Includes bibliographical references (pages 249-252) and index.
Contents:
Introduction : Jane Addams constructs herself and Hull-House. Growing up in the Gilded Age ; The nature and purpose of memoir ; Twenty years at Hull-House in place and time ; Inside Hull-House ; Jane Addams and the Progressive era -- The document. Twenty years at Hull-House with autobiographical notes -- Related documents. Hull-house weekly program, March 1, 1892 ; William G. Sumner, LL. D., "The concentration of wealth : its economic justification," The independent, 1902 ; Jane Addams, "If men were seeking the franchise," Ladies' home journal, June 1913 ; "An oft-told tale" and "The lamb tags on to the lion", The New York call, April 25, 1912 and August 11, 1912 ; Edward Alsworth Ross, "Racial consequences of immigration", The century magazine, February 1914 ; Gino C. Speranza, "How it feels to be a problem", Charities, 1904 ; Philip Davis, "Jane Addams invites me in", from And crown thy good (1952) ; H.J. Pinkett, Omaha, Nebraska, to Jane Addams, May 12, 1908 -- An Addams chronology (1860-1935).
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