The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers, Digital Edition > My Day
FEBRUARY 11, 1936
[Original version of the column. Text in red are tagged with <sic> (needs correction); text in purple are tagged with <orig> (needs regularization); and text in blue are tagged names of persons or organizations. View emended version]
I was told a most interesting story to-day about a piece of work that a woman had been doing for several years. Mrs. Ruth G. K. Strawbridge started the Philadelphia Help Bureau in her own home at the suggestion of the late William Howard Taft she tells me, which allowed people who were in need to advice to come to her. She really established a clearing house through which she directed people into the right channels for such assistance as they needed. She studied her own city, knew the people who would be willing to see those who were in need of help and sent her clients to them without even a letter of introduction. She felt that it was better that they should tell their stories without another person preparing the way and she found herself gradually working up to a point where over two hundred people visited her every week and needless to say it became more than she could do so she turned it over to a group of churches.
I asked her what percentage of her visitors she had been able to follow up, and about how many she felt had been permanently started on a basis which would mean that they would proceed under their own momentum and solve their own difficulties. She said about four out of every ten were only temporarily bewildered and were quite able to proceed when helped to think through their own situations and to start climbing up hill again instead of sliding steadily further down.
This struck me as extremely significant for it would indicate that over one third of the people who are in trouble, if they knew of some place to go where really sane advice was available might start themselves going in the right direction again. One amusing touch was her claim that many young people are intimidated at home because their parents will not listen to them but immediately begin to scold before the young people have a chance to explain their difficulties or their point of view. Good listeners are always a Godsend and work of this kind may prove to be helpful at the present time.
E.R.
About this document
My Day by Eleanor Roosevelt, February 11, 1936
Digital edition created by The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project The George Washington University 312 Academic Building 2100 Foxhall Road, NW Washington, DC 20007
Digital edition published 2008, 2017 by
The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project
Available under licence from the Estate of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt.
Published with permission from the Estate of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt.
MEP edition publlished on June 30, 2008.
TEI-P5 edition published on April 28, 2017.
XML master last modified on: May 2, 2022.
HTML version generated and published on: May 3, 2022.
TMsd, 10 February 1936, AERP, FDRL