During WWI, Anne Morgan, daughter of the New-Yorker banker, moved to the devastated France along with 350 American women volunteers. The highly educated women - many were doctors - brought not only new treatments but greatly helped advance women’s rights in postwar France.
Conscious of the primordial importance of the media, Anne Morgan, a close friend to Chaplin, put together an in-house photography and film unit to raise awareness back in the US of this immense humanitarian cause.
During WWI, Anne Morgan, daughter of the New-Yorker banker, moved to the devastated France along with 350 American women volunteers. The highly educated women - many were doctors - brought not only new treatments but greatly helped advance women’s rights in postwar France.
Conscious of the primordial importance of the media, Anne Morgan, a close friend to Chaplin, put together an in-house photography and film unit to raise awareness back in the US of this immense humanitarian cause.