It's been rainy today in Chicago, but Chicago is a town that looks good wet. This is true of other things as well. |
I'm a guest of sorts of the Association for Humanist Sociology, which is having its annual meeting this week. From the conference HQ (the Hilton-Orrlington), conferees took a bus to Hull House, which is a very cool place indeed. |
Hull House was founded in 1889 by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr. It is the most famous example of the century-old phenomenon of "settlement houses," of which there were 500 in the U.S. by 1920. Naturally, Addams, a pacifist and progressive sociologist, had an FBI file; she was regarded for a time as "the most dangerous person in the country." She was a philosopher, you know. A "feminist pragmatist." In 1932, she received a Nobel Peace Prize. She died in 1935. |
There isn't much left of the huge complex that Hull House became, but at least two buildings remain, and they are fascinating. Above is a clock in the larger building. Here we see keys used by Addams and other Hull House officials. You can read more about Hull House here.
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Tomorrow, the U-505!