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In the 1800s, despite the fact that Social Work did not exist as such, Jane Addams (born in 1860), was illustrated as a feminist and activist, she believed in her own instincts and learned from her past experiences when with working with individuals who had desperate and complex needs for high quality care due to their current situations. Because of this she was most recognised as the Mother of Social Work.
Jane was inspired to recreate Toynbee, the world’s first settlement house in London which she discovered whilst travelling with her friend Ellen Starr. Addams described what she witnessed at Toynbee as so unaffectedly sincere and so productive of good results in its classes and libraries that it seemed perfectly ideal (Kington, 2020). Following Jane’s trip to London she along with her friend Ellen Starr opened Hull House, the first establishment in the U.S which would go on to help hundreds of individuals week in week out. Hull House mainly supported immigrants and the poor, providing them with health services, education, libraries, shelter and security. Jane thrived off helping those less fortunate and with nowhere to go so for her providing a sense of security for these individuals, where they would have access to social and educational opportunities was a way for her to try get equality across because she believed everyone was entitled to health, education, shelter and security no matter your wealth status, gender, race, ethnicity or age.
By 1900 Hull House had massively succeeded in a way that Addams had never expected, Hull House was helping over 2000 people each week and had expanded the resources that they provided including a pool, gym, book bindery and even day care for children of working mothers. Jane Addams was later joined in Hull House by Florence Kelly, Alice Hamilton, Julia Lathrop and several other social workers and feminists, collectively they provided disadvantaged individuals with numerous social programs, including the immigrants protective league and juvenile protective association, alongside this these women helped enact protective legislation for women and children, child labour regulations and mandatory education laws (A.Paul, 2020).
Alongside the work Jane did to help the less fortunate and people in need she received a Nobel Peace Prize in 1931. Jane began her public life as a leader of the U.S progressive era Social reform movement. She combined theory and action through her settlement work in the often, contentious, immigrant communities in Chicago. Addams developed innovative theories of democracy and peace, which were advanced through extensive public speaking engagements, 11 books and hundreds of articles (Addams, 2002).
In the lead up to Jane’s final years her health seriously declined after she had a heart attack in 1926 despite this, she still spent the remainder of her life working at Hull House when she passed at 70 years old. Following Jane Addams death in 1935 she is remembered not only as a pioneer in the field of social work but as one of the nation’s leading pacifists. Jane showed compassion and genuine care when it was needed the most, she showed empathy and sympathy and set an example of how no one should be discriminated against. Jane Addams set high standards and procedures in which we now as social workers still follow to this day, she was everything a Social Worker should be.
Bibliography
- A.Paul, C., 2020. Jane Addams (1860 1935). [online] Social Welfare History Project. Available at: [Accessed 9 October 2020].
- Addams, J., 2002. Democracy And Social Ethics. Champaign: University of Illinois Press, page 7.
- Kington, A., 2020. Jane Addams: The Mother Of Social Work. [online] InterExchange. Available at: [Accessed 9 October 2020].
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