Fannie Fern Andrews

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Fanny Fern Andrews (Phillips) (18671950) was an American lecturer, social worker, and writer, born at Margaretville, N. S., and educated at the Salem (Mass.) Normal School, Radcliffe College, and Harvard Summer School. She was known as a lecturer on education in Europe and America, as secretary and organizer of the American School Citizenship League, and as a member of the advisory council of the Institute of International Education and the International Peace Bureau (Berne, Switzerland), etc. She was a delegate to the International Conference on Education in 1914 and represented the United States Bureau of Education at Paris during the Peace Conference. Her works include:

  • The United States and the World (1918)
  • The World Family (1918)
  • The War - What Should Be Said about it in the Schools? (Boston, 1914)
  • Central Organization for a Durable Peace (Boston, 1916)
  • Freedom of the Seas (The Hague, 1917)
  • A Course in Foreign Relations, prepared for the Army Education Commission (Paris, 1919)