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ISBN:9781319104726
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Gain insight into the Progressive Era and how Jane Addams surfaced as an early leader in protecting immigrants and those on the political margins from indiscriminate police prosecution. Throughout her reforms, Addams founded Hull-House, frequented by immigrants and those in need. Twenty Years at Hull-House not only documents the Addams political philosophy, which guided her reform efforts, but also shares insight into her life and shows the impact her work had through first-person accounts.
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Learn MoreTable of Contents
Foreword
Preface
Part One: Introduction: Jane Addams Constructs Herself and Hull-House
Growing Up in the Gilded Age
The Nature and Purpose of Memoir
Twenty Years at Hull-House in Place and Time
Inside Hull-House
Jane Addams and the Progressive Era
Part Two: The Document
Twenty Years at Hull-House with Autobiographical Notes
Part Three: Related Documents
1. Hull-House Weekly Program, March 1, 1892
2. William G. Sumner, LL.D., "The Concentration of Wealth: Its Economic Justification," The Independent, 1902
3. Jane Addams, "If Men Were Seeking the Franchise," Ladies’ Home Journal, June 1913
4. "An Oft-Told Tale" and "The Lamb Tags on to the Lion," The New York Call, April 25, 1912 and August 11, 1912
5. Edward Alsworth Ross, "Racial Consequences of Immigration," The Century Magazine, February 1914
6. Gino C. Speranza, "How it Feels to be a Problem," Charities, 1904
7. Philp Davis, "Jane Addams Invites Me in" from And Crown Thy Good (1952)
8. H.J. Pinkett, Omaha, Nebraska to Jane Addams, May 12, 1908
Appendices
An Addams Chronology (1860-1935)
Questions for Consideration
Selected Bibliography
Index