2007 - Big Brothers Big Sisters: 100+ Years of Volunteering

Thea Woods

Voices from the Past article from e-Volunteerism, Vol. VIII, Issue 1, Oct-Dec 2007, 8 pages.

Electronic version:


Price: US$3.00

Order this article individually from here or subscribe to e-Volunteerism for just $40 to access all past and current articles.

Article Preview

In 1904, a young New York City court clerk named Ernest Coulter was seeing more and more boys come through his courtroom. He recognized that caring adults could help many of these kids stay out of trouble, and he set out to find volunteers.

From this beginning (as described on the Big Brothers Big Sisters Web site) emerged the concept of the volunteer “Big Brother.”  By 1916, Big Brothers had spread to 96 cities across the country and a parallel organization for girls, Big Sisters, had started, too.  Merged in 1977, Big Brothers Big Sisters currently operates in all 50 states and in 35 countries around the world.  This is the history of this effort to bring “caring mentors into the lives of children.”

Other e-Volunteerism Articles

Subscribe to e-Volunteerism

This article was published in e-Volunteerism: The Electronic Journal of the Volunteer Community. Subscribe now to access all the articles.