Overview
Administrative Information
Biographical/Historical note
Scope and Contents
Access Terms
Overview
Call Number: SCM0441
Title: Order of Siberian Snow Dogs photographs and roster
Dates: 1918
Physical Description:
0.02 Linear feet
Summary: Two photographs and roster of the Order of Siberian Snowdogs.
Language(s): The materials are in English.
Repository:
Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Green Library
557 Escondido Mall
Stanford, CA 94305-6064
Email: specialcollections@stanford.edu
Phone: (650) 725-1022
URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc
Administrative Information
Information about Access
The materials are open for research use.
Ownership & Copyright
The materials are in the public domain. There are no restrictions on use.
Cite As
[identification of item], Order of Siberian Snow Dogs Photographs and Roster (SCM0441). Dept. of Special Collections and University
Archives, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, Calif.
Biographical/Historical note
(Russia, Siberia, World War I) 1918 US soldiers in Siberia after the Russian Revolution
"Order of Siberian Snow Dogs" [American Expeditionary Forces, Siberia] (No place or date, but probably printed in Siberia,
circa November 1918) 3 x 5.5 inches, 6pp. Roster of what was apparently a light-hearted social group of 70 of the first American
officers and soldiers sent to Siberia two months before the end of World War I, most drafted civilians from all over the US,
showing their hometown addresses. One notable military professional on the list was Lt. Col. Philip Faymonville, a Stanford
and West Point graduate who was chief Ordnance officer of AEF Siberia, and 15 years later, would become the first US Military
Attache to Stalin's Russia. With two original photographs: One, captioned on verso "The Sacred Order of Siberian Snow Dogs/woof!
Woof!" 3.5 x 5.5 inches; and a photo of 11 American officers and the Danish Consul, named on verso, and captioned "The Staff,
Taken, Dec. 1918, in front of Officers' Quarters, War Prison Camp, Krasnaya Retchka, Siberia". These were undoubtedly some
of the first of the 8,000 American officers and men who would eventually be sent to Vladivostok, Siberia between August 1918
and April 1920, not, ostensibly, to intervene in the raging Russian civil war between Bolshevik Reds and the Czarist Whites,
but to protect military railroads and supplies. One special unit were the officers of the 29th Infantry shown in the second
photograph who took charge of the Krasnaya Retchka POW camp where 2000 captured Germans, most of them officers, were awaiting
repatriation to their homeland.
Scope and Contents
The materials consist of two photographs and a roster of the Siberian Snow Dogs.
Access Terms
Photographs.
Russia--History
World War, 1914-1918--Personal narratives, American.
World War, 1914-1918.