Laura Jane Addams: The Mother Of The Social Work

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Jane Addams was one of many social workers who spent their whole life helping the poor people. She creates certain organizations that help the poor people to get the necessary things to life. One of these organizations that began as known her as ¨The Mother Of The Social Work¨ was the Chicago Hull House (The Settlement House) in 1889. Addams create this organization to promote welfare for those people in need. Jane Addams with this organization made a critical impact in people's lives with her generous, caring heart and became a big influence in the history of the social work.
Jane Addams, known as Laura Jane Addams was born on September 6, 1860, in Cedarville, Illinois. Addams was the eighth daughter of 9 children, she lived a life of privilege …show more content…

When she was visiting some places in Europe she visited the settlement house called Toynbee Hall. Toynbee Hall is a welfare neighborhood institution located in a slum that gives a scope of projects and exercises, comprehensively separated into youth, the elderly, monetary incorporation, obligation, guidance, free lawful counsel and group engagement. This organizations or settlement houses provide a safe, clean home. These organizations provided mostly help to immigrant people, also, the settlement houses provide healthcare, food and English language lessons, child care and general advocacy. When Addams finally return home she already was convinced that it was her goal to make a settlement house in the united states. The dream of Jane became come true and the first settlement house was created in the United States in …show more content…

The residents of Hull-House, at the request of the surrounding community, began to offer practical classes that might help the immigrant people or poor people become more combined different things together so they worked as one unit into American community of people these classes where, English language, cooking, sewing, abilities to do particular job-related tasks well and American government. The residents were the women and men who chose to live at Hull-House; they paid rent and added to the activities and services that the Settlement was committed to providing to their neighbors. The Hull-House became not only a cultural center with music, art, and theater, but also a safe place and a place where poor people and immigrant people could find the help they needed for successfully they overcome their poverty. Hull-House exists today as a social service agency, with locations around the city of Chicago. The University of Illinois at Chicago has preserved a small part of the buildings as a museum after the University razed many of the original buildings of Hull-House. The hull house no only transformed how poor were cared for but also how they were seen by the majority population. Now, Immigrants had a safe place to live, a voice to talk to them and a way to better get into American society so their dream of having

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