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Settlement movement

The settlement movement was a reformist social movement that began in the 1880s and peaked around the 1920s in the United Kingdom and the United States. Its goal was to bring the rich and the poor of society together in both physical proximity and social connection. Its main object was the establishment of "settlement houses" in poor urban areas, in which volunteer middle-class "settlement workers" would live, hoping to share knowledge and culture with, and alleviate the poverty of, their low-income neighbors. The settlement houses provided services such as daycare, English classes, and healthcare to improve the lives of the poor in these areas.[1] The settlement movement also spawned educational/reform movements. Both in the UK and the US settlement workers worked to develop a unique activist form of sociology known as Settlement Sociology. This science of social reform movement is neglected in the history of sociology in favor of a teaching-, theory- and research university–based model.[2]

History edit

United Kingdom edit

 
Toynbee Hall settlement house, founded 1884, pictured here in 1902

The movement started in 1884 with the founding of Toynbee Hall in Whitechapel, in the East End of London. These houses, radically different from those later examples in America, often offered food, shelter, and basic and higher education, provided by virtue of charity on part of wealthy donors, the residents of the city, and (for education) scholars who volunteered their time.

Victorian Britain, increasingly concerned with poverty, gave rise to the movement whereby those connected to universities settled students in slum areas to live and work alongside local people. Through their efforts settlement houses were established for education, savings, sports, and arts. Such institutions were often praised by religious representatives concerned with the lives of the poor, and criticised as normative or moralistic by radical social movements.[citation needed]

There were basic commonalities in the movement. These institutions were more concerned with societal causes for poverty, especially the changes that came with industrialisation, rather than personal causes which their predecessors believed were the main reason for poverty. The settlement movement believed that social reform was best pursued and pushed for by private charities. The movement was oriented toward a more collectivist approach and was seen as a response to socialist challenges that confronted the British political economy and philanthropy.[3]

The British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centres is a network of such organisations. Other early examples include Browning Hall, formed in Walworth in 1895 by Francis Herbert Stead, and Mansfield House Settlement, also in east London (see Percy Alden). Oxford House in Bethnal Green was sponsored by High Church Anglicans associated with Oxford University. In Edinburgh, the New College Settlement was founded in 1893, followed by the Edinburgh University Settlement in 1905.[4][5] Bristol University Settlement was founded by Marian Pease and Hilda Cashmore in 1911.[6]

There is also a global network, The International Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers (IFS).[7]

The movement gave rise to many social policy initiatives and innovative ways of working to improve the conditions of the most excluded members of society. The Poor Man's Lawyer service came about because a barrister volunteered his time and encouraged his friends to do the same. In general, the settlement movement, and settlement houses in particular, "have been a foundation for social work practice in this country".[8]

As higher education opened up to women, young female graduates came into the settlement movement. The Women's University Settlement (now Blackfriars Settlement) was founded in 1887 "by women from Girton and Newnham Colleges at Cambridge University, Lady Margaret and Somerville Colleges at Oxford University and Bedford and Royal Holloway Universities".[9]

Australia edit

Australia's first settlement activity was begun by the University of Sydney Women's Society. The Society was instigated by Helen Phillips when she was the first tutor of women students at the University of Sydney in 1891–1892. Before she took up that position, Phillips visited Cambridge and Oxford Universities in England to find out how they supported women students. She also visited her younger brother, William Inchbold Phillips, Priest in Charge, St John's College Mission (Lady Margaret Church) Walworth[10] where she learned more about the work of the college mission. The mission involved university students in charitable works and educating poorer people in the area in the settlement movement tradition.[11][12] She took the model back to Australia and formed the Women's Society which focused on visiting patients in hospitals and setting up night schools particularly a night school for girls at Millers Point, Sydney.[13][14][15] After Phillips left the university for missionary and education work in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) the founding principal of the new Women's College, Louisa Macdonald developed settlement work further through the Women's Association. Over the years The Settlement gained the support of other partners and provided services for Aboriginal and migrant families and is now known as The Settlement Neighbourhood Centre in Darlington, Sydney New South Wales.[16]

United States edit

 
Bohemian immigrant youth at the Lessie Bates Davis Neighborhood House in 1918 in East St. Louis, Illinois

The settlement movement model was introduced in the United States by Jane Addams[17] after travelling to Europe and learning about the system in England.[18] It was Addams who became the leading figure of the settlement movement in the United States with the help of like-minded personalities such as Mary Rozet Smith, Mary Keyser, Alice Hamilton, Julia Lathrop, Florence Kelley, and Ella May Dunning Smith, among others.[18]

The settlement movement became popular due to the socio-economic situation in the United States between 1890 and 1910, when more than 12 million European people immigrated to the country. They came from Ireland, Russia, Italy and other European countries and provided cheap factory labor, a demand that was necessitated by the country's expansion into the west and rapid industrialization following the Civil War. Many immigrants lived in crowded and disease-ridden tenements, worked long hours, and lived in poverty. Children often worked to help support the family. Jacob Riis wrote How the Other Half Lives in 1890 about the lives of immigrants on New York City's Lower East Side to bring greater awareness of the immigrant's living conditions.[19]

The most famous settlement house in the United States is Chicago's Hull House, founded by Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in 1889 after Addams visited Toynbee Hall within the previous two years. Hull House, unlike the charity and welfare efforts which preceded it, was not a religious-based organization. Instead of Christian ethic, Addams opted to ground her settlement on democratic ideals.[18] It focused on providing education and recreational facilities for European immigrant women and children.[20]

Katharine Coman, Vida Scudder, and Katharine Lee Bates were among a group of women who founded Denison House in Boston in 1892. Union Settlement Association, founded in 1894, Lenox Hill Neighborhood House, founded in 1894, Friendly Inn Settlement House, founded in 1894, Henry Street Settlement, founded in 1893, Hiram House, founded in 1896, Houchen House in El Paso Texas, founded in 1912 and University Settlement House, founded in 1886 and the oldest in the United States, were, like Hull House, important institutions for social reform in America's teeming, immigrant-dominant urban communities. United Neighborhood Houses of New York is the federation of 38 settlement houses in New York City.[21] These and other settlement houses inspired the establishment of settlement schools to serve isolated rural communities in Appalachia, such as the Hindman Settlement School in 1902 and the Pine Mountain Settlement School in 1913.[citation needed]

A count of American settlements reported: 74 in 1897; 103 in 1900; 204 in 1905; and 413 by 1911 in 32 states.[22] By the 1920s, the number of settlement houses in the country peaked at almost 500.[20] The settlement house concept was continued by Dorothy Day's Catholic Worker "hospitality houses" in the 1930s. By 1993 the estimated number of houses dropped to 300 in 80 cities.[23]

The American settlement movement sprang out of the-then fashionable philosophy of "scientific philanthropy", a model of social reform that touted the transmission of "proper" [i.e.WASP) values, behavior, and morals to the working classes through charitable but also rigorously didactic programs as a cure to the cycle of poverty. Many settlement workers joined the movement out of a strong conviction that effective social welfare programs were the only thing that could prevent the pernicious development in the United States of a European-style entrenched social class system.

Russia edit

 
Site of the Communal Club for Working Children, a cornerstone of the Russian Settlement network.

The movement also spread to late imperial Russia, as Stanislav Shatsky and Alexander Zelenko set up a network of educational and social institutions in northern Moscow in 1905, naming it "Settlement" ("Сетлемент", the English word transliterated to Russian). This network of institutions was closed down by the government in 1908, due to alleged socialist activities.[24]

Description edit

Today, settlements are still community-focused organizations, providing a range of services including early education, youth guidance and crime intervention, senior programs, and specialized programs for young people who have "aged out" of the foster care system. Since they are staffed by professional employees and students, they no longer require that employees live alongside those they serve.

Legacy and impact edit

Settlement houses influenced urban design and architecture in the twentieth century. For example, James Rossant of Conklin + Rossant agreed with Robert E. Simon's social vision and consciously sought to mix economic backgrounds when drawing up the master plan for Reston, Virginia.[25] The New Monastic movement has a similar goal and model.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wade, Louise Carrol (2004). "Settlement Houses". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved 22 June 2009.
  2. ^ Oakley, Ann (2023), "Jane Addams and Settlement Sociology", in Patricia M. Shields, Maurice Hamington, and Joseph Soeters (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Jane Addams, Oxford Academic, 14 Feb. 2022), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197544518.013.25
  3. ^ Colls, Robert; Dodd, Philip (2014). Englishness: Politics and Culture 1880-1920. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 124–125. ISBN 978-1-4725-2334-1.
  4. ^ Ashley, Percy (1911). "University Settlements in Great Britain". The Harvard Theological Review. 4 (2): 175–203. doi:10.1017/S0017816000007136. JSTOR 1507407. S2CID 163552618. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
  5. ^ Bruce, Lynn (2012). Scottish Settlement Houses from 1886–1934 (PDF) (PhD). School of Social and Political Sciences, College of Social Sciences, University of Glasgow. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
  6. ^ Thomas, John B. (2004). "Pease, Marian Fry (1859–1954), schoolteacher". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/48581. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 2 December 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ "Home". IFS.
  8. ^ Reyes, J. M. (2008). Common space, safe place: Lived experiences of former settlement house participants from the West Town and Humboldt Park neighborhoods of Chicago Dissertation Abstract International, 69(5), 1682A. (UMI No. AAI3314871) Retrieved 13 July 2009, from Dissertations and Theses Database.
  9. ^ . www.blackfriars-settlement.org.uk. Archived from the original on 8 November 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  10. ^ Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900. United Kingdom, Cambridge University Press, 2011. p115
  11. ^ The Sydney University Settlement is still open.
  12. ^ Phillips, Helen P. and Mort, Eirene. and Cave & Co.  From Sydney to Delhi with Cook's coupons breaking the journey for a fortnight in Ceylon / by Helen P. Phillips; illustrated by Messrs. Cave & Co., Colombo and Irene Mort, Sydney  Industrial School Dodanduwa [Sri Lanka]  1914
  13. ^ Woolston, H. (1999) "Helen Plummer Phillips 1851-1929, Headmistress and Missionary". Church of England Historical Society Journal, 44(3, September): 36-40
  14. ^ Phillips, Helen P. and Mort, Eirene. and Cave & Co.  From Sydney to Delhi with Cook's coupons breaking the journey for a fortnight in Ceylon / by Helen P. Phillips; illustrated by Messrs. Cave & Co., Colombo and Irene Mort, Sydney  Industrial School Dodanduwa [Sri Lanka]  1914 p63.
  15. ^ Bygott, Ursula M. L. and Cable, K. J. and University of Sydney.  Pioneer women graduates of the University of Sydney 1881-1921 / by Ursula Bygott and K.J. Cable  University of Sydney Sydney  1985
  16. ^ "History". The Settlement. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  17. ^ Shields, Patricia M., Maurice Hamington, and Joseph Soeters, (2023)'On the Maturation of Addams Studies: A Figure of Vital Intellectual and Practical Significance', in Patricia M. Shields, Maurice Hamington, and Joseph Soeters (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Jane Addams p. 3-34. Oxford Academic https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197544518.013.45
  18. ^ a b c Shook, John R. (2005). Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers. Bristol: Thoemmes Continuum. pp. 21. ISBN 1-84371-037-4.
  19. ^ Friedman, Michael; Friedman, Brett (1 January 2006). Settlement Houses: Improving the Social Welfare of America's Immigrants. Rosen Classroom. pp. 4–7. ISBN 978-1-4042-0859-9.
  20. ^ a b Danilov, Victor J. (26 September 2013). "Social Activists". Famous Americans: A Directory of Museums, Historic Sites, and Memorials. Scarecrow Press. pp. 356–357. ISBN 978-0-8108-9186-9.
  21. ^ "Stronger Communities, Together | United Neighborhood Houses". www.unhny.org.
  22. ^ Woods, Robert Archey; Kennedy, Albert Joseph, eds. (1911). Handbook of Settlements. Charities Publication Committee, New York, The Russel Sage Foundation. p. vi. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  23. ^ Husock, Howard (1992). "Bringing back the settlement house". Public Welfare. 109 (Fall): 53–72.
  24. ^ Valkanova, Y.; Brehony, K. J. (2006). "Gifts and Contributions: Friedrich Froebel and Russian Education (1860 – 1929)". History of Education Journal. 35 (3): 187–209. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  25. ^ "Reston". JamesRossant.com. Retrieved 30 December 2010.

Further reading edit

  • Berry, Margarent E. "The Settlement Movement 1886-1986: One Hundred Years on Urban Frontiers", VCU Libraries Social Welfare History Project.
  • Blank, Barbara Trainin. "Settlement Houses: Old Idea in New Form Builds Communities", The New Social Worker, Summer 1998, Vol. 5, No. 3
  • Hunter, Robert. "The Relation Between Social Settlements and Charity Organization" Journal of Political Economy, vol. 11, no. 1 (Dec. 1902), pp. 75–88. In JSTOR
  • Scotland, Nigel. "Squires in the Slums: Settlements and Missions in Late Victorian England", I. B. Tauris, London, 2007

External links edit

  • British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centres (bassac) is now Locality
  • International Federation of Settlements website
  • United Neighborhood Houses (New York)

settlement, movement, organizations, kibbutzim, moshavim, israel, settlement, movement, reformist, social, movement, that, began, 1880s, peaked, around, 1920s, united, kingdom, united, states, goal, bring, rich, poor, society, together, both, physical, proximi. For the organizations for kibbutzim and moshavim see Settlement movement Israel The settlement movement was a reformist social movement that began in the 1880s and peaked around the 1920s in the United Kingdom and the United States Its goal was to bring the rich and the poor of society together in both physical proximity and social connection Its main object was the establishment of settlement houses in poor urban areas in which volunteer middle class settlement workers would live hoping to share knowledge and culture with and alleviate the poverty of their low income neighbors The settlement houses provided services such as daycare English classes and healthcare to improve the lives of the poor in these areas 1 The settlement movement also spawned educational reform movements Both in the UK and the US settlement workers worked to develop a unique activist form of sociology known as Settlement Sociology This science of social reform movement is neglected in the history of sociology in favor of a teaching theory and research university based model 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 United Kingdom 1 2 Australia 1 3 United States 1 4 Russia 2 Description 3 Legacy and impact 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editUnited Kingdom edit nbsp Toynbee Hall settlement house founded 1884 pictured here in 1902 The movement started in 1884 with the founding of Toynbee Hall in Whitechapel in the East End of London These houses radically different from those later examples in America often offered food shelter and basic and higher education provided by virtue of charity on part of wealthy donors the residents of the city and for education scholars who volunteered their time Victorian Britain increasingly concerned with poverty gave rise to the movement whereby those connected to universities settled students in slum areas to live and work alongside local people Through their efforts settlement houses were established for education savings sports and arts Such institutions were often praised by religious representatives concerned with the lives of the poor and criticised as normative or moralistic by radical social movements citation needed There were basic commonalities in the movement These institutions were more concerned with societal causes for poverty especially the changes that came with industrialisation rather than personal causes which their predecessors believed were the main reason for poverty The settlement movement believed that social reform was best pursued and pushed for by private charities The movement was oriented toward a more collectivist approach and was seen as a response to socialist challenges that confronted the British political economy and philanthropy 3 The British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centres is a network of such organisations Other early examples include Browning Hall formed in Walworth in 1895 by Francis Herbert Stead and Mansfield House Settlement also in east London see Percy Alden Oxford House in Bethnal Green was sponsored by High Church Anglicans associated with Oxford University In Edinburgh the New College Settlement was founded in 1893 followed by the Edinburgh University Settlement in 1905 4 5 Bristol University Settlement was founded by Marian Pease and Hilda Cashmore in 1911 6 There is also a global network The International Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers IFS 7 The movement gave rise to many social policy initiatives and innovative ways of working to improve the conditions of the most excluded members of society The Poor Man s Lawyer service came about because a barrister volunteered his time and encouraged his friends to do the same In general the settlement movement and settlement houses in particular have been a foundation for social work practice in this country 8 As higher education opened up to women young female graduates came into the settlement movement The Women s University Settlement now Blackfriars Settlement was founded in 1887 by women from Girton and Newnham Colleges at Cambridge University Lady Margaret and Somerville Colleges at Oxford University and Bedford and Royal Holloway Universities 9 Australia edit Australia s first settlement activity was begun by the University of Sydney Women s Society The Society was instigated by Helen Phillips when she was the first tutor of women students at the University of Sydney in 1891 1892 Before she took up that position Phillips visited Cambridge and Oxford Universities in England to find out how they supported women students She also visited her younger brother William Inchbold Phillips Priest in Charge St John s College Mission Lady Margaret Church Walworth 10 where she learned more about the work of the college mission The mission involved university students in charitable works and educating poorer people in the area in the settlement movement tradition 11 12 She took the model back to Australia and formed the Women s Society which focused on visiting patients in hospitals and setting up night schools particularly a night school for girls at Millers Point Sydney 13 14 15 After Phillips left the university for missionary and education work in Ceylon now Sri Lanka the founding principal of the new Women s College Louisa Macdonald developed settlement work further through the Women s Association Over the years The Settlement gained the support of other partners and provided services for Aboriginal and migrant families and is now known as The Settlement Neighbourhood Centre in Darlington Sydney New South Wales 16 United States edit See also Social Gospel and New York State Tenement House Act nbsp Bohemian immigrant youth at the Lessie Bates Davis Neighborhood House in 1918 in East St Louis Illinois The settlement movement model was introduced in the United States by Jane Addams 17 after travelling to Europe and learning about the system in England 18 It was Addams who became the leading figure of the settlement movement in the United States with the help of like minded personalities such as Mary Rozet Smith Mary Keyser Alice Hamilton Julia Lathrop Florence Kelley and Ella May Dunning Smith among others 18 The settlement movement became popular due to the socio economic situation in the United States between 1890 and 1910 when more than 12 million European people immigrated to the country They came from Ireland Russia Italy and other European countries and provided cheap factory labor a demand that was necessitated by the country s expansion into the west and rapid industrialization following the Civil War Many immigrants lived in crowded and disease ridden tenements worked long hours and lived in poverty Children often worked to help support the family Jacob Riis wrote How the Other Half Lives in 1890 about the lives of immigrants on New York City s Lower East Side to bring greater awareness of the immigrant s living conditions 19 The most famous settlement house in the United States is Chicago s Hull House founded by Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in 1889 after Addams visited Toynbee Hall within the previous two years Hull House unlike the charity and welfare efforts which preceded it was not a religious based organization Instead of Christian ethic Addams opted to ground her settlement on democratic ideals 18 It focused on providing education and recreational facilities for European immigrant women and children 20 Katharine Coman Vida Scudder and Katharine Lee Bates were among a group of women who founded Denison House in Boston in 1892 Union Settlement Association founded in 1894 Lenox Hill Neighborhood House founded in 1894 Friendly Inn Settlement House founded in 1894 Henry Street Settlement founded in 1893 Hiram House founded in 1896 Houchen House in El Paso Texas founded in 1912 and University Settlement House founded in 1886 and the oldest in the United States were like Hull House important institutions for social reform in America s teeming immigrant dominant urban communities United Neighborhood Houses of New York is the federation of 38 settlement houses in New York City 21 These and other settlement houses inspired the establishment of settlement schools to serve isolated rural communities in Appalachia such as the Hindman Settlement School in 1902 and the Pine Mountain Settlement School in 1913 citation needed A count of American settlements reported 74 in 1897 103 in 1900 204 in 1905 and 413 by 1911 in 32 states 22 By the 1920s the number of settlement houses in the country peaked at almost 500 20 The settlement house concept was continued by Dorothy Day s Catholic Worker hospitality houses in the 1930s By 1993 the estimated number of houses dropped to 300 in 80 cities 23 The American settlement movement sprang out of the then fashionable philosophy of scientific philanthropy a model of social reform that touted the transmission of proper i e WASP values behavior and morals to the working classes through charitable but also rigorously didactic programs as a cure to the cycle of poverty Many settlement workers joined the movement out of a strong conviction that effective social welfare programs were the only thing that could prevent the pernicious development in the United States of a European style entrenched social class system Russia edit nbsp Site of the Communal Club for Working Children a cornerstone of the Russian Settlement network The movement also spread to late imperial Russia as Stanislav Shatsky and Alexander Zelenko set up a network of educational and social institutions in northern Moscow in 1905 naming it Settlement Setlement the English word transliterated to Russian This network of institutions was closed down by the government in 1908 due to alleged socialist activities 24 Description editToday settlements are still community focused organizations providing a range of services including early education youth guidance and crime intervention senior programs and specialized programs for young people who have aged out of the foster care system Since they are staffed by professional employees and students they no longer require that employees live alongside those they serve Legacy and impact editSettlement houses influenced urban design and architecture in the twentieth century For example James Rossant of Conklin Rossant agreed with Robert E Simon s social vision and consciously sought to mix economic backgrounds when drawing up the master plan for Reston Virginia 25 The New Monastic movement has a similar goal and model See also editDown to the Countryside Movement Gentrification List of active settlement houses List of historical settlement houses Social work Sonoratown Los Angeles for description of one of the housesReferences edit Wade Louise Carrol 2004 Settlement Houses Encyclopedia of Chicago Chicago Historical Society Retrieved 22 June 2009 Oakley Ann 2023 Jane Addams and Settlement Sociology in Patricia M Shields Maurice Hamington and Joseph Soeters eds The Oxford Handbook of Jane Addams Oxford Academic 14 Feb 2022 https doi org 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780197544518 013 25 Colls Robert Dodd Philip 2014 Englishness Politics and Culture 1880 1920 London Bloomsbury Publishing pp 124 125 ISBN 978 1 4725 2334 1 Ashley Percy 1911 University Settlements in Great Britain The Harvard Theological Review 4 2 175 203 doi 10 1017 S0017816000007136 JSTOR 1507407 S2CID 163552618 Retrieved 17 August 2022 Bruce Lynn 2012 Scottish Settlement Houses from 1886 1934 PDF PhD School of Social and Political Sciences College of Social Sciences University of Glasgow Retrieved 17 August 2022 Thomas John B 2004 Pease Marian Fry 1859 1954 schoolteacher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 48581 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 2 December 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Home IFS Reyes J M 2008 Common space safe place Lived experiences of former settlement house participants from the West Town and Humboldt Park neighborhoods of ChicagoDissertation Abstract International 69 5 1682A UMI No AAI3314871 Retrieved 13 July 2009 from Dissertations and Theses Database Our History www blackfriars settlement org uk Archived from the original on 8 November 2018 Retrieved 12 July 2018 Alumni Cantabrigienses A Biographical List of All Known Students Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge from the Earliest Times to 1900 United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2011 p115 The Sydney University Settlement is still open Phillips Helen P and Mort Eirene and Cave amp Co From Sydney to Delhi with Cook s coupons breaking the journey for a fortnight in Ceylon by Helen P Phillips illustrated by Messrs Cave amp Co Colombo and Irene Mort Sydney Industrial School Dodanduwa Sri Lanka 1914 Woolston H 1999 Helen Plummer Phillips 1851 1929 Headmistress and Missionary Church of England Historical Society Journal 44 3 September 36 40 Phillips Helen P and Mort Eirene and Cave amp Co From Sydney to Delhi with Cook s coupons breaking the journey for a fortnight in Ceylon by Helen P Phillips illustrated by Messrs Cave amp Co Colombo and Irene Mort Sydney Industrial School Dodanduwa Sri Lanka 1914 p63 Bygott Ursula M L and Cable K J and University of Sydney Pioneer women graduates of the University of Sydney 1881 1921 by Ursula Bygott and K J Cable University of Sydney Sydney 1985 History The Settlement Retrieved 1 July 2022 Shields Patricia M Maurice Hamington and Joseph Soeters 2023 On the Maturation of Addams Studies A Figure of Vital Intellectual and Practical Significance in Patricia M Shields Maurice Hamington and Joseph Soeters eds The Oxford Handbook of Jane Addams p 3 34 Oxford Academic https doi org 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780197544518 013 45 a b c Shook John R 2005 Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers Bristol Thoemmes Continuum pp 21 ISBN 1 84371 037 4 Friedman Michael Friedman Brett 1 January 2006 Settlement Houses Improving the Social Welfare of America s Immigrants Rosen Classroom pp 4 7 ISBN 978 1 4042 0859 9 a b Danilov Victor J 26 September 2013 Social Activists Famous Americans A Directory of Museums Historic Sites and Memorials Scarecrow Press pp 356 357 ISBN 978 0 8108 9186 9 Stronger Communities Together United Neighborhood Houses www unhny org Woods Robert Archey Kennedy Albert Joseph eds 1911 Handbook of Settlements Charities Publication Committee New York The Russel Sage Foundation p vi Retrieved 16 August 2021 Husock Howard 1992 Bringing back the settlement house Public Welfare 109 Fall 53 72 Valkanova Y Brehony K J 2006 Gifts and Contributions Friedrich Froebel and Russian Education 1860 1929 History of Education Journal 35 3 187 209 Retrieved 26 July 2015 Reston JamesRossant com Retrieved 30 December 2010 Further reading editBerry Margarent E The Settlement Movement 1886 1986 One Hundred Years on Urban Frontiers VCU Libraries Social Welfare History Project Blank Barbara Trainin Settlement Houses Old Idea in New Form Builds Communities The New Social Worker Summer 1998 Vol 5 No 3 Hunter Robert The Relation Between Social Settlements and Charity Organization Journal of Political Economy vol 11 no 1 Dec 1902 pp 75 88 In JSTOR Scotland Nigel Squires in the Slums Settlements and Missions in Late Victorian England I B Tauris London 2007External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Settlement houses nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Social Settlements British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centres bassac is now Locality International Federation of Settlements website United Neighborhood Houses New York Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Settlement movement amp oldid 1210946039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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