610 S. Collett St.
Lima, OH 45805
Phone: 419-227-5121
Fax: 419-222-0416
MISSION
The
American Red Cross is a humanitarian organization, led by volunteers,
that provides relief to victims of disasters and helps people prevent,
prepare for and respond to emergencies.
A
BRIEF HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN RED CROSS
The
American Red Cross, as one of the nation's premier humanitarian
organizations, is dedicated to helping people in need throughout
the United States and, in association with other Red Cross societies,
throughout the world. It depends on generous contributions of time,
blood, tissue, and money from the American public to its national
headquarters and chapters and blood regions throughout the country
in support of its lifesaving services and programs.
Clara
Barton and a circle of acquaintances founded the American Red Cross
in Washington, D.C. on May 21, 1881. Barton first heard of the Swiss-inspired
International Red Cross Movement while visiting Europe following
the Civil War. Returning home, she campaigned for an American Red
Cross society and for ratification of the Geneva Convention protecting
the war-injured, which the United States ratified in 1882.
Barton headed
the Red Cross for 23 years, during which time it conducted its first
domestic and overseas disaster relief efforts, aided the United
States military during the Spanish-American War, and campaigned
successfully for the inclusion of peacetime relief work as part
of the International Red Cross Movementthe so-called American
Amendment that initially met with some resistance in Europe.
The Red Cross
received its first congressional charter in 1900 and a second in
1905, the year after Barton resigned from the organization. This
charterwhich remains in effect todaysets forth the purposes
of the organization that include giving relief to and serving as
a medium of communication between members of the American armed
forces and their families and providing national and international
disaster relief and mitigation.
Prior
to the First World War, the Red Cross introduced its first aid,
water safety, and public health nursing programs. With the outbreak
of war, the organization experienced phenomenal growth. The number
of local chapters jumped from 107 in 1914 to 3,864 in 1918 and membership
grew from 17,000 to more than 20 million adult and 11 million Junior
Red Cross members. The public contributed $400 million in funds
and material to support Red Cross programs, including those for
American and Allied forces and civilian refugees. The Red Cross
staffed hospitals and ambulance companies and recruited 20,000 registered
nurses to serve the military. Additional Red Cross nurses came forward
to combat the worldwide influenza epidemic of 1918.
After the war,
the Red Cross focused on service to veterans and enhanced its programs
in safety training, accident prevention, home care for the sick
and nutrition education. It also provided relief for victims of
such major disasters as the Mississippi River floods in 1927 and
severe drought and the Depression during the 1930s.
The Second World
War called upon the Red Cross to provide extensive services once
again to the U.S. military, Allies, and civilian war victims. It
enrolled more than 104,000 nurses for military service, prepared
27 million packages for American and Allied prisoners of war, and
shipped more than 300,000 tons of supplies overseas. At the military's
request, the Red Cross also initiated a national blood program that
collected 13.3 million pints of blood for use by the armed forces.
After World
War II, the Red Cross introduced the first nationwide civilian blood
program that now supplies nearly 50 percent of the blood and blood
products in this country. The Red Cross expanded its role in biomedical
research and entered the new field of human tissue banking and distribution.
During the 1990s, it engineered a massive modernization of its blood
services operations to improve the safety of its blood products.
It continued to provide services to members of the armed forces
and their families, including during the Korean, Vietnam, and Gulf
wars. The Red Cross also expanded its services into such fields
as civil defense, CPR/AED training, HIV/AIDS education, and the
provision of emotional care and support to disaster victims and
their survivors. It helped the federal government form the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and serves as its principal supplier
of mass care in federally declared disasters.
While closely
associated with the federal government in the promotion of its objectives,
the Red Cross is an independent, volunteer-led organization, financially
supported by voluntary public contributions and cost-reimbursement
charges. A 50-member, all volunteer Board of Governors leads the
organization. The president of the United States, who is honorary
chairman of the Red Cross, appoints eight governors, including the
chairman of the board. The chairman nominates and the board elects
the president of the Red Cross who is responsible for carrying into
effect the policies and programs of the board. The American Red
Cross works closely with the International Committee of the Red
Cross on matters of international conflict and social, political,
and military unrest. As a member of the International Federation
of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, which it helped found in
1919, the American Red Cross joins more than 175 other national
societies in bringing aid to victims of disasters throughout the
world.