109 results

  • Subject is exactly "Hull-House, programs"
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Addams sends Blaine early products of the labor museum, which Blaine helped inspire and support.
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Addams discussed the role of schools in preparing children for life in a speech at the Ethical Society.
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Addams graciously declines Skiff's offer of museum cases for the Hull-House Labor Museum, because there is no room for them.
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Addams remarks on an altercation between Clement Pfuetzner and socialists meeting at Hull House.
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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.
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Addams asks Skiff if the Field Museum might donate a collection of medieval textiles to the Hull-House Labor Museum.
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Addams discusses the formation and goals of Hull-House in a speech to the B'rith Kodesh Temple.
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Addams writes to Wald about the reception of William Dean Howells' plays at Hull-House and about her plans for a trip to California.
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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.
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Addams discusses the Hull-House Labor Museum and the effect of factories on craftsmanship.
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Addams discusses efforts made to reach the needy through settlement work. She delivered this speech at the annual meeting of the Associated Charities.
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Addams discusses the different methods of social work and describes how the settlement works to help society.
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Addams compliments Barnett on her recent publications and provides updates about Hull-House and the Labor Museum.
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Excerpts from Addams' speech on educational opportunities wasted due to discrimination against immigrants.
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Addams denies an accusation that Hull-House turned away a woman appealing for help.
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Addams argues that the Hull-House production of Sophocles' Ajax served to introduce the community of Greek immigrants to the rest of the city.
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Addams discusses the value in the Hull House production of the Ajax in bringing attention to the Greek immigrants in the city.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Addams is delighted that Landsberg agreed to take on a secretarial position.
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Annual report of Hull-House, covering the activities, operations, and administration.
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Addams writes to Gyles hoping that she will change her mind about leaving Hull-House.
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On behalf of Lenora Hamlin, Austin forwards to Addams a selection of letters to the Chicago Municipal Museum.
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Addams co-wrote the Hull-House entry in The New Encyclopedia of Social Reform, covering its history and accomplishments.
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Addams speaks for the value of immigrants to American society. This article was drawn from a speech.
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Addams reports on the Hull-House Labor Museum's condition after six years of operation and encloses the First Report on the Museum.
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Addams writes Gyles about some teachers and costs related to their classes.
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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.
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Addams sends a birthday gift to Haldeman and regrets that she will not see Marcet Haldeman when she is in Chicago.
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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.
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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.
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Addams writes Landsberg about upcoming activities at Hull-House and her recent work on Twenty Years at Hull House.
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Addams explains the difference between opposing child acting as an occupation and a vocation.
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Fuog praises Addams for Twenty Years at Hull-House and expresses gratitude for the impact Addams made on her life.
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Addams invites Whitlock to Chicago to see the Hull-House  production of John Galsworthy's play, Justice.
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Addams' speech at the Chicago Child Welfare Exhibit, on the Hull-House Labor Museum's exhibit.
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Addams' speech at the Chicago Child Welfare Exhibit, on the Hull-House Labor Museum's exhibit. It was published in 1912.
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Addams writes Lathrop about funding for the Fresh Air program and about a conference she is attending.
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Addams writes Lathrop about her health and plans for an upcoming event.
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Addams writes Lathrop about her living arrangements at Hull House.
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Addams writes Lathrop about camp business and visitors in Maine.
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Addams informs Smith that there will be no Hull-House Year Book for 1911.
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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.
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Addams thanks North for her donation, which will provide coal for poor families.
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Addams offers a memorial to Joseph Tilton Bowen and describes the creation of the Hull-House country club named after him.
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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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