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| Detroit Free Press, July 17, 1959 |
Thanks to the snow, its shoveling and the lack of newspaper search
results I present you this little photo caption. While the Free Press is
mostly an entertainment rag with faulty information and spelling, it
did have a decent heart at certain durations of its long existence.
Namely to the sick and poor.
The Sunbeam Club (c. 1917) was set
up for sick children to communicate with other such children through the
newspaper. Whereby they would obtain addresses of those who interested the reader and they would become pen pals.
The Free Press Fresh Air Camp (c. 1906) was a service that persisted
even longer and gave sick children the opportunity to go to a camp for
10 days or so to regain their health. Obviously there was one at Sylvan
Lake but the location may have changed over the years. I don't really
want to delve into for obvious reasons of time. At one point I started
collecting articles from the Sunbeam Club but despite the troves of
information I couldn't process it all within 17 lifetimes. Somebody with
an inclination towards such an endeavor could easily write a book on
the subject of sick children and charity in Detroit in the 1900s.

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