100th
Anniversary of World War I

Unlike other American municipalities, New Rochelle’s World War I years were unique:
- Fort Slocum, the country’s largest military recruiting depot east of the Mississippi, was located just off New Rochelle’s shore on Davids Island.
- New Rochelle was home to a great number of the nation’s leading illustrators, many of whom lent their talent to the earliest, largest propaganda campaign the world had ever experienced.
- The community’s historic ties to France and our “Mother City” of La Rochelle led to a wartime bond between the two cities, and an enormous war relief effort.


Barbara Davis, now City Historian, wrote an article about a unique and highly significant WWI event that occurred in New Rochelle in December, 1918. Click here to read her articles, which appeared in the Standard Star newspaper on December 15 and 22, 1994.
For fun, we thought we’d share a few recipes from
the “Women’s Club of New Rochelle War
Time Cookbook.” Liver Balls or Baked
Beef Heart, anyone? A hard copy of the
cookbook is part of the Library’s Local History Collection.