124 results

  • Subject is exactly "Hull-House, programs"

Addams sends Blaine early products of the labor museum, which Blaine helped inspire and support.

Addams discussed the role of schools in preparing children for life in a speech at the Ethical Society.

Addams graciously declines Skiff's offer of museum cases for the Hull-House Labor Museum, because there is no room for them.

Addams remarks on an altercation between Clement Pfuetzner and socialists meeting at Hull House.

Addams provides an overview of the activities of the Hull-House Labor Museum, complete with illustrations of weaving. The sixteen-page report discusses the weaving and cloth-making techniques of various immigrants who live in the Hull-House neighborhood.

Addams asks Skiff if the Field Museum might donate a collection of medieval textiles to the Hull-House Labor Museum.

Addams discusses the formation and goals of Hull-House in a speech to the B'rith Kodesh Temple.

Addams writes to Wald about the reception of William Dean Howells' plays at Hull-House and about her plans for a trip to California.

An excerpt of Addams' lecture on how settlement houses give people opportunities to practice arts and crafts, an important activity for immigrants afraid of losing their cultural heritage.

Addams discusses the Hull-House Labor Museum and the effect of factories on craftsmanship.

Addams discusses efforts made to reach the needy through settlement work. She delivered this speech at the annual meeting of the Associated Charities.

Addams discusses the different methods of social work and describes how the settlement works to help society.

Addams compliments Barnett on her recent publications and provides updates about Hull-House and the Labor Museum.

Excerpts from Addams' speech on educational opportunities wasted due to discrimination against immigrants.

Addams denies an accusation that Hull-House turned away a woman appealing for help.

Addams argues that the Hull-House production of Sophocles' Ajax served to introduce the community of Greek immigrants to the rest of the city.

Addams discusses the value in the Hull House production of the Ajax in bringing attention to the Greek immigrants in the city.

Addams pays her respects to the late Jennie Dow Harvey, whom she knew as the Hull-House kindergarten teacher, as well as having been a dear friend.

Addams asks Blaine for her annual Hull-House donation, so that they may cover costs of Christmas refreshments and invites her to hear a talk on glass factory work.

Addams thanks Blaine for the flowers, describing the staff of Hull-House as battered and worn from the holidays. Addams sends Blaine a silver box made by the boys in the shop.

Addams is delighted that Landsberg agreed to take on a secretarial position.

Annual report of Hull-House, covering the activities, operations, and administration.

Addams writes to Gyles hoping that she will change her mind about leaving Hull-House.

On behalf of Lenora Hamlin, Austin forwards to Addams a selection of letters to the Chicago Municipal Museum.

Addams co-wrote the Hull-House entry in The New Encyclopedia of Social Reform, covering its history and accomplishments.

Addams speaks for the value of immigrants to American society. This article was drawn from a speech.

Addams reports on the Hull-House Labor Museum's condition after six years of operation and encloses the First Report on the Museum.

Addams writes Gyles about some teachers and costs related to their classes.

Addams reports on Hull-House's facilities and social services on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary, providing a sense of the costs of maintaining buildings and programs, and ending with an appeal for financial support.

Addams sends a birthday gift to Haldeman and regrets that she will not see Marcet Haldeman when she is in Chicago.

Addams describes the poverty of the Hull-House neighborhood in the early days of her work there. She discusses the lack of security and loneliness of the elderly, as well as child labor.

Addams discusses the many programs at Hull-House that appeal to its immigrant neighbors and the additional value that their neighbors bring to the programs.

Addams writes Landsberg about upcoming activities at Hull-House and her recent work on Twenty Years at Hull House.

Addams explains the difference between opposing child acting as an occupation and a vocation.

Fuog praises Addams for Twenty Years at Hull-House and expresses gratitude for the impact Addams made on her life.

Addams invites Whitlock to Chicago to see the Hull-House  production of John Galsworthy's play, Justice.

Addams' speech at the Chicago Child Welfare Exhibit, on the Hull-House Labor Museum's exhibit.

Addams' speech at the Chicago Child Welfare Exhibit, on the Hull-House Labor Museum's exhibit. It was published in 1912.

Addams writes Lathrop about funding for the Fresh Air program and about a conference she is attending.

Addams writes Lathrop about her health and plans for an upcoming event.

Addams writes Lathrop about her living arrangements at Hull House.

Addams writes Lathrop about camp business and visitors in Maine.

Addams informs Smith that there will be no Hull-House Year Book for 1911.

An unsigned letter discusses farm property in the Evanston area for sale and suggests that it could serve Hull-House as a camp or summer location.

Addams thanks North for her donation, which will provide coal for poor families.

Addams offers a memorial to Joseph Tilton Bowen and describes the creation of the Hull-House country club named after him.

Addams offers a biographical justification of why she has entered politics and joined the Progressive Party. The article was published in October 1912.
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