字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント it's international women's day so what better day to talk about historic Chicago women than today. I want to focus on a period of time between 1830 to the early nineteen hundreds where women were very limited both legally and socially in what they could do or achieve. Fortunately there are many women who saw these restrictions as challenges to be overcome and they fought tirelessly not only in Chicago but across America for social reform so who are these women that ultimately shape chicago for the better well there's no better place to start than Hull house. it was opened in 1889 by jane addams and Ellen Gates starr as the settlement house on the west side of Chicago for the previous 40 years Chicago population grew from slightly under 30,000 to over 1 million and this was all due to immigrants. In 1870 almost half of our population was immigrant and this was bigger than any other American city at the time. Hull house was opened in an area which is densely populated with immigrants they were living in poverty sanitation was non-existent and there was very little help available. Hull house focused on improving social conditions for these people provided education, nurseries, medical help and so much more Hull house was the birthplace of Social Work and Jane Addams was his mother she crusaded for the needs of the less fortunate convincing other women to join her cause and promoted social reform she helped America address and focus on issues that were concerned to mothers such as the needs of children, local public health and world peace in 1920 she co-founded the ACLU and in 1931 she was the first American female to be awarded the nobel peace prize. Women came from all over America to study social reform at the Hull house. Women like Ellen gates starr who campaign to reform child labor Laws and industrial working conditions. Florence Kelley worked against sweatshops campaigning for eight hour work days and women and children's work right. Alice Hamilton pioneered healthy working conditions, changing laws and general practice to improve the health of worker. Edith Abbott helped draft the Social Security Act. Eleanor Clarke Slagle was the founder of occupational therapy these are just some of the notable residents of the Hull House and if you go to the location today on Halstead you can tour the Jane Addams Hull House museum here. At the same time chicago's very own Saint. Francis Xavier Cabrini was working here helping immigrants in our city. Her mission was to help Italian immigrants who are desperately in need of spiritual and educational support. Mother Cabrini opened assumption school the first italian school in the city followed by columbus hospital on Chicago's lakefront and another hospital on the west side. She lived, worked and died in Chicago making an incredible difference too many lives in this city especially for italian immigrants you can go and visit her shrine at 2520 N. Lakeview Avenue there you can even visit the room which she died in it has been preserved for all those to see and yes Cabrini street is also named after her! We have seen numerous trailblazing women here in Chicago some of them that come to mind include Myra Bradwell who was the first woman lawyer in Illinois. Bradwell passed the Illinois Law exam in 1869 but was denied access to the bar she fought for the rights for women to practice law in Illinois eventually in 1873 a law was passed allowing women to practice law in the state interestingly under the new Law Bradwell would have had to reapply to be accepted into the bar however she never did had she should have been accepted although she no longer pursued it because she felt like she had already won when she won the right for other women to practice law in the state of illinois. The chicago police department saw Marie Connolly Owens become the first female police officer in 1891 and was followed by grace wilson in 1918 as the first female african-american police officer although debated Owens and Wilson were the first women in the country to achieve their positions. Marion Mahony Griffin was the first woman to be licensed to practice architecture in the state of Illinois she worked as a drafter of the most famous architect in the nation Frank Lloyd Wright where she received very little recognition for her work in a male-dominated industry. Opinions of what she achieved while working at Wrights office often vary widely but no one disputes the fact that she had an amazing talent she married fellow architect Walter Burley Griffin who is well known for winning the design plan Australia's capital city, Canberra although it was her draft work that won over the judges. Social constructs of the time kept women out of business, finance and other male-dominated professions so they open club and charities these were run so successfully that made men second-guess their belief that financial and organizational skills were unique unto their own gender. The Women's Club movement work to improve social welfare for children and mothers that promoted civic improvement and philanthropic work working together they made huge achievement members of the Chicago Women's Club effort resulted in establishing the first juvenile court in the United States. Ida B. Wells established the Alpha suffrage club in Chicago believed to be the first of its kind of African American suffragettes they worked for political reform in Chicago, educated voters, canvassing door-to-door and succeeded in registering 3,000 women in Chicago 2nd Ward. Their efforts resulted in the election of chicago's first african-american alderman Oscar dePriest in 1915. Philanthropy made a profound difference in chicago and many of that cultural institute would not be the same without their women patrons to this day Bertha Palmers large donations of paintings constitute the core of the art institutes infamous impressionist holding. Mary Sturges donated 50 thousand dollars in 1894 to establish the field museum the fourth largest donation received that year. Blackstone library which is built in 1904 is the first branch library in the city and it's still open today it was built completely through the donations of Isabella Blackstone and have only started to scratch the surface of all the patrons to the arts that are out there I can't help but feel that I just completely glossed over the numerous achievements and examples of women in chicago the goal of this video wasn't to provide a complete resource into these amazing women it was the spark your own interest in their stories and to help i provided numerous resources in the description below do you know Bertha Palmer invented the brownie! That's right Chicago invented the brownie i love this city
B1 中級 英 シカゴの歴史に登場する有名な女性たち (Famous Women in Chicago's History) 77 3 恩 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語