Ethel Moseley Damon

[3] Ethel attended Honolulu's private college preparatory Punahou School, and was Valedictorian at her 1901 graduation.

[4] After training at Honolulu Normal school, she taught English at that same institution for a couple of years.

[5] In a 1918 letter printed in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Ethel related the effects of war on the French population.

They remained in the area providing assistance for several days, as Ethel witnessed cars and trucks parked in the streets, ready to flee on a moment's notice, and the courage of a people facing uncertainty.

At Le Havre, and wherever needed in France, they provided medical care and a safe haven for the children, often putting themselves in harm's way behind enemy lines to assist refugee women.

Ethel Moseley Damon in 1918