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  1. Jane Addams Hull-House Museum serves as a dynamic memorial to social reformer Jane Addams, the first American woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, and her colleagues whose work changed the lives of their immigrant neighbors as well as national and international public policy.

  2. Apr 16, 2010 · Jane Addams (1860-1935) was a peace activist and a leader of the settlement house movement in America. As one of the most distinguished of the first generation of college-educated women, she...

  3. Quick Facts. Location: 800 S. Halsted Street, Chicago, IL. Significance: First settlement house in the United States. Designation: National Historic Landmark. MANAGED BY: Jane Addams Hull-House Museum.

  4. Jane Addams, American social reformer and pacifist, cowinner of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1931. She is best known as a cofounder (with Ellen Gates Starr) of Hull House in Chicago, one of the first social settlements in North America, which was established to aid needy immigrants.

  5. Hull-House, Chicago's first social settlement house, was not only the private home of Jane Addams and other Hull-House Residents, but also a place where immigrants of diverse communities gathered to learn, to eat, to debate, and to acquire the tools necessary to put down roots in their new country.

  6. When Jane Addams founded Hull House in 1889, children’s rights were barely existent, let alone protected. This concept would change immeasurably during her lifetime, and her legacy of advocating on behalf of children would continue long after Addams’ death in 1935.

  7. Jan 22, 2020 · Patricia E. Daniels. Updated on January 22, 2020. Humanitarian and social reformer Jane Addams, born into wealth and privilege, devoted herself to improving the lives of those less fortunate.

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