1989, p. 2.
  10. ^ Nisbett 1977, pp. 14–15, 18.
  11. ^ Ucik 1988, p. 271.
  12. ^ Walravens 2005.
  13. ^ Kristof 1890, p. 176.
  14. ^ Montags-Revue aus Böhmen 1895, p. 5.
  15. ^ Preining 1985.
  16. ^ Caldwell & Klausinger 2021, p. 9.
  17. ^ Caldwell & Klausinger 2021, p. 8.
  18. ^ Caldwell & Klausinger 2022, pp. 219, 222.
  19. ^ Sport und Salon 1902, p. 6.
  20. ^ Janik & Veigl 1998, p. 32.
  21. ^ Die Zeit 1913, pp. 5–6.
  22. ^ Neues Wiener Tagblatt 1913, p. 9.
  23. ^ a b Macmillan 1915, p. 243.
  24. ^ Fichna 1993, p. 70.
  25. ^ a b c d Janik & Veigl 1998, p. 34.
  26. ^ a b Vorse 1935, p. 84.
  27. ^ Rath 2016, p. 174.
  28. ^ Paull 2018, pp. 256, 262.
  29. ^ Neue Freie Presse 1915, p. 7.
  30. ^ a b Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung 1915, p. 5.
  31. ^ Rath 2016, p. 176.
  32. ^ Ucik & Geyer 2008, p. 382.
  33. ^ Janik & Veigl 1998, pp. 34, 79.
  34. ^ Illustrierte Kronen Zeitung 1919, p. 4.
  35. ^ a b c Neues Wiener Tagblatt 1920, p. 5.
  36. ^ Balch 1921, p. 178.
  37. ^ Neues Wiener Abendblatt 1921, p. 4.
  38. ^ Der Morgen 1922, p. 10.
  39. ^ Tagblatt 1928, p. 1.
  40. ^ Neues Wiener Journal 1929, p. 10.
  41. ^ Pilsner Tagblatt 1929, p. 2.
  42. ^ Die Österreicherin 1929, p. 8.
  43. ^ Janik & Veigl 1998, pp. 69, 79.

Bibliography Edit

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helene, lecher, née, rosthorn, september, 1865, october, 1929, austrian, women, rights, activist, philanthropist, during, world, served, nurse, later, hospital, kitchen, administrator, establishing, nutrition, protocols, patients, born, into, well, family, vie. Helene Lecher nee von Rosthorn 8 September 1865 4 October 1929 was an Austrian women s rights activist and philanthropist During World War I she served as a nurse and later as a hospital kitchen administrator establishing nutrition protocols for patients Born into a well to do family in Vienna she was tutored at home learning English French German and Italian as well as art and music After both her parents died when she was young she moved with a sister to Prague around 1890 to live with an older brother There she was involved with the German School Association and participated in cultural events She married a physics professor and had a daughter in 1899 but continued to perform in theater and sing at events Helene LecherLecher in her nursing habit c 1915BornHelene von Rosthorn 1865 09 08 8 September 1865Vienna Austrian EmpireDied4 October 1929 1929 10 04 aged 64 Vienna AustriaOther namesFrau Hofrath LecherFrau Hofrath von LecherHelene Lecher RosthornOccupationsHospital kitchen administratornursewomen s rights activistphilanthropistIn 1909 the Lechers moved to Vienna when her husband was appointed to head the physics department at the University of Vienna She became involved in the faculty wives cultural programs and joined the Allgemeiner Osterreichischer Frauenverein AOF General Austrian Women s Association She represented the organization at the 1915 Women at the Hague Congress which resulted in the formation of the Women s International League for Peace and Freedom WILPF During the war she worked first as a nurse and then administered the kitchens for two different hospitals establishing dietary standards for patients When the war ended she converted two of the former hospital barracks in the Grinzing District of Vienna into a facility for children which provided housing for orphans a children s play garden a clinic and a distribution center for food and clothing She also campaigned for another barracks to be rehabilitated into housing for university students A committed pacifist Lecher attended the 1921 WILPF Congress in Vienna wrote articles and urged government officials to adopt policies that would maintain peace and expand women s spheres of interest She was involved in drafting recommendations for the professionalization of social welfare workers and encouraged the government to develop policies which allowed citizens to present their grievances She died after being injured in a hit and run accident with a bicycle in 1929 and was memorialized for her philanthropic work Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Death and legacy 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 BibliographyEarly life and education EditHelene von Rosthorn was born on 8 September 1865 in Vienna within the Austrian Empire to Baroness Josefine von Mandorff and Josef von Rosthorn de 1 2 Her father was the head of the Iron and Brass Factory in Oed but lived in Vienna The Rosthorn Family de were industrialists who had created the brass industry in Austria 3 Her maternal grandmother descended from the Esterhazy families of Hungary who provided support for Joseph Haydn and other musicians 4 5 6 The couple had seven children Alfons 1857 1909 Gisela 1859 1862 Emil 1860 1878 Arthur 1862 1945 Maria 1863 1951 Helene and Carl 1868 1888 2 7 8 All of the children were tutored at home and learned to read write and speak English French German and Italian 9 Their primary tutor was Adolf Lorenz who with his wife Emma Lecher were the parents of future Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine winner Konrad Lorenz 9 10 They were also taught drawing and painting deportment and music 9 After their father s death in 1886 Josefine took the younger children to her family estate in Arad County Hungary 9 11 From a young age Rosthorn was influenced by a caretaker on her mother s estate over the importance of diet in assisting recovery from illness 1 Josefine died in July 1890 12 13 and in accordance with local custom upon her death the two surviving daughters Helene and Marie went to live with their oldest brother in Prague Alfons was an obstetrician and gynecologist who cared for the girls and in turn they kept his house 9 From 1895 Rosthorn was involved in theater productions with the Deutscher Schulverein German School Association of Prague The group staged plays recited poetry and gave humorous lectures 14 Around this time she married Ernst Lecher a widower whose first wife Nathalie Heymann died in 1896 15 Lecher was the brother of her former tutor s wife Emma 16 In 1899 the couple had their only child Grete who later married Herbert Magg a cellist for the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra 7 17 18 Lecher continued to perform and earned praise for singing with Auguste V Ludovici the duet of Frau Fluth and Frau Reich in a 1902 presentation of The Merry Wives of Windsor 19 In 1909 the family moved to a villa at Cottagegasse 30 Vienna when Ernst was appointed as head of the physics department at the University of Vienna 20 Career EditBy 1913 Lecher had become an active member of several faculty wives committees which organized social events for various departments at the university 21 22 She also joined the Allgemeiner Osterreichischer Frauenverein AOF General Austrian Women s Association 23 At the outset of World War I Lecher began working as a nurse specializing in patients dietary needs 24 Thanks to family connections she won a position to organize the hospital kitchen at the 500 bed facility of the American Red Cross in the Meidling District of Vienna 25 26 Although she had little time for meetings when she read about the peace congress planned for 1915 she made arrangements to attend 27 She was one of the five Austrian delegates at the International Congress of Women at the Hague 23 The congress established the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace subsequently known as the Women s International League for Peace and Freedom WILPF 28 Lecher s presentation which Mary Heaton Vorse called the most moving speech of all the Congress urged peace and pointed out the absurdity of waging war as a pretense of protection when in reality it was destroying families She had wanted to talk about supply and food shortages but the press committee refused to allow her to disclose those details 26 When the delegates returned Lecher along with Leopoldine Kulka Rosa Mayreder Olga Misar and Francis Wolf Cirian de gave a presentation on world peace to the members of the AOF 29 Later that year she published Ein Frauenwort A Woman s Word in the journal Para Pacem Prepare Peace 30 The article questioned why women s social roles were limited to helping the poor and nursing She asked whether man s intent was to force women to build international networks and to stop populating the world 30 31 When Arnold Durig became head of a 6 000 bed hospital for the Grinzing District barracks Lecher established nutrition standards for the patients and specialty food services for those with dietary conditions 1 25 32 After the war in 1919 Lecher turned two of the Grinzing barracks into a day care and clinic for abandoned children 33 Initially the center allowed children to come for a nutritious noon meal and remain so that health officials could check them or they could play until twilight Lecher announced in February 1919 that she hoped to be able to provide lodging for those with severe needs 34 After receiving a 100 000K donation from the Wittgenstein family the former hospital barracks were renovated in 1920 Accommodations a children s play garden and a convalescent and health care area with specialized equipment were established 35 Lecher operated the center which served around 200 children solely on private donations which were raised in Austria Germany the Netherlands and the United States with the help of Hermine Wittgenstein wikidata and Margaret Stonborough Wittgenstein 1 25 35 Food and clothing were donated by the Austrian and Danish Red Cross organizations and by international hospital relief networks 35 and distributed to children in need 25 In 1921 Lecher attended the WILPF Congress of Vienna and spoke about her work in the children s hospital She reported that as part of their care she tried to educate children about the importance of internationalism 36 That year she took part in the discussions of the Neuen Wiener Frauenklub New Vienna Women s Club to make recommendations to the Bundesamt fur Sozialverwaltung Federal Office for Social Administration to professionalize the ranks of social welfare workers including nurses infant and youth workers employees of non profit organizations and other social workers They recommended that educational standards and references be met before securing posts as carers and guidelines be established for fair compensation and reasonable working hours 37 She became a mediator representing homeless university students in 1922 urging authorities to convert one of the barracks which had not been repurposed into a student hostel 38 Lecher was part of a delegation representing the Society of Friends and Versohnungsbundes Union of Reconciliation who urged the Chancellor of Austria in 1928 to develop a policy which allowed peasants to present their grievances as a means of avoiding marches which led to social unrest and disrupted the peace 39 Death and legacy EditLecher was killed after a hit and run accident when she was struck by a cyclist and incurred a skull fracture on 1 October 1929 Taken to the hospital 40 she died from her injuries on 4 October in Vienna 41 She was remembered in the obituary which appeared in Die Osterreicherin for her care of the wounded during the war and her dedication to youth and the poor 42 Her work with the children at the Retreat for Weak Children was the basis for a setting in the novel Faber oder die verlorenen Jahre Faber or the Lost Years 1924 by novelist Jakob Wassermann 43 References EditCitations Edit a b c d Korotin 2016 p 1933 a b Kaminski 2000 p 8 Janik amp Veigl 1998 p 33 Bacon 1989 p 1 Tweddell 1927 p 37 Wigmore 2011 p 82 a b Ucik amp Geyer 2008 p Stammtafel der Familie The Chicago Tribune 1951 p 36 a b c d e Bacon 1989 p 2 Nisbett 1977 pp 14 15 18 Ucik 1988 p 271 Walravens 2005 Kristof 1890 p 176 Montags Revue aus Bohmen 1895 p 5 Preining 1985 Caldwell amp Klausinger 2021 p 9 Caldwell amp Klausinger 2021 p 8 Caldwell amp Klausinger 2022 pp 219 222 Sport und Salon 1902 p 6 Janik amp Veigl 1998 p 32 Die Zeit 1913 pp 5 6 Neues Wiener Tagblatt 1913 p 9 a b Macmillan 1915 p 243 Fichna 1993 p 70 a b c d Janik amp Veigl 1998 p 34 a b Vorse 1935 p 84 Rath 2016 p 174 Paull 2018 pp 256 262 Neue Freie Presse 1915 p 7 a b Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung 1915 p 5 Rath 2016 p 176 Ucik amp Geyer 2008 p 382 Janik amp Veigl 1998 pp 34 79 Illustrierte Kronen Zeitung 1919 p 4 a b c Neues Wiener Tagblatt 1920 p 5 Balch 1921 p 178 Neues Wiener Abendblatt 1921 p 4 Der Morgen 1922 p 10 Tagblatt 1928 p 1 Neues Wiener Journal 1929 p 10 Pilsner Tagblatt 1929 p 2 Die Osterreicherin 1929 p 8 Janik amp Veigl 1998 pp 69 79 Bibliography Edit Bacon Madi 1989 Madi Bacon Musician Educator Mountaineer An Oral History Conducted from 1985 1987 PDF Interview Interviewed by Janet G Harris Berkeley California Regional Oral History Office Bancroft Library University of California OCLC 37000525 Archived PDF from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Balch Emily G ed 1921 Report Third International Congress of Women Vienna 10 17 July 1921 Geneva Switzerland Women s International League for Peace and Freedom OCLC 259988472 Caldwell Bruce Klausinger Hansjoerg 2021 F A Hayek s Family and the Vienna Circles CHOPE Papers Durham North Carolina Duke University Center for the History of Political Economy 7 doi 10 2139 ssrn 3844096 hdl 10419 234318 OCLC 1252062179 S2CID 236560924 Caldwell Bruce Klausinger Hansjoerg 2022 Hayek A Life 1899 1950 Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 81683 8 Fichna Margarete 1993 Lecher Helene geb v Rosthorn 1865 1929 Philanthropin Lecher Helene nee von Rosthorn 1865 1929 Philanthropist Osterreichisches Biographisches Lexikon Austrian Biographical Lexicon in German Vol 5 Lange v Burgenkron Emil Maier Simon Martin reprint ed Vienna Austria Austrian Academy of Sciences pp 70 71 ISBN 978 3 7001 2146 6 Janik Allan S Veigl Hans 1998 Wittgenstein in Vienna A Biographical Excursion through the City and Its History Vienna Austria Springer Science Business Media ISBN 978 3 211 83077 2 Kaminski Gerd 2000 Der Boxeraufstand entlarvter Mythos The Boxer Rebellion Myth Debunked in German Vienna Austria Locker Verlag ISBN 978 3 85409 325 1 Korotin Ilse ed 2016 Lecher Helene geb v Rosthorn Philanthropin Lecher Helene nee von Rosthorn Philanthropist biografiA Lexikon osterreichischer Frauen Biography Austrian Lexicon PDF in German Vol 2 I O Vienna Austria Bohlau Verlag p 1933 hdl 20 500 12657 32406 ISBN 978 3 205 79590 2 Kristof Lorenz ed 20 December 1890 An das Verzeichnis der derzeitigen wirklichen Mitglieder reihen wir die Namen derjenigen an welche im Laufe dieses Jahres gestorben To the List of Current Actual Members We Add the Names of Those Who Died During the Year Mittheilungen in German Graz Austria K K Gartenbau Gesellschaft in Steiermark 12 176 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Macmillan Chrystal ed 1915 Bericht Rapport Report International Congress of Women The Hague 28 April to 1 May 1915 Amsterdam the Netherlands International Women s Committee for Permanent Peace OCLC 1327848600 Nisbett Alec 1977 Konrad Lorenz First American ed New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 978 0 15 147286 4 Paull John 2018 12 The Women Who Tried to Stop the Great War The International Congress of Women at The Hague 1915 In Campbell Andrew H ed Global Leadership Initiatives for Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding Hershey Pennsylvania IGI Global pp 249 266 ISBN 978 1 5225 4994 9 Preining Othmar 1985 Lecher Ernst Neue Deutsche Biographie in German Munich Germany Historical Commission at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 17 January 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Rath Brigitte 2016 10 Do Women Want War or Peace Female Peace Activists in First World War Austria In Bianchi Bruna Ludbrook Geraldine eds Living War Thinking Peace 1914 1924 Women s Experiences Feminist Thought and International Relations PDF Newcastle upon Tyne UK Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 169 189 ISBN 978 1 4438 8684 0 Archived PDF from the original on 8 January 2023 Tweddell Edith 1927 1926 PDF Alumnae Bulletin Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania Bryn Mawr Alumnae Association 7 36 38 OCLC 7516200 Archived PDF from the original on 22 January 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Ucik Friedrich Hans Geyer Alexander 2008 Die Industriellenfamilie Rosthorn sowie ihre Bedeutung fur Karnten und Osterreich The Rosthorn Industrial Family and Their Importance for Carinthia and Austria PDF Rudolfinum in German Klagenfurt Austria Abteilung fur Geologie Mineralogie Palaontologie und Montanwesen de Institution Landesmuseum Karnten 371 389 Archived PDF from the original on 16 June 2022 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Ucik Friedrich Hans 1988 Rosthorn Josef von Industrieller Rosthorn Josef von Industrialist PDF Osterreichisches biographisches Lexikon Austrian Biographical Lexicon in German Vol 9 Razus Martin Savic Zarko Vienna Austria Austrian Academy of Sciences p 271 ISBN 978 3 7001 1483 3 Vorse Mary Heaton 1935 5 Women s Peace Conference The Suffragettes Grief Prayer for the Dead Futility Neutral Landscape A Footnote to Folly Reminiscences of Mary Heaton Vorse New York New York Farrar amp Rinehart pp 79 89 OCLC 1299608 Archived from the original on 7 December 2022 Walravens Hartmut 2005 Rosthorn Arthur Edler von Neue Deutsche Biographie in German Munich Germany Historical Commission at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 27 February 2022 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Wigmore Richard 2011 Esterhazy Family The Faber Pocket Guide to Haydn London UK Faber and Faber pp 82 83 ISBN 978 0 571 26873 3 Der deutsche Naturforscher und Aerztetag in Wien The German Natural Scientists and Doctors Day in Vienna Die Zeit in German No 3711 Vienna Austria 24 January 1913 pp 5 6 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Die erfrischendste musikalische Gabe The Most Refreshing Musical Gift Sport und Salon in German Prague Austria Hungary 5 April 1902 p 6 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Die Kindergartenstadt in Grinzing The City Kindergarten in Grinzing Neues Wiener Tagblatt in German Vienna Austria 19 January 1920 p 5 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Die Kleinseitner Ortsgruppe des deutschen Schulvereins The Lesser Town Local Group of the German School Association Montags Revue aus Bohmen in German Prague Austria Hungary 9 December 1895 p 5 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Die Zusammensetzung des grossen Damenkomitees The Composition of the Great Women s Committee Neues Wiener Tagblatt in German No 23 Vienna Austria 24 January 1913 p 9 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Frau und Welt Woman and World Neues Wiener Abendblatt in German No 151 Vienna Austria 4 June 1921 p 4 Retrieved 24 January 2023 Fur eine Versohnungspolitik For a Policy of Reconciliation Tagblatt in German No 230 Linz Austria 4 October 1928 p 1 Retrieved 24 January 2023 Helene Lecher Die Osterreicherin in German Vienna Austria Bund Osterreichischer Frauenvereine 2 9 8 1929 Retrieved 24 January 2023 Mrs Maria Bacon Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois 25 September 1951 p 36 Retrieved 21 January 2023 via Newspapers com Notizen Grinzing Kasgraben Verpflegsstation fur schwache Kinder Notices Grinzing Kasgraben Catering Station for Weak Children Illustrierte Kronen Zeitung in German Vienna Austria 19 February 1919 p 4 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Para Pacem Prepare Peace Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung in German No 11265 Vienna Austria 27 October 1915 p 5 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Tod durch einen Radunfall Death from a Bicycle Accident Pilsner Tagblatt in German No 270 Pilsen Czechoslovakia 5 October 1929 p 2 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Von einem Radlerwildling getotet Killed by a Wild Biker Neues Wiener Journal in German No 12884 Vienna Austria 4 October 1929 p 10 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Vortragsabend uber den internationalen Frauencongress im Haag Lecture Evening about the International Women s Congress in The Hague Neue Freie Presse in German No 18223 Vienna Austria 17 May 1915 p 7 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Wie Hochschuler wohnen How College Students Live Der Morgen Wiener Montagblatt in German Vienna Austria 23 October 1922 p 4 Retrieved 24 January 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Helene Lecher amp oldid 1158181624, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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