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Films about Queer History

 

Jane Addams  (1860 - 1935) 

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Jane Addams : Nobel Prize Winner and Founder of Hull House

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Biography:  Jane Addams 

Addams was born to a well-off and locally prominent family in Cedarville, Illinois. She completed college and went on to study medicine when ill-health caused her to leave school. During the 1880 she traveled with Ellen Gates Starr, a former classmate at the Rockford Female Seminary with whom she was said to have had a romantic friendship. In England, the pair discovered settlement houses, houses found in city slums occupied by social workers who provided services to the local community.

Back in the United States in 1889, Addams and Starr founded Hull House in Chicago. By 1900, Hull House flourished as a popular center of political, educational and social activity. Due to the success of Hull House Addams became well-known and a nationwide settlement house movement began.

Addams published books about the effects of industrialization on immigrants and the working poor as well as two books that chronicled Hull House. A pacifist in the tradition of Leo Tolstoy, she also considered herself an anarchist and strongly opposed U.S. participation in World War I. She helped found the American Union Against Militarism, the American Civil Liberties Union, headed the Woman's Peace Party and published the controversial book Peace and Bread in Time of War. She received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931.

Addams shared her life for 40 years with Mary Rozet Smith.

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