Archive Entry
New Eyes for the Needy: Thank you postcard with Bob Dunn illustration
Postcard
Ca. 1950 advertising postcard for New Eyes for the Needy, Inc.,"Sponsored by The Junior Service League of Short Hills," thanking patrons for "your helpful contributions to the work of New Eyes for the Needy, Inc.; Short HIlls, New Jersey." The postally unused postcard has a Bob Dunn sketch of a dungaree-clad young boy saying "Gosh! Everything looks wonderful now..."
New Eyes for the Needy was founded in 1932 by the late Julia Lawrence Terry of Short Hills, NJ. The idea originated with Mrs. Terry when she worked as a volunteer at a Red Cross food depot during the Depression. So many applicants had impaired vision that she collected discarded eyeglasses from her friends, carrying the glasses to New York in a shoe box.
Mrs. Terry soon realized that the real need was for new glasses prescribed for each individual. As most of the used glasses she collected had gold rims, it occurred to her that this precious metal might be a source of income to pay for new glasses. She located a refiner and enlisted the help of opticians. New Eyes for the Needy was born.
With a workable plan in place, the most important task was to increase the collection of glasses. Mrs. Terry wrote countless letters to newspapers and magazines, made speeches at clubs and meetings and spoke on several national radio broadcasts. Immediately, packages began to pour into the Short Hills post office from all over the United States.
As the volume of mail grew, the Junior Service League of Short Hills took over the task of opening the packages, sorting and testing the glasses, and acknowledging their receipt. The League assumed full responsibility after Mrs. Terry’s death in 1947 through 1958. During that time, New Eyes operated in people’s basements, and, beginning in 1953, in the Benedict House of Christ Church in Short Hills.
Bob Dunn (1908-1989) was an American cartoonist, comedian & magician. He worked for Rube Goldberg before becoming an assistant to Jimmy Hatlo on the single-panel comic They'll Do It Every Time and its spinoff Little Iodine. Dunn took over Little Iodine and They'll Do It Every Time after Hatlo's death in 1963. Dunn has been credited with inventing the "Knock-Knock" joke in 1936. He was born in Newark, but lived most of his life in Short Hills and served as toast-master at many local charitable events from the 1940s to the 1960s. He received a number of cartooning awards for his work, including the National Cartoonists Society Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award (1968, 1969, shared in 1979) and the Reuben Award (1975). He was also a cartoonist on the 1950 game show Quick on the Draw, a cartoon version of charades.
2014.030.002
2014.030
1952
5-1/2 in
3-1/4 in