|
Home |
About the Library |
Services |
Programs and Events |
Reference |
Kids and Teens |
Support your Library |
![]() |
|
|||||
Honor Varian Fry with a Postage Stamp Support the effort to get a stamp in Varian Fry's honor. This effort was initiated by The Jewish Standard and the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies. Click here to view and print a petition. Collect signatures and mail them to the Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee. For additional information see the links below. Varian Fry Fry and his compatriots rescued over 2,000 people from Nazi-controlled France. During 1940 and 1941, Varian Fry, a 32-year-old Harvard graduate working as an editor in New York, volunteered to take on the Emergency Rescue Committee's project to bring 200 specific political and intellectual refugees out of Nazi-controlled Vichy France to safety. While in Marseilles he realized the need to get many other people out of France and away from the Nazis. Unable to gain cooperation from the French government or the American Consulate, Fry established a clandestine operation by which |
|
Varian Fry grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey Fry was born on October 15, 1907, in Harlem, New York City. In 1910, his parents, Arthur and Lillian Fry, moved to 25 Richmond Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ. They joined many others who were moving to Ridgewood at this time to take advantage of new housing, clean air, and the easy rail commute to New York City. Arthur Fry managed the office of Carlysle and Mellick, a stockbrokerage on Wall Street.According to Andy Marino's biography, As a child Fry enjoyed solitary pursuits, particularly reading and the natural world. He especially liked bird watching and once rescued an injured cedar waxwing. Fry's early school years were spent at the Monroe Street School (at the site of the present George Washington Middle School) and he "displayed an alert intelligence and showed a great facility for learning." In 1917, at 9 years old, Varian and several of his friends had a bazaar to raise money for the Red Cross, to benefit the war effort. Attractions included an ice cream booth, a vaudeville show, and a fish pond. Fry joined the West Side Presbyterian Church on June 25, 1922, when he was 14. Also at that time he was enrolled in a private school where he prepared for examinations for entrance to Hotchkiss, a prestigious private school. When he reached Hotchkiss in 1922, he found that the hazing was intolerable and that his protest of it only targeted him for extra pain and humiliation. He left Hotchkiss at the end of 1924, refusing to return, and completed his high school education at Riverdale Country School in the Bronx.Throughout this time Fry was an avid reader and an eager student. By his graduation in 1926, he was on his way to reading and writing in six languages and scored in the top 10% on the Harvard entrance examinations. Although Fry's interests were now centered at Harvard and in New York City, his parents continued to live in Ridgewood until 1951. He wrote to his mother at the Richmond Street address when he was in France. |
|
|
November 3-December 16, 2001: The Committee to Honor Varian Fry sponsored a Holocaust Memorial Museum traveling exhibit about Fry. It was installed in the Library auditorium. Concurrent with the exhibit was a lecture series. 2002: A photograph of Fry with a description of his work is displayed on the 2nd level of the library. 2002: As a living memorial, the Varian Fry Humanitarian Scholarship was established and is awarded each year to a senior student at Ridgewood High School. The student is chosen based on demonstrated ability to recognize a need, and to step up and make a humanitarian difference as exemplified by Varian Fry's work. June 26, 2005: Ridgewood dedicated a portion of South Monroe St. as Varian Fry Way. The dedication ceremony included addresses by Izzy Canner, a man rescued by Fry, and William Bingham, the son of Hiram Bingham who aided Fry in his work in France. October 16, 2007: The Ridgewood Post Office issued a special 30-day cancelation commemorating Fry's 100th birthday. October 28, 2007: Ridgewood commemorated the 100th anniversary of Fry's birthday with the dedication of a plaque in his honor. The plaque is placed at the entrance to the Library patio. The occasion featured presentations by Nancy Blasberg, Assistant Library Director, Catherine Taub, Founder of the Committee to Honor Varian Fry, Isi Canner and Jeanette Berman, who were both rescued from France by Fry, Congressman Steve Rothman, Rosemary Sullivan, author of Villa Air-Bel, and Juan Opitz, independent film maker. Mary Ellen Murray, Ridgewood Postmaster canceled mail with a special cancelation commemorating the anniversary.
|
![]() |
Resources Available in the Ridgewood Public Library Bibliographies: Varian Fry. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Guide to the Varian Fry Papers. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Varian Fry Institute: dedicated to Americans Who Cared. Varian Fry: The American Schindler Varian Fry: the forgotten hero who displayed extraordinary courage. The Varian Fry Project/IRC Resources in support of a stamp honoring Varian Fry Varian Fry the Artists' Schindler Rothman, Menendez Boost Fry Stamp |
![]() |