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A day of her own
By Mark Sorensen
Local girl makes good. College class president, founder of a settlement house, civic leader, Nobel Prize winner and now, on December 10th, the first woman in the United States to have her own state commemorative day. Born in the small Stephenson County town of Cedarville on September 6, 1860, Jane Addams struggled to find a meaningful role for herself in a world where men dominated civic, economic and government functions. In 1889 she and lifelong friend Ellen Gates Starr founded Hull House in Chicago, one on the first settlement houses in the nation. Over the next 40 years she became a leader in the Chicago schools, women's suffrage movement, American Civil Liberties Union, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and the American Association of University Women. On December 10, 1931, she and Columbia University President Nicholas Murray Butler were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Addams died in Chicago on May 21, 1935. She was buried in Cedarville, her childhood home town. Fast forward to the tiny Southern Illinois town of Dongola where teacher Cindy Vines asked students in her eighth-grade social studies class to "do a project that would make a difference." Five students (John Cauble, Katie Forcht, Brittany Lannom, Jennifer Medlin, and Chayse Swink) decided their goal was to advocate for a state holiday honoring Addams after discovering that there were no state or national holidays honoring women anywhere in the United States. On
In a 1972 AAUW tribute to Addams and the women of Hull House, Louise V. Molkup wrote, "These gentlewomen were imbued with the ideals of altruism and service. They believed they had a duty to share the fruits of their superior education. In a neighborhood of immigrants [Addams] became personally concerned with ILLINOIS HERITAGE| 7    
the health and education of the people, especially the young. She believed children younger than age fourteen should not be permitted to work; nor should their non-English speaking parents be exploited. Along with working increasingly for the passage of child labor laws and the establishment of unions, Jane Addams was concerned for the quality of life of her neighbors. She invited them into Hull-House as she would have invited them into her own home. She and her associates taught the women English, cooking and sewing. The men were given tools and a workbench and were encouraged to speak English to each other. The young had materials for crafts of all kinds, for art work, for social games, for music and for drama." Patrick Quinn hopes that organizations use "this new holiday as an opportunity to express their pride in one of Illinois' most famous citizens, and teach young people throughout or state that one person really can make a difference." Addams, he said, "proved that when people work together for reform, they can change the world." Both the AAUW and the Illinois Women's Press Association are promoting this new state commemorative day. According to Jan Lisa Huttner of AAUW-Illinois, "our goal is to make sure everyone knows to mark December 10, 2007 on their calendars right away; great things will happen in Illinois on that date!" ISHS vice president Mark Sorensen teaches history at Millikin University in Decatur.
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