Contents
Collection Overview
Biographical Note
Scope and Contents of the Collection
Search Terms
Contents and National Union Catalog of
Manuscripts sheet
Articles by Jane Addams,
1910
Articles about Jane Addams,
1906-78
Bibliography
Biographical fact sheet
Citations, honors, and prizes,
1926-32
Newspaper clippings
Correspondence
Hull House
Memorials
Photographs and pictures of Jane Addams and
Hull House
Radio broadcast (NBC),
1932, 1936, 1940
Speeches on various topics,
1912-33
Articles by Jane Addams
OVERSIZE MATERIALS
ON SHELF
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Jane Addams Papers, 1904-1960
Finding AidFinding aid prepared by Amanda Izzo.Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.2003
| | | | | Creator: | Addams, Jane, 1860-1935 | | Title: | Jane Addams Papers | | Dates: | 1904-1960 | | Dates: | 1904-1936 | | Abstract: | Founder, Hull House, Chicago; pacifist; labor organizer; settlement house worker; and women's rights advocate. The Addams papers contain primarily published material and duplicates of materials from the Swarthmore Peace Collection. Included are articles, books, memorials, and memorabilia about Addams, as well as writings and speeches by her. There is a small amount of original correspondence, plus photographs and drawings of Jane Addams and Hull House. | | Extent: | 2 boxes(1.5 linear ft.) | | Language: | English. | | Identification: | MS 1 |
Jane Addams as a young woman, undated
Studio portrait by Cox, Chicago(Laura) Jane Addams was born on 6 September 1860 in
Cedarville, Illinois. She was the youngest of five children
of John Huy Addams and Sarah Weber Addams. Her father was a
prosperous mill owner and a leader in state politics; he
served for sixteen years as an Illinois state senator. Her
mother died when Addams was only two years old. Her father
married Anna H. Haldeman in 1865, which added two
stepbrothers to the family. Jane Addams was profoundly
influenced by her father. He encouraged her education and
ambition; however, when she set her heart on attending Smith
College, he refused to send her so far away from home. In
1877, she entered Rockford Female Seminary in nearby
Rockford, Illinois. In 1881, Addams was the valedictorian of
her graduating class. One year later she received a
bachelor's degree when the school became the Rockford College
for Women. Addams planned to study medicine and become a doctor. In
1881, she began her schooling at the Women's Medical College
of Pennsylvania. Her father's sudden death and her own ill
health forced Addams to abandon her medical studies. In 1882,
she had surgery to remedy a congenital spinal defect. Addams,
accompanied by her stepmother, traveled in Europe from 1883
until 1885. In London's East end she observed urban poverty
first hand; this exposure left a lasting impression on
Addams. In 1887, Addams returned to Europe with Ellen Gates
Starr, a Rockford classmate. On this trip, which included a
visit to Toynbee Hall, a settlement house in London's East
End, Addams and Starr formulated ideas about establishing a
settlement house in the U.S. that would directly address the
human consequences of rapid industrialization, immigration,
and urban poverty. After their return to the United States in 1899, Addams
and Starr leased a dilapidated mansion in one of the poorest
immigrant slums of Chicago on the corner of Halstead and Polk
streets. Hull House, which was named after the original
owner, was the first settlement house in America. Its mission
was to "investigate and improve the conditions in the
industrial districts of Chicago" and function as a center of
civic and social life in a neighborhood that consisted of
multiple immigrant groups. It was both an educational and a
philanthropic activity. Addams, Starr, and other activists
and reformers who resided at Hull House learned first-hand
the needs of a diverse urban community. Hull House residents
raised money; found volunteers, especially among the growing
number of female college students and graduates; helped sick
children, displaced families, and the unemployed; taught
vocational and educational classes; and offered their support
to Chicago's working people. Hull House provided numerous
activities and services including: health and child care,
clubs for both children and adults, an art gallery, kitchen,
gymnasium, music school, theater, library, employment bureau,
and a labor museum. Through her work at Hull House, Addams became heavily
involved with civic affairs of Chicago and was a leader in
the social reform movement. She fought for legislation
regarding housing, sanitation, factory inspection, and
immigrant rights. She also effectively campaigned for child
labor laws and other protective legislation. Addams became
strongly allied with the labor movement and allowed union
organizing meetings to be held at Hull House. In 1910, she
arbitrated a garment strike involving 90,000 workers. That
year she also became Vice President of the American Branch of
International Association for Labor Legislation. Addams was a
feminist and supported the women's suffrage campaign. She
served as Vice President of the National American Woman
Suffrage Association (1911-14). She was also active in the
Progressive Party and especially supported its platform for
industrial safety. Hull House brought Jane Addams world-wide celebrity, and
she was recognized as a pioneer in the field of social work.
However, with the onset of war in Europe in the 1910s, public
opinion turned against Addams as she became increasingly
active in the pacifist and internationalist movements. In
1915, Addams co-founded the Women's Peace Party (WPP). Addams
and the WPP established strong networks of peace activists in
the U.S. and abroad, and in 1919, the WPP evolved into the
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, a
still-thriving organization that "works to achieve through
peaceful means world disarmament, full rights for women,
racial and economic justice, an end to all forms of violence,
and to establish those political, social, and psychological
conditions which can assure peace, freedom, and justice for
all." Jane Addams served as the first president of WILPF
(1919-1929). In 1931, Addams was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize for her pacifist activism. She was the first American
woman to receive this honor. Addams wrote prodigiously throughout her life, and the
profits from her books were her main source of income. Some
of her notable works are Newer Ideals of Peace (1907), Twenty
Years at Hull House (1910), The Long Road of Women's Memory
(1916), Peace and Bread in Time of War (1922), and The Second
Twenty Years at Hull House (1930). She received honorary
degrees from numerous colleges and universities including:
Wisconsin, Smith, Yale, Tufts, Northwestern, Chicago, and
Bryn Mawr. Among her many other achievements and commitments,
Jane Addams was a founding member of the NAACP (1909) and the
ACLU (1920). She died of cancer in 1935, and she was buried
at her childhood home in Cedarville, Illinois. Return to the Table of Contents
The Jane Addams papers consist of 1.5 linear feet of
material. They contain primarily duplicates from the
Swarthmore Peace Collection. There is some biographical
information including articles (1898-1961), obituaries
(1935), memorials (1935-60), and typescripts of radio
broadcasts about her (1932-40). Organizational and historical
information about the Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom is included in the memorials section. There are
typescripts of speeches by Addams (1912-33), which provide
her perspective on topics including social service, women's
issues, and World War I. Many reprints of articles
(1898-1935) by Addams also offer insight as to her opinion on
a variety of subjects. Some topics addressed in this section
are: nationalism, peace, politics, labor, suffrage, women's
rights, WWI, and social work. There are some articles and printed material regarding
Hull House (1897-1950), and a few photographs and pictures of
Addams and Hull House. A small amount of correspondence
consists of a few original autographed letters to friends
(1903-1934). The Jane Addams Papers are closely related to the Ellen
Gates Starr Papers in the Sophia Smith Collection.
Researchers may wish also to consult the Peace and Settlement
House Collections for further information about the Women's
International League for Peace and Freedom and Hull House, as
well as the Schwimmer-Lloyd and Madeleine Zabriskie Doty
Papers (re: WILPF) and the Jessie Lloyd O'Connor Papers
(O'Connor was a resident/worker at Hull House). Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Table of Contents
Box | Folder |
| 1 | A | Contents and National Union Catalog of
Manuscripts sheet |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 1 | Articles by Jane Addams,
1910 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 2 | Articles about Jane Addams,
1906-78 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 4 | Biographical fact sheet |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 5 | Citations, honors, and prizes,
1926-32 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 6 | About Jane Addams,
1898-1961 |
| 8 | Book reviews of books by and about Jane
Addams |
| 9 | Zurich Peace Conference (International Conference of Women),
1919 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 10 | Bailie, Helen Tufts,
1928 |
| 13 | Miss Fitts,
1904, 1927, n.d. |
| 14 | Mack, Rebecca Robins,
1933, 1934 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 15 | Newspaper clippings and
articles |
| 16 | Printed material,
1897-1950, n.d. |
| 17 | Yearbook,
1925, 1929, 1934 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 18 | Memorial service programs and Jane Addams
memorial medal by Nancy Cox McCormack,
1935 |
| 19 | Jane Addams Centennial,
1960 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 20 | Photographs and pictures of Jane Addams and
Hull House |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 21 | Radio broadcast (NBC),
1932, 1936, 1940 |
Box | Folder |
| 1 | 22 | Speeches on various topics,
1912-33 |
Box | Folder |
| 2 | 23 | Education,
1907, n.d. |
| 25 | Labor, 1898(?)-
1935, n.d. |
| 26 | League of Nations,
1919-20 |
| 27 | Miscellaneous: Gordon Dewey, John Dewey,
Egypt, food, Jenkin Lloyd Jones, juvenile
delinquency, Julia Lathrop, Mexico, old age, women,
1898-1935, n.d. |
| 28 | Nationalism,
1919-34, n.d. |
| 30 | Playgrounds,
(?)
1907-12 |
| 31 | Politics,
1905-24, n.d. |
| 35 | Social questions,
1908-31, n.d. |
| 37 | Suffrage,
1908-13, n.d. |
| 39 | Women's rights,
1915-30 |
| 40 | World War I,
1915-33, n.d. |
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| Drawings, includes Jane Addams and Hull
House, by Gwenyth King Brown,
1958 |
|
| Cathedral of Compassion: Dramatic Outline of
the Life of Jane Addams, 1860-1935. Violet Oakley (1955)
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| Jane Addams, A Centennial Reader,
1960 |
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| Twenty Years at Hull House,
1910 |
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| The Long Road of Woman's Memory,
1916 |
|
| The Second Twenty Years at Hull House,
1930 |
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