This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2016, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Salt Lake City resident Erin Freeman had hoped to raise $6,000 to help refugee Syrian children through an online campaign that she launched on Thanksgiving day.

Within weeks, the donation total exceeded $10,000 and churches and businesses also had collected piles of winter clothing and other items to help out, she said.

And on Saturday, the community responded again by assisting at a "packing party" at Saint Ambrose Catholic Church in Salt Lake City. Volunteers packed sleeping bags, boots, clothing, coats, gloves and other items to ship to Lesbos, Greece, where refugee camps Moria and Kara Tepe are located.

Included in the boxes of donated items are letters and pictures written and colored by Utah children. They will hang in areas where the children — many of them orphans — are housed.

Freeman said she was touched by the turnout of dozens of volunteers, including Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams, Salt Lake City Councilman Arlyn Bradshaw and Patrick Poulin, executive director of the International Rescue Committee in Salt Lake City. The stay-at-home mother of three boys said she decided to start her Indiegogo campaign, 1,000 Boots and Sleeping Bags for Refugee Children, after seeing images of suffering refugees.

The shipment of the donated goods is the first phase of the campaign and the next will be the purchase of more necessities with the monetary donations. Freeman and a few other volunteers plan to travel at their own expense to Greece and to work with organizations there distributing the donations at the refugee camps, as well as at ports and on beaches.

The campaign is ongoing and all donations are tax deductible. Visit 1,000 Boots on Indiegogo at http://tinyurl.com/z4om7dt or on Facebook at http://tinyurl.com/hf9gkgo for more information.

Twitter: PamelaMansonSLC