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Helen Johns Kirtland (1890-1979)

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Introduction


Helen Johns Kirtland in trench during World War I; she is wearing a helmet and great coat, and has a gas mask hanging around her neck
Helen Johns Kirtland in trench during World War I; she is wearing a helmet and great coat, and has a gas mask hanging around her neck. Between 1914 and 1918.
LC-USZ62-115862

Helen Johns Kirtland was an early woman war photojournalist active at the end of World War I. She was the “the first and only woman correspondent allowed at the front after Caporetto, the 1917 Italian retreat in which 275,000 troops were captured.”

As a photojournalist, Kirtland worked for Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly in Europe and was also associated with the YMCA, which provided physical fitness and swimming classes to the soldiers. Like many of her male colleagues, she covered a variety of subjects that required facing danger and capturing images that could be readily published to convey the war visually.

In 1981, the Library of Congress received a gift from Mark and Birk Hinderaker of some four thousand photos taken by Helen and her husband Lucian Swift Kirtland. The Kirtland Collection at the Library of Congress includes about two hundred images of World War I and its aftermath. The earliest images are family portraits, and the bulk of the collection represents their post war travels in Europe and Asia. Although relatively little documentation has been found to date, Helen’s life and career merit further study.

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  Home >> Collection Guides & Finding Aids >>
Collection Overviews>> Women Photojournalists
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  July 16, 2008
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