In 1931 Jane Addams was the second woman to receive the Peace Prize. She ran Hull House in Chicago, a center which helped immigrants in particular (Nobel Media, 2014).…
These women campaigned for programs that were to benefit the working class immigrants in urban settings. Many of these women differed in their approach but were united in their campaign for change do to the conditions being faced in the urban ghettos of the time period. Most of these reformers believed in setting a moral tone within newly created programs by aiding only those who deserved help. The goal was to build a social safety net to help women in need due to difficult circumstances. They believed there was a distinct difference between those who deserved aid and those who did not. They were also fighting for the women’s suffrage movement by demonstrating women’s ability to help themselves. A sense of togetherness was created amongst these women as they gathered to discuss and combine their efforts in places such as the YWCA and the New York Women’s Club.[ii] These clubs allowed a network of like minded women to unite giving them greater political power, a strong organizational structure, and maybe, most importantly, a support group. This togetherness, much like their programs, grew progressively from within their own cities to the national level allowing the sharing of ideas across urban centres to create consistency among programmes. Many of the women also lived together and mentored each other in the settlement houses they created. Such was the case with Jane Addams and her work with many women who considered themselves to be social workers at the Hull House in…
In the early 20th century, many social and political movements demanded the attention and action of the United States. During this time, Jane Addams became an accomplished philosopher, author, peace advocate, feminist and sociologist during the Progressive era, who was unique from other reformers during this time because she didn’t prioritize the social, economic, and political inequalities that plagued America’s minorities; Every issue was important and she proposed her beliefs on coexistence through a pacifist attitude that helped pave the way to the accomplishment of many successful labor and social reform movements because the actions she took to promote change ignited an awareness among middle class America that wasn’t there before,…
Jane Addams opened the Hull House to the public in 1889. She was born on September 6, 1860 in Illinois and dies on May 21, 1935. She was one of the major leaders in the women’s suffrage movement. Ms. Addams helped a countless amount of people. She established the Hull House, which was like a safe house for the poor and the immigrants. Jane Addams was the most important social reformer in the time of progressivism because she helped lots and lots of immigrants and poor people get back on their feet.…
Jane Addams founded Hull-House in 1889, a social settlement to improve conditions in a poor immigrant neighborhood in Chicago, then expanded her efforts nationally. Addams gained international recognition as an advocate of women's rights, pacifism and internationalism, and served as the founding president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. Her work ultimately resulted in protective legislation for women and children.…
Jane Addams’ legacy and impact on history lives on through many people and organizations today. Because Jane Addams opened the Hull House, many other settlement houses were built and continue to function. These settlement houses brought attention to the needs of youth in society. In 1893, Hull House opened the first public playground in Chicago. Current care for children and teens are seen today in early childhood education, after-school programs, and focus on recreation such as gym, recess, and sports.…
Jane Addams, a pioneering social worker, helped bring attention to the possibility of revolutionizing America's attitude toward the poor. Not only does she remain a rich source of provocative social theory to this day, her accomplishments affected the philosophical, sociological, and political thought. Addams was an activist of courage and a thinker of originality. Jane Addams embodied the purest moral standards of society which were best demonstrated by her founding of the Hull-House and her societal contributions, culminating with the winning of the 1931 Nobel Peace Prize.…
Jane Addams was another leader in her community trying to help the lower classes immigrants assimilate to America. Addams was born the 6 of September of 1860 in Cedarville, Illinois. Her father, John H. Addams, was a Quaker owning a flour and sawmill factory. Addams was born into a good family where most of her childhood she spent comfort. Since a child, she always had an intuition to help and live among the less fortunate. “On that day I had my first sight of the poverty which implies squalor, and felt the curious distinction between the ruddy poverty of the country and that which even a small city presents in its shabbiest streets […..] I declared with much firmness when I grew up I should, of course, have a large house, but it would not…
Jane Addams (September 6, 1860 - May 21, 1935) was a pioneer settlement social worker, public philosopher, sociologist, author, and leader in women's suffrage and world peace. In an era when presidents such as Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilsonidentified themselves as reformers and social activists, Adams was one of the most prominent[1] reformers of the Progressive Era. She helped turn the US 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 being recognized as a member of the American pragmatist school of philosophy.[2] In 1931 she became the first American woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and is recognized as the "father" of the social work profession in the United States.…
Although many people had mixed views about her, she diligently pursued her stand for social equality for all people. A member of the original Hull-House family, Alice Hamilton, commented, "She had some unusual traits, unusual for a philanthropist and unusual for a woman. For instance, a sort of intellectual integrity that protected her from any touch of sentimentality. She…
Jane Addams, though often trivialized in popular schooling as an ever-beloved “Lady Bountiful”, was a deeply thoughtful, ethically committed person, of only modest personal wealth, who genuinely tried to love her neighbors, and who in her life time both was on the FBI’s list of “most dangerous radicals” (during the 1920s “Red Scare”) and won the Nobel Prize (in1931). Jane Addams was born in Freeport, Illinois, on September 6, 1860, into a family involved in both business and politics. "Jenny" as they called her as a baby was strongly influenced by her father who lead a very active life. She was the daughter of a very well-to-do gentleman, John Addams. He was in the State Legislature for sixteen years and directed a bank as well as a railroad. And her mother Sarah Weber Addams was a strong woman and "stern disciplinarian" of her children. She ran the "domestic factor" with the help of a hired hand, which enabled her to prepare meals for flour, saw mill and field workers. She took charge of the mills when John was away and often helped the neighbors. When Jane was only three her mother became very ill and died. Jane had five brothers and sisters at the time of her mother 's death. Martha, the eldest, took over in raising the family. As a result of not having any siblings her age, Jenny was often given her way and disliked greatly being reprimanded. Although it has been stated that Jane was pretty, she felt self-conscience about the curve in her spine which as a result, made her feel…
Jane Addams of Cedarville, Illinois, is anything except ordinary. She was a member and founder of the Settlement House Movement. Along with her companion Ellen Starr, Addams founded the Hull House, which is located in Chicago. If that is not enough, she was also the first woman from America to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. You may wonder how this woman was able to fulfill all of her achievements, being a girl from a small community in Illinois. She was from a large family; her father was a well-to-do gentleman; her mother was very kind, she also had five brothers and sisters. When her mother died, her father remarried and they had two new step- brothers. Jane and her father had a very special relationship; he was there to encourage her and pursue a higher education. Even though it was expected of most women to get married and become housewives during that time, Jane was not going to settle for an average life. She attended Rockford Seminary for young ladies. She was one of the smartest and well liked people in her school, yet she wanted more. Her parents discouraged her aspirations to obtain a degree in medicine by taking her on a trip to Europe. She became very ill on the duration of this trip and had to return home. Upon arrival, her father passed away which sent Jane into a deep depression. After a long recovery period, she left home for Europe again, but this time, she visited the Toynbee Hall in England.…
Feminism: a topic of discussion in many homes and classrooms, which asserts the utmost attention amongst its listeners. A crazy ideal that believes women hold fundamental rights among men, and deserve the same treatment, the same opportunities. Feminism has grown since its conception in the early 20th century, and has catapulted upward in a grand and illustrious fashion, clinging to the souls of women who will no longer be oppressed by an abusive patriarchy. However, in this decade, feminism has become the topic of crude humor, has been made the punchline of jokes directed toward women. Feminism has become merely a way to generalize women as “crazy, hormonal monsters” who should never have a say in democracy because their “time of…
No matter how the world changes, no matter what country and social system people live, no one can deny women's importance in history. But it doesn't mean that women are always treated well and fairly, and the women' role in history was changed in each period, too.…
I feel like women have became more of an positive effect in the world. They became more important because, women can now vote or run for president if they wanted too. I don’t consider women as “the weaker vessel’’, because women can do many things that men can’t do. They can take care of babies and raise them. Women should not be underestimated more than men. We should all be treated equally because were same.…