World War I Burke was honorary secretary of the London Office of the
Scottish Women's Hospitals during World War I. She raised funds and visited hospital units; she was the first woman to enter
Verdun. She was decorated by seven European nations for her volunteer activities, including a British
Victory Medal and
CBE (1918), membership in the French
Légion d'honneur, a Serbian
Knighthood of Saint Sava, and a Russian
Cross of St. George. She was also made an honorary colonel in the
United States Army. She met all three of her future husbands during this period. Burke wrote about her war experiences in
The White Road to Verdun, and gave talks about her war experiences for community groups.
Between the wars With her first husband Burke worked to rebuild Santa Barbara after its devastating
1925 earthquake; a high school stadium was named in recognition of their work. She was active in supporting many civic organizations in Santa Barbara, including the hospital, the public library, the
Lobero Theatre, the
Humane Society, the
Junior League and scouting organizations.
World War II and after Hale and her third husband worked on refugee resettlement in France until the Nazi occupation; then they focused on British war relief efforts. "This is a different kind of war," she told
The New York Times in 1940, "but the human needs are the same." After the war, they funded the rebuilding of a French village,
Maillé.
Eleanor Roosevelt mentioned their project in her newspaper column, "My Day." == Personal life and legacy ==