Jane Addams Jane Addams was a settlement activist, sociologist, author, and leader for women’s suffrage and peace. This was a woman of many accomplishments. She was born in Cedarville, Illinois. Jane’s father, John Addams, was the owner of a local mill and later went on to be Illinois senator. Jane attended Rockford Female Seminary, which was dedicated to instilling religious piety, cultural awareness, and domesticity in young women. Jane went on to become valedictorian, president of her class, and editor of class magazine. When she graduated, her father passed and caused Jane to be more confused and suffer from depression. After a stretch of medical issues she traveled to Europe with a former teacher and friend. During this trip she visited …show more content…
It was guided by three basic principles: (1) active and side-by- side participation with community residents in addressing local issues; (2) respect for the dignity of all individuals regardless of ethnic background, socioeconomic status, gender, or age; and (3) a belief that poverty and lack of opportunity breed ignorance, crime, and disease that are the result of financial desperation and not due to a aw in moral character. (Ivany 2015) Hull house had visiting nurse from the Chicago Visiting Nurses Association (VNA) that provided a wide range of nursing skills including chronic illness, maternity and well baby, hygiene, basic baby care, etc. They provided way more than just basic nurse care they were also for housekeeping. Not only did Hull House have visiting nurses they also had a resident physician, Emma C. Hackett. Hackett specialized in women and children’s health. The Hull House not only was a safe place for women, but also their children. Single working mothers would bring their children to the Hull House, which provided nursery and kindergarten during the day. Hull House was not originally founded to be a women’s shelter, it did serve as a safe place for them. In 1905 after Miss Addams reputation had grew, she became drawn into bigger fields of civic responsibility when she was appointed to Chicago’s Board of …show more content…
She was an avid feminist by philosophy. She always believed that women had a voice and that they should use that voice in legislation and be allowed to vote. She thought that women should have dreams and go for them. Jane Addams had dreams of her own and one of those was to shed this world of war. She was always looking for an opportunity in order to bring light to this cause. She would give lectures, such as one at the University of Wisconsin, and then she went on to publish a book, Newer Ideals of Peace. In 1913 at a ceremony commemorating the building of the Peace Palace at The Hague, she spoke for peace. (Fredrick 2016) She spoke out against America’s part in the First World War. Congress went on to later form the organization called the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom where Jane served as president until 1929. Addams received bad press and even got thrown out of the Daughters of the American Revolution for her open disagreement for America’s involvement in the war. This however did not stop her humanitarian efforts. She would help provide supplies to women and children of those enemy nations. She went on to tell her stories in a book called Peace and Bread in Time of War (1922). In 1931 she won the Noble Peace Prize, becoming the first woman to do so. The Hull house remained open for 122 years, closing in 2012. Jane Addams lived at the Hull House until she passed