Letter Jane Addams to Edith Abbott 1911-07-18

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                <date when="2018-04-27">27 April 2018</date>
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                    <author>Jane Addams</author>
                    <title>Jane Addams to Edith Abbott, 18 July 1911</title>
                    <date when="1911-07-18">July 18, 1911</date>
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                    <name>Hull's Cove Maine</name>
                    <date when="1911-07-18">July 18" 1911</date>
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                <salute>My dear <persName ref="/sites/default/files/1524486624/tei/Annotations.xml#pers_edith_abbott">Miss Abbott</persName></salute>
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            <p>I don’t suppose that 
                you have such a paragon 
                at the school as the 
                <choice><orig>inclosed</orig><reg>enclosed</reg></choice> letter outlines 
                but I am sending to <unclear reason="illegible" cert="low" resp="#eb">an</unclear> 
                because if you had, it would 
                be such a triumph to 
                Chicago.</p>
            <p>Will you <unclear reason="illegible" cert="medium" resp="#ch">proudly cherish</unclear> 
                my copies of the Report 
                on Woman and Child</p>
            
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            <p>Wage Earners in the U.S.A. 
                as fast as they come to <placeName ref="/sites/default/files/1524486624/tei/Annotations.xml#place_hull_house">H. H.</placeName>
                Otherwise I am afraid I will 
                never use them. I do think 
                that volume V is pretty <unclear reason="illegible" cert="high" resp="#eb">nice</unclear>.</p>
            <p>How are you standing the 
                heat. I do wish some of you 
                would come to this beautiful 
                spot. With love to Miss 
                <persName ref="/sites/default/files/1524486624/tei/Annotations.xml#pers_sophonisba_breckinridge">Breckinridge</persName>. </p>
            
            <salute> Always affectionately yours </salute>
            
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Jane Addams to Edith Abbott 18 July 1911: A TEI Edition Abbott/Addams Letter Digitization Project Emily Benes Caitlin Henry Seolha Lee Rosamond Thalken the TEI Archiving, Publishing, and Access Service (TAPAS)
360 Huntington Avenue Northeastern University Boston, MA 02115
27 April 2018

This file is free to download, share, or repurpose for educational and project development purposes.

Jane Addams Jane Addams to Edith Abbott, 18 July 1911 July 18, 1911 Edith and Grace Abbott, Papers (MS 129). Archives & Special Collections, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries.
view page image(s) Hull's Cove Maine July 18" 1911 My dear Miss Abbott

I don’t suppose that you have such a paragon at the school as the inclosed enclosed letter outlines but I am sending to an because if you had, it would be such a triumph to Chicago.

Will you proudly cherish my copies of the Report on Woman and Child

view page image(s) view page image(s)

Wage Earners in the U.S.A. as fast as they come to H. H. Otherwise I am afraid I will never use them. I do think that volume V is pretty nice.

How are you standing the heat. I do wish some of you would come to this beautiful spot. With love to Miss Breckinridge.

Always affectionately yours Jane Addams. view page image(s)

Edith Abbott

Edith Abbott was born on September 26, 1876 in Grand Island, Nebraska, into a politically and socially active Nebraskan family. After receiving a degree at the University of Nebraska, Edith attended the University of Chicago on a fellowship to study political economy. In 1905, she obtained her doctoral degree and spent multiple years at the University College London studying social economics and welfare. She returned to the United States to continue a successful career of teaching and researching social welfare alongside Grace Abbott, Sophonisba Breckinridge, and other women at Jane Addams’ Hull House. Abbott’s work focused on social statistics as a methodology to look critically at women’s rights, child labor, immigration, and public welfare. She was promoted to Dean of the University of Chicago’s School of Social Service Administration in 1924, and held that position until retiring in 1942.

Hull House

Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr founded Hull House in 1889. Inspired by Toynbee Hall in London, Hull House began with outreach programs for the large immigrant population in the South side of Chicago, Illinois. Over the years, the scope of programs offered expanded widely, and Hull House attracted numerous experts in the American social work field. Hull House residents conducted research and fought for social reform in the United States. At its height, Hull House included about a dozen buildings; today, the only remaining building is the original house opened by Jane Addams.

Sophonisba Breckinridge

Shophonisba Breckinridge was born on April 1, 1866 in Lexington Kentucky to a prominent family. After passing the Kentucky bar exam, Breckinridge moved to Chicago to earn her Ph.D. in political science and economics. She then became an instructor and researcher of social reform and immigrant rights at the University of Chicago before becoming involved at Jane Addams’ Hull House where she met and began a collaborative relationship with Edith Abbott. Together, Abbott and Breckinridge established the Wendell Phillips Settlement House as well as the Social Service Review scholarly journal. Throughout her career, Breckinridge devoted her time to improving labor conditions, immigrant rights, women’s suffrage, and creating child labor laws before passing away at the age of 82.

Jane Addams

Jane Addams was born on September 6, 1860 in Cedarville, Illinois in a wealthy family. She received the bachelor's degree from Rockford College for Women in 1882. She studied medicine at the Woman's Medical College of Philadelphia, but completed only one year due to her poor health. Inspired from her visit to Toynbee Hall, a settlement house in London, she co-founded Hull House with Ellen Gates Starr in 1889 to help immigrants in Chicago. Addams was actively engaged in woman suffrage and international peace movement serving as an officer in the National American Woman's Suffrage Association and leading organizations such as Women's Peace Party, the International Congress of Women and the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize at the age of 71. Addams died of cancer in 1935.

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Jane Addams to Edith Abbott 18 July 1911: A TEI Edition Abbott/Addams Letter Digitization Project Emily Benes Caitlin Henry Seolha Lee Rosamond Thalken the TEI Archiving, Publishing, and Access Service (TAPAS)
360 Huntington Avenue Northeastern University Boston, MA 02115
27 April 2018

This file is free to download, share, or repurpose for educational and project development purposes.

Jane Addams Jane Addams to Edith Abbott, 18 July 1911 July 18, 1911 Edith and Grace Abbott, Papers (MS 129). Archives & Special Collections, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries.
Jane Addams Edith Abbott
Hull's Cove Maine July 18" 1911 My dear Miss Abbott

I don’t suppose that you have such a paragon at the school as the inclosed enclosed letter outlines but I am sending to an because if you had, it would be such a triumph to Chicago.

Will you proudly cherish my copies of the Report on Woman and Child

Wage Earners in the U.S.A. as fast as they come to H. H. Otherwise I am afraid I will never use them. I do think that volume V is pretty nice.

How are you standing the heat. I do wish some of you would come to this beautiful spot. With love to Miss Breckinridge.

Always affectionately yours Jane Addams.