Toynbee Hall/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 20:03, 11 January 2010
- See also changes related to Toynbee Hall, or pages that link to Toynbee Hall or to this page or whose text contains "Toynbee Hall".
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- Hull House [r]: Chicago settlement house established in September, 1889 by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in a house on Halstead Street built by Charles Hull. [e]
- Jane Addams [r]: (1860-1935) A pioneer American settlement worker and founder of Hull House. [e]
- Settlement movement [r]: An approach to social reform that began in the 1880s in which educated middle- and upper-class reformers lived in inner-city neighborhoods seeking to know, befriend and aid their uneducated, lower-class, immigrant or poor neighbors. Toynbee House (London, 1883), University Settlement (Chicago, 1883), Hull House (Chicago, 1889), Henry Street (New York, 1895) are among the best known of the hundreds of settlement houses formed. [e]
- William Beveridge [r]: (1879-1963) A British social administrator who is widely considered one of the principal founders of the British welfare state. [e]