Jane Addams Essay, Research Paper
Founder of Hull-House in Chicago, first president of the Women’s International League for Peace and
Freedom, and co-winner of the 1931 Nobel Peace Prize, Jane Addams was a dedicated crusader for
social justice.
Her lifes’ work was to fight for the under priviliged and oppressed, also for the rights of workers, women
and children.
Jane Addams was born on September 6, 1860 in the small town of Cedarville, Illinois. As a child, Jane
often felt like an outcast. She was “an ugly, piegon-toed little girl whose crooked back obliged her to walk
with her head held very much upon one side.” Even though she grew-up in a nice, well-kept community she
felt overwhelming sorrow for those in other communities who lived in “horrid little houses,” she was always
asking herself what could be done to make them less horrid. Feeling like a misfit herself, Jane could
sympathize with the misfits and outcasts of society.
Jane studied at Rockford Seminary, a school for girls where the emphasis was on religion and Good
Works. After having a breakdown, Jane was sent to Europe to “drink up the culture of the Old World,” but
instead Jane visited the factories and slums with her companion Ellen Starr. During one of her visits to
London’s East Side she came upon Toynbee Hall, a religious settlement house for London’s poor. It was
then that she decided to have her own settlement house one day, but without the emphasis on religion.
When Jane and Ellen returned to Chicago they found an old mansion that was built by the merchant,
Charles Hull and owned by Helen Culver, a woman known for her generosity. Jane bought the mansion and
opened it as a settlement house on September 18, 1889, Hull-House was Chicago’s first
settlement house. Jane Addams started one of…
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