Learn more about books and games from WWI (and from modern times!)
Grown-ups everywhere saw children as key to achieving victory and legacy.
Storybooks cast their childish audiences as patriotic heroes and heroines, glossing over the true horrors of war.
"The Youngest in Command"
1918
Sheet music dedicated to four-and-a-half-year-old Thelma Dell Daniels, a pretend captain in the American Expeditionary Forces.
"Sailor Tommy"
by Florence Notter
1918
Click on the arrows to flip through this American storybook.
"Nursery Rhymes for Fighting Times"
1914
This British children's book contains popular nursery rhymes rewritten to mock the German military.
Toys and games valorized their country and ridiculed the enemy.
Cut-out paper doll
Dolly Dingle cut-outs like this one emphasized patriotic ideals for young girls.
Girls' Red Cross smock and cap
1918
Child's play American Red Cross uniform made by Cynthia Nelson for her daughter Millicent Elise Nelson.
Child's uniform
1915
Child's play military uniform made by Michele J. Marcelli, a tailor in New Jersey, for his son Joseph D. Marcelli.
Joseph D. Marcelli wearing his play uniform.
"Liberty Boy" doll
circa 1917
The "Liberty Boy" dolls were modeled after U.S. doughboys (soldiers). This doll was a gift for Helen Lucile Knipp.
Scouting organizations and community drives recruited children to help raise money and conserve resources on the home front.
Handbook
1917
This handbook provided girls with instructions on how to earn badges and how they could help their country during wartime.
Pin
1917-1918
The U.S. Department of Labor issued this pin to boys who enrolled in the U.S. Boys' Working Reserve, an organization that employed boys on farms to increase food production.
Pamphlet
1917
The American Red Cross published this pamphlet to educate school children on ways they could contribute to the war effort.
Properly nourished children grew up to be strong soldiers and nurses, so nutrition and diet became much more important to society.
Pin
1917
This Child Welfare Week pin was issued in Australia. Child Welfare Week was part of a larger initiative to ensure children around the world had proper nutrition and healthy lifestyles.
Poster
This Young Women's Christian Association poster advertises the Girl Reserves program which encouraged girls to join the World War I effort by participating in patriotic work.
Propagandists and relief committees played up stories of war orphans to tug at the heartstrings and pocketbooks of millions.
Pin
1915-1919
A small pin issued in support of the aid organization The Fatherless Children of France.
Impressionable young minds were learning a clear lesson: loyalty and commitment will win the war.
Molded by the first truly global conflict, the children of WWI grew into the generation that would both inflict and endure profound hardship, economic depression and world war in their turn: the Greatest Generation.
The Little War is created for children and their grown-ups to understand the Great War from a child’s perspective, using imaginative play, original toys and games, photos and other artifacts from the time period. The exhibition text is offered at two separate reading levels to ensure accessibility and comprehension. Children and adults can further explore the themes of the exhibition in a small hands-on “living room” featuring WWI-era children’s books and contemporary literature, as well as games and puzzles for play. The Little War is appropriate for all ages to discover a lesser-known part of WWI as they journey through childhood in wartime.