Who was Enella Benedict?

Who was Enella Benedict?

One of the most influential Residents of Hull-House was artist and arts educator Enella Benedict. She was the founder and long-time director of the Hull-House Art School. She was also the longest Resident of the Hull-House Settlement after Jane Addams, living and working there for nearly 50 years. Her work was intrinsic to the growth of Hull-House as an arts institution and laid the foundations for Hull-House's most important artists-in-residence.

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Who was Rachelle Slobodinsky Yarros?

Who was Rachelle Slobodinsky Yarros?

Hull-House Resident Dr. Rachelle Slobodinsky Yarros (May 18, 1869 – March 17, 1946) was an early pioneer in what would become the field of reproductive justice. Yarros immigrated at the age of 18 to the United States out of fear of the Russian government, due to her ties with revolutionary groups. In the US, she worked in a sweatshop before becoming the first woman to enroll in the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Boston. She went on to complete her MD at Philadelphia’s Women’s Medical College in 1893. Yarros met future fellow Hull-House Resident Alice Hamilton while they were both interning at New England Hospital for Women and Children. She and Hamilton would go on to be revolutionaries in the field of public health, working both in their own respective areas of expertise as well as combining efforts for wider access to basic health care for women and children.

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Who was Florence Kelley?

Who was Florence Kelley?

Florence Kelley (1859-1932) came from a wealthy Quaker and Unitarian family in Philadelphia, her parents both staunch abolitionists and advocates for women’s rights. All five of her sisters died in childhood, leaving her the lone girl in the family with two brothers. Click to learn more about the national leader for childrens’ and workers’ rights!

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Who was Ellen Gates Starr?

Who was Ellen Gates Starr?

Ellen Gates Starr co-founded Hull-House with Jane Addams in 1889. She was influenced by her father, Caleb Starr, an abolitionist, supporter of collective farming, and an advocate for women's rights. Starr met Addams at Rockford Female Seminary. Due to her family’s lack of finances, Starr could not stay to complete her degree, but eagerly partnered with Addams to establish a settlement house in Chicago. Despite differences in background and temperament, Starr and Addams were lifelong friends, sharing a desire to find meaningful work.

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Who was Dewey Roscoe Jones?

Who was Dewey Roscoe Jones?

Jones moved to Chicago in 1923 and became a reporter for the Chicago Defender, a leading black-owned weekly newspaper that encourage Black people to leave the violence in the American South and move to northern urban centers like Chicago. A little over ten years later Jones became the first black assistant director at Hull-House.

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