-from the Nobel (Prize) Institute
(Laura)
Jane Addams (September 6, 1860-May 21, 1935) won worldwide recognition in
the first third of the twentieth century as a pioneer social worker in America,
as a feminist, and as an internationalist.
She was born in Cedarville, Illinois, the eighth of nine children. Her father
was a prosperous miller and local political leader who served for sixteen years
as a state senator and fought as an officer in the Civil War; he was a friend of
Abraham Lincoln
whose letters to him began «My Dear Double D-'ed Addams». Because of a
congenital spinal defect, Jane was not physically vigorous when young nor truly
robust even later in life, but she became a graceful attractive woman after her
spinal difficulty was remedied by surgery.
In 1881 Jane Addams was graduated from the Rockford Female Seminary, the
valedictorian of a class of seventeen, but was granted the bachelor's degree
only after the school became accredited the next year as Rockford College for
Women. In the course of the next six years she began the study of medicine but
left it because of poor health, was hospitalized intermittently, traveled and
studied in Europe for twenty-one months, and then spent almost two years in
reading and writing and in considering what her future objectives should be. At
the age of twenty-seven, during a second tour to Europe with her friend Ellen G.
Starr, she visited a settlement house, Toynbee Hall, in London's East End. This
visit helped to finalize the idea then current in her mind, that of opening a
similar house in an underprivileged area of Chicago. In 1889 she and Miss Starr
leased a large home built by Charles Hull at the corner of Halsted and Polk
Streets. The two friends moved in, their purpose, as expressed later, being «to
provide a center for a higher civic and social life; to institute and maintain
educational and philanthropic enterprises and to investigate and improve the
conditions in the industrial districts of Chicago»1.
Miss Addams and Miss Starr made speeches about the needs of the neighborhood,
raised money, convinced young women of well-to-do families to help, took care of
children, nursed the sick, listened to outpourings from troubled people. By its
second year of existence,
Hull-House
was host to two thousand people every week.
As her reputation grew, Miss Addams was drawn into larger fields of civic
responsibility. In 1905 she was appointed to Chicago's Board of Education and
subsequently made chairman of the School Management Committee; in 1908 she
participated in the founding of the Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy
and in the next year became the first woman president of the National Conference
of Charities and Corrections. In her own area of Chicago she led investigations
on midwifery, narcotics consumption, milk supplies, and sanitary conditions,
even going so far as to accept the official post of garbage inspector of the
Nineteenth Ward, at an annual salary of a thousand dollars. In 1910 she received
the first honorary degree ever awarded to a woman by
Yale
University.
Charmingly feminine by nature, Jane Addams was an ardent feminist by philosophy.
In those days before women's suffrage she believed that women should make their
voices heard in legislation and therefore should have the right to vote, but
more comprehensively, she thought that women should generate aspirations and
search out opportunities to realize them.
For her own aspiration to rid the world of war, Jane Addams created
opportunities or seized those offered to her to advance the cause. In 1906 she
gave a course of lectures at the University of Wisconsin summer session which
she published the next year as a book, Newer Ideals of Peace. She spoke
for peace in 1913 at a ceremony commemorating the building of the Peace Palace
at The Hague and in the next two years, as a lecturer sponsored by the
Carnegie
Foundation, spoke against America's entry into the First World War. In
January, 1915, she accepted the chairmanship of the Women's Peace Party, an
American organization, and four months later the presidency of the International
Congress of Women convened at The Hague largely upon the initiative of Dr.
Aletta Jacobs, a Dutch suffragist leader of many and varied talents. When this
congress later founded the organization called the
Women's
International League for Peace and Freedom, Jane Addams served as president
until 1929, as presiding officer of its six international conferences in those
years, and as honorary president for the remainder of her life.
Publicly opposed to America's entry into the war, Miss Addams was attacked in
the press and expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution, but she
found an outlet for her humanitarian impulses as an assistant to
Herbert
Hoover in providing relief supplies of food to the women and children of the
enemy nations, the story of which she told in her book Peace and Bread in
Time of War (1922).
After sustaining a heart attack in 1926, Miss Addams never fully regained her
health. Indeed, she was being admitted to a Baltimore hospital on the very day,
December 10, 1931, that the Nobel Peace Prize was being awarded to her in Oslo.
She died in 1935 three days after an operation revealed unsuspected cancer. The
funeral service was held in the courtyard of Hull-House.
Return to Corvallis Community Pages