name | Jane Addams |
---|
birth date | September 06, 1860 |
---|
birth place | Cedarville, Illinois, U.S. |
---|
death date | May 21, 1935 |
---|
death place | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
---|
occupation | Social and political activist, author and lecturer, community organizer, public intellectual |
---|
awards | Nobel Peace Prize |
---|
parents | John H. AddamsSarah WeberHlll |
---|
children | }} |
---|
Jane Addams (September 6, 1860 – May 21, 1935) was a pioneer settlement worker, founder of
Hull House in Chicago, public philosopher, sociologist, author, and leader in
woman suffrage and world peace. Beside presidents such as
Theodore Roosevelt and
Woodrow Wilson, she was the most prominent reformer of the
Progressive Era and helped turn the nation to issues of concern to mothers, such as the needs of children, public health, and world peace. She said that if women were to be responsible for cleaning up their communities and making them better places to live, they needed the vote to be effective in doing so. Addams became a role model for middle-class women who volunteered to uplift their communities. She is increasingly recognized as a member of the
American pragmatist school of philosophy. In 1931 she became the first American woman to be awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize.
;Early Life
Born in
Cedarville, Illinois, Jane Addams was the youngest of eight children born into a prosperous northern Illinois family; her father was politically prominent. Three of her siblings died in infancy, and another died at sixteen, leaving only four by the time Addams was age eight. Her mother, Sarah Addams (
née Weber), died in childbirth when Jane was two years old.
Addams spent her childhood playing outdoors, reading indoors, and attending Sunday school. When she was four, she contracted tuberculosis of the spine, Potts's disease, which caused a curvature in her back and lifelong health problems. As a child, she thought she was "ugly" and later remembered wanting not to embarrass her father, when he was dressed in his Sunday best, by walking down the street with him.
Addams adored her father when she was a child, as she made clear in the stories she told in her memoir, ''Twenty Years at Hull House'' (1910). John Huey Addams was an agricultural businessman with large timber, cattle, and agricultural holdings; flour and timber mills; and a woolen factory. He was the president of The Second National Bank of Freeport. He remarried in 1868, when Jane was eight years old. His second wife was Anna Hostetter Haldeman, the widow of a miller in Freeport.
John Addams was a founding member of the Illinois Republican Party, served as an Illinois State Senator (1855–70), and supported his friend Abraham Lincoln in his candidacies, for senator (1854) and the presidency (1860). John Addams kept a letter from Lincoln in his desk, and Jane Addams loved to look at it as a child.
In her teens, Addams had big dreams—to do something useful in the world. Long interested in the poor from her reading of Dickens and inspired by her mother's kindness to the Cedarville poor, she decided to become a doctor so that she could live and work among the poor. It was a vague idea, nurtured by the delights of fiction. She was a voracious reader.
;Education
Addams's father encouraged her to pursue higher education, but not too far from home. She was eager to attend the brand-new college for women, Smith College in Massachusetts; but her father required Addams to attend nearby Rockford Female Seminary (now Rockford College), in Rockford, Illinois. After graduating from Rockford in 1881, with a collegiate certificate, she still hoped to attend Smith to earn a proper B.A. That summer, her father died unexpectedly from an appendicitis. Each child inherited roughly $50,000 (equivalent to $}} today).
That fall, Addams, her sister Alice, Alice's husband Harry, and their stepmother, Anna Haldeman Addams, moved to Philadelphia so that the three young people could pursue medical educations. Harry was already trained in medicine and did further studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Jane and Alice completed their first year of medical school at the Woman's Medical College of Philadelphia, but Jane's health problems, a spinal operation and a nervous breakdown, prevented her from completing the degree. She was filled with sadness at her failure. Stepmother Anna was also ill, so the entire family canceled their plans to stay two years and returned to Cedarville.
The following fall her brother-in-law/stepbrother Harry performed surgery on her back, to straighten it. He then advised that she not pursue studies but, instead, travel. In August 1883, she set off for a two-year tour of Europe with her stepmother, traveling some of the time with friends and family who joined them. Addams decided that she did not have to become a doctor to be able to help the poor. But, what then should she do?
Upon her return home, in June 1885, she lived with her stepmother in Cedarville, and spent the winters with her in Baltimore. Addams, still filled with vague ambition, sank into depression, unsure of her future and feeling useless leading the conventional life expected of a well-to-do young woman. She wrote long letters to her friend from Rockford Seminary, Ellen Gates Starr, mostly about Christianity and books but sometimes about her despair.
;Deciding to begin a settlement house
Meanwhile, she was gathering clues about her future from what she read. Fascinated by the early Christians and Tolstoy's book ''My Religion'', she was baptized a Christian in the Cedarville Presbyterian Church, in the summer of 1886. Reading Giuseppe Mazzini's ''Duties of Man'', she began to be inspired by the idea of democracy as a social ideal. She still felt confused about her role as a woman, though. John Stuart Mill's ''The Subjection of Women'' made her question the social pressures on a woman to marry and devote her life to family.
Then, finally, she read about something she could actually do. In the summer of 1887, she read in a magazine about the new idea of a settlement house. She decided to visit the world's first, in London, on a second trip to Europe. It was called Toynbee Hall. She and several friends, including Ellen Gates Starr, traveled in Europe from December 1887 through the summer of 1888. Addams told no one of her dream to start a settlement house at first; but, as she traveled, she felt increasingly guilty that she was just being a tourist and not acting.
Her feelings finally overwhelmed her after watching a bullfight in Madrid. While her friends soon left the arena, too horrified by the great bloody gore of the event to remain, Addams stayed, mesmerized by what she saw as an exotic cultural tradition. Afterward, she condemned her fascination with the bullfight and her inability to feel outraged at the suffering of the horses and bulls that had been killed. She blamed her love of culture for hardening her heart to suffering, for inhibiting her from acting. And was not that the underlying reason she still had not started a settlement house? Believing that if she told someone her dream, she might finally do something, she told Ellen Gates Starr. Starr loved the idea of starting a settlement house and agreed to join Addams in pursuing her dream.
Addams and another friend traveled to London without Starr, who was tied up. Visiting Toynbee Hall, Addams was enchanted. She described it as "a community of University men who live there, have their recreation clubs and society all among the poor people, yet, in the same style in which they would live in their own circle. It is so free of 'professional doing good,' so unaffectedly sincere and so productive of good results in its classes and libraries that it seems perfectly ideal." Addams's dream of the classes mingling socially to mutual benefit, as they had in early Christian circles, seemed embodied in the new type of institution.
In fact, the co-founders of Toynbee Hall, Samuel and Henrietta Barnett, shared Addams's desire to bring Christianity back to its roots. Part of what was called the "social Christian" movement, the Barnetts had no interest in converting anyone to Christianity, but they did feel that Christians should be more engaged with the world, and, in the words of one of the leaders of the movement in England, W.H. Fremantle, "imbue all human relations with the spirit of Christ's self-renouncing love." Addams learned about social Christianity from them, soon considered herself one, and soon made friends among the leaders of the "social Christian" movement in the United States.
Jane Addams's religious faith was thus a central motive in co-founding Hull House with Starr, but the settlement was never religious. It did not seek to convert others to Christianity. A brief experiment in weekly prayer among the residents of the settlement house, requested by some of them, was so ecumenical in its approach that it soon fizzled. (However, other settlements in both Great Britain and the United States would be religious and seek conversions).
Addams's own religious beliefs were shaped by her wide reading and life experience. By the time she had graduated from Rockford Seminary, she knew the Bible and especially the New Testament, thoroughly, having studied it throughout her young life, including in college courses. She had also been required to memorize a verse from the Bible every day at Rockford, and listen to a short sermon on the daily verse by the school's principal. Evidence of this deep familiarity with Scripture can be found throughout her later writings.
While she remained a member of a Presbyterian Church, Addams regularly attended a Unitarian Church and Ethical Society in Chicago. And at one point was appointed "interim lecturer" at the Ethical Society. Addams also established a close relationship with members of the established Jewish community, notably with the rabbi of Chicago Sinai Congregation, Emil G. Hirsch, and several so Sinai's congregants, among them Judge Julian Mack and Julius Rosenwald.
In 1889 she and her college friend co-founded
Hull House in Chicago, Illinois, the first
settlement house in the United States.
The run-down mansion had been built by Charles Hull in 1856 and needed repairs and upgrading. Addams at first paid for all of the capital expenses (repairing the roof of the porch, repainting the rooms, purchasing the furniture) and the bulk of the operating costs. But gifts from individuals supported the House from its first year and over time, Addams was able to reduce the proportion of her contributions, although the annual budget grew rapidly. A number of wealthy women became important long-term donors to the House, including Helen Culver, who managed her first cousin Charles Hull's estate, and who eventually allowed them to use the house rent free, Louise deKoven Bowen, Mary Rozet Smith, Mary Wilmarth, and others.
Addams and Starr were the first two occupants of the house, which would later become the residence of about twenty-five women. At its height, Hull House was visited each week by around two thousand people. Its facilities included a night school for adults, kindergarten classes, clubs for older children, a public kitchen, an art gallery, a coffeehouse, a gym, a girls' club, a bathhouse, a book bindery, a music school, a drama group, and a library, as well as labor-related divisions. Her adult night school was a forerunner of the continuing education classes offered by many universities today. In addition to making available social services and cultural events for the largely immigrant population of the neighborhood, Hull House afforded an opportunity for young social workers to acquire training. Eventually, Hull House became a thirteen-building settlement complex, which included a playground and a summer camp (known as Bowen Country Club).
The Hull House neighborhood was a mix of various European ethnic groups that had immigrated to Chicago around the start of the twentieth century. The Bethlehem-Howard Neighborhood Center Records that mix of immigrants which comprised the social laboratory upon which the social and philanthropic elitists comprising Hull House's inner sanctum tested their theories and based their challenges to the establishment. "Germans and Jews resided south of that inner core (south of Twelfth Street) [...] The Greek delta formed by Harrison,
Halsted, and Blue Island Streets served as a buffer to the Irish residing to the north and the Canadian–French to the northwest." Italians resided within the inner core of the Hull House Neighborhood [...] from the river on the east end, on out to the western ends of what came to be known as
Little Italy. Greeks and Jews, along with the remnants of other immigrant groups, began their exodus from the neighborhood during the early part of the twentieth century. The Italians were the only ethnic group to continue as an intact and thriving community through the Great Depression, World War II, and well beyond the ultimate demise of Hull House proper in 1963.
Hull House, as Addams named it, became America's best known settlement house. She used Hull House to generate system-directed change, on the principle that to keep families safe, community and societal conditions had to be improved. The neighborhood was controlled by local political bosses. At one point Addams ran for alderman against the local boss, Johnnie Powers, and lost.
Starr and Addams developed three "ethical principles" for social settlements: "to teach by example, to practice cooperation, and to practice social democracy, that is, egalitarian, or democratic, social relations across class lines." Hull House therefore offered a comprehensive program of civic, cultural, recreational, and educational activities and attracted admiring visitors from all over the world, in including
William Lyon MacKenzie King, a graduate student from Harvard who later became prime minister of Canada. In the 1890s
Julia Lathrop,
Florence Kelley, and other residents of the house made it a world center of social reform activity. Hull House used the latest methodology (pioneering in statistical mapping) to study overcrowding, truancy, typhoid fever, cocaine, children's reading, newsboys, infant mortality, and midwifery. Starting with efforts to improve the immediate neighborhood, the Hull House group became involved in city- and state-wide campaigns for better housing, improvements in public welfare, stricter child-labor laws, and protection of working women. Addams brought in prominent visitors from around the world, and had close links with leading Chicago intellectuals and philanthropists. In 1912 she helped start the new
Progressive Party and supported the presidential campaign of
Theodore Roosevelt.
"Addams’ philosophy combined feminist sensibilities with an unwavering commitment to social improvement through cooperative efforts. Although she sympathized with feminists, socialists, and pacifists, Addams refused to be labeled. This refusal was pragmatic rather than ideological."
Addams at Hull House stressed the role of children in the Americanization process of new immigrants, and fostered the play movement and the research and service fields of leisure, youth, and human services. Addams argued in ''The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets'' (1909) that play and recreation programs are needed because cities are destroying the spirit of youth. Addams feared that cities and playgrounds were killing the spirit of youth; recreation and play were healthy mediums to channel the spirit of youth. Hull-House featured multiple programs in art and drama, kindergarten classes, boys' and girls' clubs, language classes, reading groups, college extension courses, along with public baths, a free-speech atmosphere, a gymnasium, a labor museum and playground. They were all designed to foster democratic cooperation and collective action and downplay individualism. She helped pass the first model tenement code and the first factory laws.
Addams and her colleagues documented the geography of typhoid fever and reported that poor workers bore the brunt of illness. She identified the political corruption and business avarice that caused the city bureaucracy to ignore health, sanitation, and building codes. Linking environmental justice and municipal reform, she eventually defeated the bosses and fostered a more equitable distribution of city services and modernized inspection practices. Addams spoke of the "undoubted powers of public recreation to bring together the classes of a community in the modern city unhappily so full of devices for keeping them apart." Addams worked with the Chicago Board of Health and served as the first vice-president of the Playground Association of America.
Addams lectured throughout the United States, at various colleges and social settlements. For example:
:In February 13, 1899, she went on a typical lecture tour—leaving Chicago on February 13, she spoke at Wells College in Aurora, New York on the 14th; at Auburn Seminary the next day; at Wells again on the 16th; then to New York for a quick stopover; then to Boston where she made two appearances at woman's clubs on the 18th; two more appearances on Sunday; on to the University of Vermont on Monday; back to Boston for two more appearance [sic] on Tuesday; two more on Wednesday, and two on Thursday; then she was off to Meadville, Pennsylvania; to Harrisburg, Richmond, Virginia, and Columbia, South Carolina, before returning home.
Although many of these speeches were not academic, others were, and Addams' division between academic and everyday thought was dramatically different from that of her typical male academic colleagues. In addition, she offered college courses through the Extension Division of the University of Chicago. She declined offers from the university to become directly affiliated with it, including an offer from Albion Small, chair of the Department of Sociology, of a graduate faculty position. She declined in order to maintain her independent role outside of academia. Her goal was to teach adults not enrolled in formal academic institutions, because of their poverty and/or lack of credentials. Furthermore, she wanted no university controls over her political activism.
Addams was a charter member of the American Sociological Society, founded in 1905. She gave papers to it in 1912, 1915, and 1919. She was the most prominent woman member during this period.
Throughout her life Addams was close to many women and was very good at eliciting the involvement of women from different classes in Hull House's programs. Her closest adult companion and friend was Mary Rozet Smith, who supported Addams's work at Hull House, and with whom she shared a
romantic friendship. Together they owned a summer house in
Bar Harbor, Maine.
The harsh criticism received by Addams, both for her outspoken pacifism during World War I and her defense of immigrants' civil rights during a period when anarchism and socialism were greatly feared in the United States, never stopped her from putting forth a great amount of effort and energy into Hull House. She even had the time to work on international peace efforts. She spoke and campaigned extensively for Theodore Roosevelt's 1912 Presidential campaign on the 'Progressive' Party.
In 1915, she became involved in the Woman's Peace Party and was elected national chairman. Addams was elected president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in 1915, a position that entailed frequent travel to Europe (during and after World War I) and Asia. With this she also attended the International Woman's Conference in The Hague and was chosen to head the commission to find an end to the war. This included meeting ten leaders in neutral countries as well as those at war to discuss mediation. This was the first significant international effort against the war. Addams along with co-delegates Emily Balch and Alice Hamilton documented their experiences of this period and was published as a book ''Women at The Hague'' (University of Illinois).
In her journal, Balch recorded her impression of Jane Addams (April 1915):
"Miss Addams shines, so respectful of everyone's views, so eager to understand and sympathize, so patient of anarchy and even ego, yet always there, strong, wise and in the lead. No 'managing', no keeping dark and bringing things subtly to pass, just a radiating wisdom and power of judgement."
In 1917, she became also member of the Fellowship of Reconciliation USA (American branch of the International Fellowship of Reconciliation founded in 1919) and was a member of the Fellowship Council until 1933. When the US joined the war, in 1917, Addams started to be strongly criticized. She faced increasingly harsh rebukes and criticism as a pacifist. Her 1915 speech on pacifism at Carnegie Hall received negative coverage by newspapers such as the ''New York Times'', which branded her as unpatriotic. Later, during her travels, she would spend time meeting with a wide variety of diplomats and civic leaders and reiterating her Victorian belief in women's special mission to preserve peace. Recognition of these efforts came with the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Addams in 1931. As the first U.S. woman to win the prize, Addams was applauded for her "expression of an essentially American democracy." She donated her share of the prize money to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Hull House and the Peace Movement are widely recognized as the key tangible pillars of Addams' legacy. While her life focused on the development of individuals, her ideas continue to influence social, political and economic reform in the United States as well as internationally.
Willard Motley, a resident artist of Hull House, extracting from Addams' central theory on symbolic interactionism, used the neighborhood and its people to write his 1948 best seller, Knock on Any Door.
Addams' role as reformer enabled her to petition the establishment at and alter the social and physical geography of her Chicago neighborhood. Although contemporary academic sociologists defined her engagement as "social work," Addams' efforts differed significantly from activities typically labeled as "social work" during that time period. Before Addams' powerful influence on the profession, social work was largely informed by a "friendly visitor" model in which typically wealthy women of high public stature visited impoverished individuals and, through systematic assessment and intervention, aimed to improve the lives of the poor. Addams rejected the friendly visitor model in favor of a model of social reform/social theory-building, thereby introducing the now-central tenets of social justice and reform to the field of social work.
Hull House enabled Addams to befriend and become a colleague to early members of the Chicago School of Sociology. Her influence, through her work in applied sociology, impacted their thoughts and their direction. In 1893, she co-authored the ''Hull-House Maps and Papers'' that came to define the interests and methodologies of the School. She worked with George H. Mead on social reform issues including promoting women's rights, ending child labor, and mediating during the 1910 Garment Workers' Strike.
Addams worked with labor as well as other reform groups toward goals including the first juvenile-court law, tenement-house regulation, an eight-hour working day for women, factory inspection, and workers' compensation. She advocated research aimed at determining the causes of poverty and crime, and supported women's suffrage. She was a strong advocate of justice for immigrants and blacks, becoming a chartered member of the NAACP. Among the projects that the members of the Hull House opened were the Immigrants' Protective League, the Juvenile Protective Association, the first juvenile court in the United States, and a Juvenile Psychopathic Clinic.
Addams' writings and speeches, on behalf of the formation of the League of Nations and as peace advocate, are well documented; influencing the later shape of the United Nations.
In 2007, the state of Illinois renamed the Northwest Tollway as the
Jane Addams Memorial Tollway.
Jane Addams House is a residence hall built in 1947, at Connecticut College.
Hull House had to be demolished for the establishment of the Chicago campus of the University of Illinois, in 1963, and relocated. The Hull residence itself was preserved as a museum and monument to Jane Addams.
Jane Addams Business Careers Center is a high school in Cleveland, Ohio.
Jane Addams High School For Academic Careers is a high school in The Bronx, NY.
Florence Kelley
Flora Dunlap
Mary Treglia
Elizabeth Harrison (educator)
Jane Addams Burial Site
Jane Addams School for Democracy
Jane Addams Middle School
John H. Addams Homestead
John Dewey
Community practice social work
Stanton Street Settlement
Progressive Party (United States, 1912)
American philosophy
List of American philosophers
List of female Nobel laureates
International Fellowship of Reconciliation
Jane Addams Collection, 1838-date (bulk 1880-1935) (130 linear feet) is housed at Swarthmore College Peace Collection.
Jane Addams Correspondence, 1872-1935 (inclusive) (23 reels) is housed at Harvard University Radcliffe Institute of Advanced Study.
Berson, Robin Kadison. ''Jane Addams: a biography'' (2004), 140pp.
Brown, Victoria Bissell. ''The Education of Jane Addams: Politics and Culture in Modern America.'' (2003). 421 pp. excerpt and text search
Davis, Allen F. ''American Heroine: The Life and Legend of Jane Addams'' (1973), 339pp, solid scholarship but tends toward debunking
Diliberto, Gioia. ''A Useful Woman: The Early Life of Jane Addams.'' (1999). 318 pp.
Elshtain, Jean Bethke. ''Jane Addams and the Dream of American Democracy: A Life'' Basic Books: 2002 online edition, by a leading conservative scholar
Knight, Louise W. ''Citizen: Jane Addams and the Struggle for Democracy.'' (2005). 582 pp.; biography to 1899
Knight, Louise W. ''Jane Addams: Spirit in Action.'' (2010). 334 pp., complete biography aimed at a broader audience.
Joslin, Katherine. ''Jane Addams: A Writer's Life.'' (2004). 306 pp.
Linn, James W. ''Jane Addams: A biography.'' (1935) 457 pp, by her admiring nephew
"How Did Changes in the Built Environment at Hull-House Reflect the Settlement's Interaction with Its Neighbors, 1889-1912?" by Kathryn Kish Sklar, Rima Lunin Schultz, Melissa Doak, Marian Horan, and Kerry Lippincott. Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000
Alonso, Harriet Hyman. "Nobel Peace Laureates, Jane Addams And Emily Greene Balch: Two Women Of The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom." ''Journal Of Women's History'' 1995 7(2): 6-26. Issn: 1042-7961 Fulltext: Ebsco
Beer, Janet and Joslin, Katherine. "Diseases of the Body Politic: White Slavery in Jane Addams' "A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil" and "Selected Short Stories" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman." ''Journal of American Studies'' 1999 33(1): 1-18. Issn: 0021-8758
Bowen, Louise de Koven. ''Growing up with Pity''. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1926.
Brinkmann, Tobias, "Sundays at Sinai: A Jewish Congregation in Chicago" (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012), link:
Brittain, Vera, "The Rebel Passion", George Allen & Unwin ltd, London, 1964.
Bryan, Mary Linn McCree, and Allen F. Davis. ''One Hundred Years at Hull-House'' (1990), a history of the programs there
Carson, Minal. ''Settlement Folk: Social Thought and the American Settlement Movement, 1885-1930'' (1990)
Chansky, Dorothy. "Re-visioning Reform," ''American Quarterly'' vol 55 #3 (2003) 515-523 online at Project Muse
Curti, Merle. "Jane Addams on Human Nature," ''Journal of the History of Ideas'' Vol. 22, No. 2 (Apr., 1961), pp. 240–253 in JSTOR
Danielson, Caroline Page. "Citizen Acts: Citizenship and Political Agency in the Works of Jane Addams, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and Emma Goldman." PhD dissertation U. of Michigan 1996. 331 pp. DAI 1996 57(6): 2651-A. DA9635502 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Dawley, Alan. ''Changing the World: American Progressives in War and Revolution'' (2003)
Deegan, Mary. ''Jane Addams and the Men of the Chicago School, 1892–1918''. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, Inc., 1988.
Donovan, Brian. ''White Slave Crusades: Race, Gender, and Anti-Vice Activism, 1887-1917.'' U of Illinois Press. 2006. 186 pp.
Duffy, William. "Remembering is the Remedy: Jane Addams's Response to Conflicted Discourse." ''Rhetoric Review'' 30.2 (2011): 135-152.
Fischer, Marilyn, et al eds. ''Jane Addams and the Practice of Democracy'' (2009), 230pp; 11 specialized essays by scholars excerpt and text search
Foust, Mathew A. "Perplexities of Filiality: Confucius and Jane Addams on the Private/Public Distinction," "Asian Philosophy" (2008) 18(2): 149-166.
Grimm, Robert Thornton, Jr. "Forerunners for a Domestic Revolution: Jane Addams, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and the Ideology Of Childhood, 1900-1916." ''Illinois Historical Journal'' 1997 90(1): 47-64. Issn: 0748-8149
Hamington, Maurice. "Jane Addams," ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'' (2007) online edition, Addams as philosopher
Hamington, Maurice. ''Embodied Care Jane Addams, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Feminist Ethics'' (2004) excerpt and online search at amazon.com
Hamington, Maurice. "Jane Addams and a Politics of Embodied Care," ''The Journal of Speculative Philosophy'' v 15 #2 2001, pp. 105–121 online at Project Muse
Hamington, Maurice. "Public Pragmatism: Jane Addams and Ida B. Wells on Lynching," ''The Journal of Speculative Philosophy'' v. 19#2 (2005), pp. 167–174 online at Project Muse
Hansen, Jonathan M. "Fighting Words: The Transnational Patriotism of Eugene V. Debs, Jane Addams, and W. E. B. Du Bois." PhD dissertation Boston U. 1997. 286 pp. DAI 1997 57(10): 4511-A. DA9710148 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Henderson, Karla A. "Jane Addams: Leisure Services Pioneer". ''Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance'', v53 n2 p42-45 Feb 1982.
Jackson, Shannon. ''Lines of Activity: Performance, Historiography, Hull-House Domesticity'' (2000). 384 pp.
Joslin, Katherine. ''Jane Addams: A writer's Life'' (2009) excerpt and text search
Krysiak, Barbara H. "Full-Service Community Schools: Jane Addams Meets John Dewey.". ''School Business Affairs'', v67 n8 p4-8 Aug 2001. ISSN 0036-651X
Knight, Louise W. "An Authoritative Voice: Jane Addams and the Oratorical Tradition." ''Gender & History'' 1998 10(2): 217-251. Issn: 0953-5233 Fulltext: Ebsco
Knight, Louise W. "Biography's Window on Social Change: Benevolence and Justice in Jane Addams's 'A Modern Lear.'" ''Journal Of Women's History'' 1997 9(1): 111-138. Issn: 1042-7961 Fulltext: Ebsco
Lissak, R. S. ''Pluralism and Progressives: Hull-House and the New Immigrants.'' (1989)
Matassarin, Kat. "Jane Addams of Hull-House: Creative Drama at the Turn of the Century". ''Children's Theatre Review'', Oct 1983. v32 n4 pp 13–15
Morton, Keith. "Addams, Day, and Dewey: The Emergence of Community Service in American Culture". ''Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning'', Fall 1997 v4 pp 137–49 * Oakes, Jeannie. ''Becoming Good American Schools: The Struggle for Civic Virtue in Education Reform.'' (2000). ISBN 0-7879-4023-2
Ostman, Heather Elaine. "Social Activist Visions: Constructions of Womanhood in the Autobiographies of Jane Addams and Emma Goldman." PhD dissertation Fordham U. 2004. 240 pp. DAI 2004 65(3): 934-A. DA3125022 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Packard, Sandra. "Jane Addams: Contributions and Solutions for Art Education". ''Art Education'', 29, 1, 9-12, Jan 76.
Phillips, J. O. C. "The Education of Jane Addams". ''History of Education Quarterly'', 14, 1, 49-68, Spr 74.
Philpott, Thomas. L. ''The Slum and the Ghetto: Immigrants, Blacks, and Reformers in Chicago, 1880-1930.'' (1991).
Platt, Harold. "Jane Addams and the Ward Boss Revisited: Class, Politics, and Public Health in Chicago, 1890-1930." ''Environmental History'' 2000 5(2): 194-222. ISSN 1084-5453
Polacheck, Hilda Satt. ''I Came a Stranger: The Story of a Hull-House Girl''. Chicago, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1989.
Sargent, David Kevin. "Jane Addams's Rhetorical Ethic." PhD dissertation Northwestern U. 1996. 275 pp. DAI 1997 57(11): 4597-A. DA9714673 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Scherman, Rosemarie Redlich. "Jane Addams and the Chicago Social Justice Movement, 1889-1912." PhD dissertation City U. of New York 1999. 337 pp. DAI 1999 60(4): 1297-A. DA9924849 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Schott, Linda. "Jane Addams and William James on Alternatives to War." ''Journal Of The History Of Ideas'' 1993 54(2): 241-254. in JSTOR
Seigfried, Charlene H. "A Pragmatist Response to Death: Jane Addams on the Permanent and the Transient" "Journal of Speculative Philosophy" (2007) 21(2): 133-141.
Shields, Patricia M. 2006. "Democracy and the Social Feminist Ethics of Jane Addams: A Vision for Public Administration". Administrative Theory & Praxis, vol. 28, no. 3, September, pp. 418–443. http://ecommons.txstate.edu/polsfacp/36
Sklar, Kathryn Kish. "Hull House in the 1890s: A Community of Women Reformers," ''Signs,'' Vol. 10, No. 4, (Summer, 1985), pp. 658–677 in JSTOR
Sklar, Kathryn Kish. "'Some of us who deal with the Social Fabric': Jane Addams Blends Peace and Social Justice, 1907-1919." ''Journal Of The Gilded Age And Progressive Era'' 2003 2(1): 80-96. ISSN 1537-7814 Fulltext: at History Cooperative
Stebner, E. J. ''The Women of Hull-House: A Study in Spirituality, Vocation, and Friendship.'' (1997).
Stiehm, Judith Hicks. "''Champions for Peace: Women Winners of the Nobel Peace Prize.''” Rowman and Littlefield, 2006.
Sullivan, M. "Social work's legacy of peace: echoes from the early 20th century." ''Social Work'', Sep93; 38(5): 513-20. EBSCO
Toft, Jessica and Abrams, Laura S. "Progressive Maternalists and the Citizenship Status of Low-Income Single Mothers." ''Social Service Review'' 2004 78(3): 447-465. ISSN: 0037-7961 Fulltext: Ebsco
Bryan, Mary Lynn McCree, Barbara Bair, and Maree De Angury. eds., ''The Selected Papers of Jane Addams Volume 1: Preparing to Lead, 1860-1881.'' University of Illinois Press, 2002. online excerpt and text search
Addams, Jane. "A Belated Industry" ''The American Journal of Sociology'' Vol. 1, No. 5 (Mar., 1896), pp. 536–550 in JSTOR
Addams, Jane. ''The subjective value of a social settlement'' (1892) online
Addams, Jane, ed. ''Hull-House Maps and Papers: A Presentation of Nationalities and Wages in a Congested District of Chicago, Together with Comments and Essays on Problems Growing Out of the Social Conditions'' (1896; reprint 2007) excerpts and online search from amazon.com full text
Kelley, Florence. "Hull House" ''The New England magazine.'' Volume 24, Issue 5. (July 1898) pp. 550–566 MOA">online at MOA
Addams, Jane. "Ethical Survivals in Municipal Corruption," ''International Journal of Ethics'' Vol. 8, No. 3 (Apr., 1898), pp. 273–291 in JSTOR
Addams, Jane. "Trades Unions and Public Duty," ''The American Journal of Sociology'' Vol. 4, No. 4 (Jan., 1899), pp. 448–462 in JSTOR
Addams, Jane. "The Subtle Problems of Charity," ''The Atlantic monthly.'' Volume 83, Issue 496 (February 1899) pp. 163–179 MOA">online at MOA
Addams, Jane. ''Democracy and Social Ethics'' (1902) online at books.google.com online at Harvard Library
*23 editions published between 1902 and 2006 in English and held by 1,570 libraries worldwide
Addams, Jane. ''Child labor'' 1905 Harvard Library online
Addams, Jane. "Problems of Municipal Administration," ''The American Journal of Sociology'' Vol. 10, No. 4 (Jan., 1905), pp. 425–444 JSTOR
Addams, Jane. "Child Labor Legislation - A Requisite for Industrial Efficiency," ''Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science'' Vol. 25, Child Labor (May, 1905), pp. 128–136 in JSTOR
Addams, Jane. ''The operation of the Illinois child labor law,'' (1906) online at Harvard Library
Addams, Jane. ''Newer Ideals of Peace'' (1906) online at books.google.com
*13 editions published between 1906 and 2007 in English and held by 686 libraries worldwide
Addams, Jane. ''National protection for children'' 1907 online at Harvard Library
Addams, Jane. ''The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets'' (1909) online at books.google.com, online at Harvard Library
*16 editions published between 1909 and 1972 in English and held by 1,094 libraries worldwide
Addams, Jane. '' Twenty Years at Hull-House: With Autobiographical Notes,'' 1910 online at A Celebration of Women Writers online at Harvard Library
*72 editions published between 1910 and 2007 in English and held by 3,250 libraries worldwide
Addams, Jane. ''A new conscience and an ancient evil'' (1912) online at Harvard Library
*14 editions published between 1912 and 2003 in English and held by 912 libraries worldwide
Addams, Jane; Balch, Emily Greene; and Hamilton, Alice. ''Women at the Hague: The International Congress of Women and Its Results.'' (1915) reprint ed by Harriet Hyman Alonso, (2003). 91 pp. online at Harvard Library
Addams, Jane. ''The Long Road of Woman's Memory'' (1916) online at books.google.com online at Harvard Library, also reprint U. of Illinois Press, 2002. 84 pp.
Addams, Jane. ''Peace and Bread in Time of War'' 1922 online edition, online at Harvard Library
*12 editions published between 1922 and 2002 in English and held by 835 libraries worldwide
Addams, Jane. ''My Friend, Julia Lathrop.'' (1935; reprint U. of Illinois Press, 2004) 166 pp.
Addams, Jane. '' Jane Addams: A Centennial Reader'' (1960) online edition
Elshtain, Jean B. ed. ''The Jane Addams Reader'' (2002), 488pp
Lasch, Christopher, ed. ''The Social Thought of Jane Addams. '' (1965).
Harvard University Library Open Collections Program. Women Working, 1870–1930. Jane Addams (1860–1935). A full-text searchable online database with complete access to publications written by Jane Addams.
Works by Jane Addams in audio format from LibriVox
FBI file on Jane Addams
Works by Jane Addams listed at the Online Books Page
''Twenty Years at Hull House'' Online edition at A Celebration of Women Writers
''Twenty Years at Hull House '' University of Virginia American Studies Hypertext project.
Jane Addams Hull-House Museum
The Bitter Cry of Outcast London by Rev. Andrew Mearns
Online photograph exhibit of Jane Addams from Swarthmore College's Peace Collection
Gay Great article in Fyne Times magazine
Taylor Street Archives; Hull House: Bowen Country Club
Looks at her as "the first woman 'public philosopher' in United States history".
Women at the Hague: the International Congress of Women and its Results By Jane Addams, Emily Greene Balch, Alice Hamilton. 171 pages, published 1915 by MacMillan.
International Fellowship of Reconciliation
Category:1860 births
Category:1935 deaths
Category:20th-century philosophers
Category:American memoirists
Category:American Nobel laureates
Category:American pacifists
Category:American people of English descent
Category:American philosophers
Category:American political writers
Category:American social workers
Category:American sociologists
Category:Anti-poverty advocates
Category:Cancer deaths in Illinois
Category:Child labor in the United States
Category:Children's rights activists
Category:Community organizers
Category:Nobel Peace Prize laureates
Category:Nonviolence advocates
Category:People from Chicago, Illinois
Category:People from Stephenson County, Illinois
Category:Rockford College alumni
Category:Women Nobel laureates
Category:Progressive Era in the United States
Category:People associated with the American Civil Liberties Union
Category:Women sociologists
ar:جين آدمز
bn:জেন অ্যাডামস
zh-min-nan:Jane Addams
be:Джэйн Адамс
be-x-old:Джэйн Адамз
bg:Джейн Адамс
ca:Jane Addams
cs:Jane Addams
da:Jane Addams
de:Jane Addams
et:Jane Addams
es:Jane Addams
eo:Jane Addams
fr:Jane Addams
gl:Jane Addams
ko:제인 애덤스
hr:Jane Addams
io:Jane Addams
id:Laura Jane Addams
it:Jane Addams
he:ג'יין אדאמס
sw:Jane Addams
ku:Jane Addams
lt:Jane Addams
nl:Jane Addams
ja:ジェーン・アダムズ
no:Jane Addams
nn:Jane Addams
pa:ਜੇਨ ਐਡਮਜ਼
pnb:جین ایڈمز
pl:Jane Addams
pt:Jane Addams
ru:Аддамс, Джейн
simple:Jane Addams
sk:Jane Addamsová
fi:Jane Addams
sv:Jane Addams
tr:Jane Addams
uk:Лаура Джейн Аддамс
war:Jane Addams
yo:Jane Addams
zh:简·亚当斯