VAN BARKERLOO HALE
Parents
Gerard VAN BARKERLOO HALE = Kathleen BURKE
Married 1920
Gerard VAN BARKERLOO HALE:
Born 1886
Died 26 October 1958
Soldier in France, he became the Consul General to
Monaco.
Landscape artist, California
Girard Van Barkaloo Hale died Oct. 26, 1958 according to the IGI. I found him through his first wife, Camilla Eaton. They spell his name as "Van Barcelu". Christine
Kathleen BURKE:
Born 24 October 1887
Died November 1958
author of
Little Heroes Of France: 12 True Tales Of Heroic French Children In Wwi.
Young Heroes of Britain and Belgium
The White Road to Verdun. This can be read on project Guttenburg, http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/16945
email to Christine Fielding from her mother, abridged :
"Dear Christine: Kathleen Burke signed up as a Red Cross nurse, either just
before or at the beginning of, World War 1. She apparently had oodles of
charm, so the RC sent her to France to talk with generals and high
officials and She charmed them into
forking out money to the Red Cross to provide some minimum comforts for the
miserable infantry. All this was recorded in a book she wrote.
another book by her was: "Little Heroes of France"! This was a series of
stories about children in occupied France who battled on to rescue siblings
or parents, etc., more or less unaided.
I don't know if she married the old Peabody or the younger. Only that she
married a wealthy philanthropist from America and that she settled in Santa
Barbara. I was given to understand that there were several Peabodies, all
related. Also, when I was in London I volunteered to visit impoverished
elderly ladies (Don't laugh!). They had actually requested the
visits! Anyway, MY old lady lived in an apartment block called "Peabody
Buildings"! She told me it had been financed in the early 20th Century by
a "rich American philanthropist" to replace some slum buildings he had
bought and torn down. He then rehoused the former inhabitants, of which
she was one! He even paid a social worker to visit them from time to time
at first, to make sure the people were looking after their flats OK. One
inhabitant was found to be missing a wooden toilet seat, so the SW wanted
to know why. The lady proudly showed her the seat, which now served as a
handsome frame for a picture of the Prince of Wales (later King Edward
VII)! They had not previously had running water and indoor toilets, so she
didn't miss the seat!"
American Biographical Library
The Biographical Cyclopædia of American Women
Volume I
Daughters of America; or Women of the Century
Upham, Elizabeth Greene
Educational Work
page 204
BURKE, KATHLEEN, Colonel, C. B. E. (Mrs. Frederick Forest Peabody), daughter of Thomas Francis and Georgina (Connolly) Burke, was born in London, England, and educated at the University of Oxford and in Paris. During the period of the World War she achieved a record attained by few only of the women whose lives were consecrated to work for the Allies. Her service was extended and diversified, for at different times she was with the British, Italian, Serbian, and American Armies. At the beginning of the War she was sent to Belgium as member of a British Refugee Commission, and worked there during August and September, 1914, until the fall of Antwerp. She escaped from Ostend two days before the arrival of the Germans, and then, proceeding to Serbia, was appointed by the French Government its only woman representative at the front. In May, 1915, she joined the Scottish Women's Hospitals, and, as organizing secretary, visited all the scenes of their activities. She was the first woman at Vimy Ridge with the Canadian troops, and there received the gift of a German flag, captured by a Canadian. She was the only woman permitted to enter the British front lines, and was the first woman to go into Verdun. She remained at Verdun during the great siege, in the summer of 1916, and suffered a wound in the arm. Later in 1916, she came to America to plead the cause of the Scottish Women's Hospitals. Her manner of speaking was direct and forceful, and her audiences were held spellbound by her gift for narration, as she recounted anecdotes of the shocking conditions which she had seen in all the war-ridden lands. In answer to her appeal she received approximately one million five hundred thousand dollars for her cause. In 1917, when the United States entered the War, she joined the American Red Cross, and made a speaking tour of the country in behalf of its campaign for funds. In 1918 she returned to France, was with the British Army at Ypres, Cambrai, Douai and Lille, and was gassed at Valenciennes. In bitterest terms Miss Burke denounces the Germans for their atrocities committed at the end as well as in the beginning of the war. During their evacuation of Douai they had filled a barracks with three thousand old women and children "for safety," and then gassed them, in order to delay the British, who stopped to nurse these feeble and innocent victims of the Hun. Miss Burke spent the last day of the war with the American troops at Verdun, whither she went on November 9, 1918. She returned to America after the armistice to continue her work for the Scottish Women's Hospitals at their offices in New York. Large sums of money have been administered by her, but her work has been entirely on a voluntary basis, as she has accepted no salary for herself. Miss Burke is fond of outdoor sports, golf and fishing, and is an expert horsewoman. She is the author of The White Road to Verdun (1916) and Little Heroes of France, 1914-1918 (1920). Although she is of British birth, America claims her by adoption. She has been awarded the freedom of the cities of Flint, Michigan, and Fresno, California, and in October, 1918, was named Honorary Colonel of the 138th Field Artillery, United States Army. Also she has been elected a member of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Shipbuilders and Helpers of America, Local No. 6, San Francisco, and has the right of speech in all the Labor Temples of the country. She is a member of the National Chapter, Daughters of the Empire of Canada, and is an Officer de l'Instruction Publique of France. She is a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, a Knight of St. Sava of Serbia, and has been awarded the British Service Medal, the British Victory Medal, the [p.204] French Red Cross Medal, the Order of Misericorde of Serbia, the Serbian Cross of Charity, the Russian Cross of St. George, and the Greek War Cross. On April 5, 1920, she was married to Frederick Forest Peabody of Santa Barbara, California.
from C.Fielding:
Kathleen married Girard Van Barkaloo Hale in 1920. He was a soldier in France where she must have met him, and later, he became the Consul General to Monaco. He was also an artist. It would appear that they lived on a ranch in California and that Kathleen died three years after him.
Kathleen Burke
Family
He was a soldier in France
where she must have met him, and later, he became the Consul General to
Monaco. He was also an artist. It would appear that they lived on a ranch
in California and that Kathleen died three years after him
This article claims Kathleen married in 1930 although 1920 makes more sense. It also refers to her Red Cross work. Christine
4. Le parrainage des HALE Dès octobre 1944, le village de Maillé est "adopté" par les époux HALE, personnalités américaines très attachées à la France, grâce à M. DESACHÉ, conseiller général, et Mme de CAVAIGNAC, amis communs du couple américain. Après s'être engagée en Europe dans les rangs de la Croix-Rouge lors de la Première Guerre mondiale, Kathleen Hale avait épousé en 1930 Girard Van Barkaloo-Hale. L'annonce de la tragédie vécue par Maillé les convainc immédiatement d'agir pour soulager les victimes.
Dès 1946, de nombreux colis de mobilier, de linge, de matériel agricole traversent l'Atlantique et sont expédiés à l'Association des sinistrés, chargée de leur répartition. Les généreux donateurs offrent notamment le mobilier complet de la mairie, l'équipement de la cantine ou encore celui du terrain de jeux. Une grande fête a lieu le 15 septembre 1946 en leur présence.
On y voit Mme de Cavaignac et Mme Georges Bidault y distribuer elles-mêmes les couvertures et autres jouets venus d'Outre Atlantique.