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On November 5, 1917, Taylorville, Illinois native Clara Taylor
stepped off a Trans-Siberian Railway train into a city then called
Petrograd, Russia. Employed by the YWCA as an industrial expert,
Clara had been sent to Russia to help establish Associations in
Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) and Moscow. Her main charge while in
Russia was to survey and report on factory conditions, but Clara
only spent a fraction of her stay in Russia visiting factories; due
to the vagaries of the political, social, and economic
revolution—the upheaval of an entire culture—Clara and her
colleagues spent most of their first year in Russia teaching
English, home economics, book keeping, literature, and basketball,
and sponsoring lectures, dances and sing-alongs for Russian working
women. Clara’s letters, collected in this book, tell of both the
mundane and the extraordinary: what the YW staff ate for dinner;
how the Bolshevik suppression of free speech impacted Americans’
ability to communicate with those at home; shootings in the
streets; bartering for pounds of sugar; conversing with nobility,
with intellectuals, and with workers; attending the opera; and
sight-seeing at monasteries. Together, Clara’s letters to her
family—her “dearest ones at home”—tell a compelling story
of one American woman’s experiences in Revolutionary Russia.
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