Published by Macmillan Company, NY, 1930
Language: English
Seller: Tulsa Books, Tulsa, OK, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. First Edition. First printing, very good with no dust jacket. Minor wear at spine ends; endpapers just slightly darkened. Includes illustrations; 413 pages. This copy is inscribed by the author: "To Ben Goodman/with the mutual memories/of the authors/Jane Addams/Hull-House/Chicago./Alice Hamilton/Esther L. Kohn(?)/Edith de Nancrede(?)". Although Benny Goodman, the King of Swing, studied at Hull-House in his early teens, this inscription is to Benedict Goodman, a Chicago area resident and supporter of Hull-House, who is the father of Nancy Goodman Feldman, an educator and social activist who moved from Chicago to Tulsa in the 1940's and lived there until her death in 2014. Jane Addams was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1931, and died in 1935. Alice Hamilton (1869 - 1970), another signer of this volume, was the sister of classicist Edith Hamilton. Alice was trained as a physician, a pioneer in studies of occupational epidemiology, and active in both the women's rights and peace movements. The other two signers' last names are not legible. Inscribed by Author(s).
Published by The Macmillan Co., New York, 1910
Language: English
Seller: Ann Open Book, Lansing, MI, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Poor. No Jacket. Norah Hamilton (illustrator). 1st Edition. Limited Edition #152 of 210 copies. Front board is loose as is spine. A letter to Miss Edna Foley from Jane Addams, Signed. Edna L. Foley's book-plate is inside on back of front board. Signed by Author(s).
Published by The Macmillan Company, New York, 1910
Language: English
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Photographs, Illustrations By Norah Hamilton (illustrator). 1st Edition. Xvii, 462 Pp. + 4 Pp Ads At Rear. Red-Brown Cloth, Gilt, Color Illustration Mounted On Front Cover, Top Edge Gilt, Light Green Endpapers. Third Printing, December 1910, Of The First Edition. Signed "Jane Addams Hull-House" And "Louise De Koven Bowen" On Preliminary Blank, With Signature Beneath Of Mrs. J. E. Howe Dated 1910, And A Few Pencil Notes Relating To Gertrude Howe Britton (1868-1951), Social Worker And Birth Control Activist, Resident Of Hull-House, Who Was In Charge Of The Hull-House Children's Clubs, Later A Member Of The Chicago Board Of Education And Was Wife Of James Howe Britton (1876-1956), Resident Physician Of Hull-House, They Were The Parents Of The First Child Born At Hull House. She Is Frequently Mentioned In Articles And Books About Addams And Hull-House; In The 1929 Year Book She Is Cited For Meeting Weekly With The Mexican Consul And Neighborhood Residents. With Ephemera: Photographically Illustrated "From The Christmas Concert Hull House, Christmas Card Circa 1910/1930 Of The Brittons; An Invitation From Jane Addams To The Brittons' 25Th Anniversary At Hull House 1929; An Invitation From Addams And The Brittons To A Reception For The Brittons' Son James Howe Britton; An Invitation To The Christening Of Their Daughter Janith, And A Related Newspaper Clipping; And An Announcement For The Opening Of The Joint Medical Offices Of The Brittons' Father And Son In Altadena, Probably Circa 1950. Louise De Koven Bowen (1859-1953) Had An Activist Career In Social And Women's Issues In Chicago For Many Decades. She Was Vice-President, Illinois Equal Suffrage Association, Director, Woman's Club Of Chicago, Treasurer And President Of The Board Of Directors, Hull House, President, Juvenile Protection Association, Auditor, Nawsa; She Donated Extensive Country Lands For The "Camp And Summer Camp At The "Hull-House And Bowen Country Club". With Other Ephemera Including Newspaper Clippings And Magazine Articles; Brochure "All Work And No Play: A Plea For Saturday Afternoon", By Jane Sheldrick Howe, 1910, Juvenile Protective Association; Hull-House Year Book 40Th Year (1929), Discussing Gertrude Howe Britton's Work Including Her 1925 "Our Mexican Patients In Central Free Dispensary"; "Cathedral Of Compassion: Dramatic Outline Of The Work Of Jane Addams 1860-1935", Signed Limited Edition Additionally Inscribed To Kathryn Howe Miller "Old Hull House Kid)(Mrs. Herman W. Miller) From Hazel Taylor, And With A Loose Slip Regarding Subscriptions To Announcements Of Hull House Exhibitions; "Before And After Trouble", Pamphlet, Hull-House1956; "A Social Settlement In Times Of Neighborhood Change", Hull House 1957; Announcement, Invitation, And Personal Letter From The President Inviting The Recipient To The Hull-House Moving Party, 1963; "Hull House Association", Brochure, 1963. Signed by Author(s).
Published by The Macmillan Company, New York, 1916
Language: English
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. First Edition, First Printing. Xvii, 462 Pp. #107 Of 210 Copies Of The Signed, Limited First Edition, Large Paper 9 5/8" Tall. Vellum Spine Over Brown Paper Covered Boards. A Very Nice Copy, Clean, Hinges Tight, Spine And Cover Gilt Lettering All Brilliant, Small Losses Of Paper On Edges At Tops, A Few Tiny Losses Of Paper At Edges Of Front Cover, No Damage To Vellum, Hinges Tight, No Names Or Marks Or Bookplates. Signed by Author(s).
Published by Macmillan: NY, 1932
Seller: John K King Used & Rare Books, Detroit, MI, U.S.A.
Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Frontis photo portrait; illus., 7.5 x 5.25", rust-colored cloth, 462pp with index, extremities bumped and fraying, spine darkened with small abrasion, endpapers unevenly toned, waviness from damping on lower edge of textblock throught last third or so of book. Much later edition, but INSCRIBED AND SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR, JANE ADDAMS, AT TOP OF TITLE PAGE ("Jane Addams Hull House Chicago").
Published by The Macmillan Company, New York, 1930
Seller: Charles Agvent, est. 1987, ABAA, ILAB, Fleetwood, PA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. First Edition. Illustrated with drawings by Norah Hamilton and Morris Topchevsky. SIGNED by the author on the front endpaper: "'Compliments of the author'/Jane Addams/Hull-House/Chicago." Uncommon in dustwrapper. Jane Addams (1860-1935), American settlement house founder and social reformer, was born to a well-off family in Cedarsville, Illinois. Though she had hoped for a degree from Smith College, her father insisted she attend the Rockford Female Seminary. After graduation, she attended the Women's Medical College in Philadelphia but withdrew due to a chronic spinal illness. After a successful convalescence, she toured Europe in 1883 and 1887 where she was deeply affected by her experiences with the urban poor causing her to undertake a thorough study of the living conditions of the working poor. She vowed to create an American version of the settlement houses she had visited. In 1889, together with lifelong friend Helen Starr, she launched Hull House, a sanctuary offering physical, financial, medical, and legal protection to Chicago's urban underclass. By 1893 Addams had opened or inspired 40 other such local clubs, including nurseries, dispensaries and boarding houses, all based at Hull House and devoted to providing higher standards of care than had ever been offered to America's poor, predominantly female at this time. By the late 1890s Addams no longer had to self-fund her endeavors, but could depend on assistance from wealthy Chicago women. With such backing, Addams, along with Alice Hamilton, Julia Lathrop, and Edith and Grace Abbot, among others, effected not just change in their local community, but lobbied for legislative intervention. Due in large part to their efforts, Illinois passed its first factory inspection act in 1893 and Chicago established the first juvenile court in the United States in 1899; in addition, the succeeding years saw Hull House influence in political battles for child labor laws, limitation on working hours for women, improvement in welfare procedures, recognition of labor unions, protection of immigrants, compulsory school attendance, and industrial safety. Addams's battles occasioned opposition from conservative quarters, and her voluble opposition to the Great War won her no friends, but her local infamy was ultimately overwhelmed by her international reputation for pioneering good works. Addams's local community work led her into political activism on a national and even global scale: in 1909 she became the first female President of the National Conference of Charities and Corrections; in 1911, the first head of the National Federation of Settlements and Vice-President of the National American Women Suffrage Alliance (1922-14); and in 1912, a vocal member of the Roosevelt for President campaign. In 1915 Addams became Chairman of the Woman's Peace Party and President of the first Women's Peace Congress at the Hague; in 1919 she presided over the second Women's Peace Conference in Zurich, and remained its president until her death; and in 1920 she became a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union. During the following decade she pursued many of these causes with vigor and a degree of success. In 1931 Addams was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in forming the first Women's Peace Party, along with Nicholas Murray Butler. Today the most widely-read of her copious publications are her two memoirs, TWENTY YEARS AT HULL-HOUSE, published in 1910 and her most successful book then as it is now; and its less optimistic sequel, THE SECOND TWENTY YEARS AT HULL HOUSE, published in 1930. Slight offsetting to endpapers from dustwrapper. Bright, close to Fine in a lightly soiled, Very Good dustwrapper with some edgewear.
Published by Macmillan New York December, 1910
Seller: Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Signed. First Edition. FIRST edition, second printing. SIGNED and inscribed by social reformer Jane Addams on the front free endpaper. Inscribed to cleric and social reformer Samuel Barnett, whose Toynbee Hall inspired Hull-House: "To Canon Barnett / 'Comps of the author' / Jane Addams." Cover shows minor wear, rubbing, and bumped corners. Pages are lightly tanned and clean.
Published by The Macmillan Company, New York, 1911
Seller: Whitmore Rare Books, Inc. -- ABAA, ILAB, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Signed
Condition: Near Fine. Second edition. Inscribed by Jane Addams on the front free endpaper: "Affection of the author / Jane Addams / Hull-House / Chicago." Publisher's brick red cloth titled in gilt with onlaid color illustration of Hull House. xvii, 462, [2], [4, ads] pp., complete with twelve plates (including frontisportrait of Addams). Slight lean to lower board. Minor toning to a couple leaves and small open tear to fore-edge of preliminary blank. Small ink notation to lower pastedown. Still a Near Fine copy, clean and very bright, inscribed by Addams. Jane Addams' global advocacy for women's economic, educational, and social equality made her the first American woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. In her autobiography Twenty Years at Hull-House, Addams recounts her domestic activism as the founder of the second and most innovative settlement house in the United States. Originally conceived in 1889 as a space where women of privilege could share their knowledge in humanistic fields such as art, literature, and music with the less fortunate, Hull House rapidly transformed into a community support system where working women could learn practical job skills, obtain medical and legal services, and locate affordable housing. Addams' two decades working in Chicago ultimately inspired her to take a global approach to advocacy; and she founded the Women's League for Peace and Freedom in addition to serving as President of the Woman's Peace Party. This is the second edition, published in January 1911 and preceded by the first edition of November 1910. Krichmar 4411 (noting the first edition). Near Fine.
Published by The Macmillan Company, New York, 1910
Seller: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. First edition, first printing. Signed by Jane Addams and inscribed to a former owner on the front free endpaper. Bound in publisher's original brick red cloth stamped in gilt with illustrated onlay to upper board. Near Fine with light soiling and light wear to covers. Pages toned, front free endpaper lightly soiled, and several hinges throughout are slightly over-opened. Signed by the author, who is know as the mother of social work.
[Women History] [Social Activist] Jane Addams. "Twenty Years at Hull House." New York: Macmillan and Company, 1910. First edition Inscribed and signed by Jane Addams. on the front end page. Maroon cloth cover with gilt detail and a color plate image of Hull House, gilt spine. Wear and small losses to image on front cover, loss to upper left corner of spine. Cracks on inside front and back hindges. Portrait frontispiece of the author. Jane Addams' global advocacy for women's economic, educational, and social equality made her the first American woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. In her autobiography Twenty Years at Hull-House, Addams recounts her domestic activism as the founder of the second and most innovative settlement house in the U.S. Originally conceived in 1889 as a space where women of privilege could share their knowledge in humanistic fields such as art, literature, and music with the less fortunate, Hull House rapidly transformed into a community support system where working women could learn practical job skills, obtain medical and legal services, and locate affordable housing. Addams' two decades working in inner-city Chicago ultimately inspired her to take a global approach to advocacy; and she founded the Women's League for Peace and Freedom in addition to serving as President of the Woman's Peace Party.
Published by Hull House, Chicago, 1929
Seller: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Rare original letter signed and entirely in the hand of Jane Addams, presented with an original photograph also signed by her. On Hull House letterhead, the letter reads, "My dear Mr. Miller, I am very glad to send you one of my books. Faithfully yours Jane Addams May 2d 1929." In near fine condition. Double matted and framed. The entire piece measures 15 inches by 12.5 inches. "The mother of social work", Jane Addams co-founded one of America's most famous settlement houses, Hull House, in 1889 which would eventually become the residence of 25 women. The Hull House became a center for research, empirical analysis, study, and debate, as well as a pragmatic center for living in, and establishing good relations with, the neighborhood. Residents of Hull-house conducted investigations on housing, midwifery, fatigue, tuberculosis, typhoid, garbage collection, and truancy. Eventually, Hull House became a 13-building settlement complex, which included a playground and a summer camp (known as Bowen Country Club).
ADDAMS, Jane. Twenty Years at Hull-House with Autobiographical Notes. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1910. 1st ed. xvii,462pp. Portrait frontis., illus., plates. Orig. vellum-backed boards, T.e.g. Boards lightly scuffed, spine slightly darkened, else very good. Limited Autograph edition. One of 210 numbered copies signed by the author. Autograph letter from Addams tipped onto front free endpaper, dated 3 Dec. 1910, presenting this volume to "Dr. Ochsner" "as a slight expression of my gratitude." The ownership signature "A.J. Ochsner" is on the front pastedown. Albert J. Ochsner of Chicago was considered one of the finest surgeons in the United States and was one of the founders of the American College of Surgeons. Jane Addams founded in Chicago the second and most innovative settlement house in the country. From there, she became a leader of the worldwide women's movement and for global peace.
Seller: Herbst-Auktionen, Detmold, Germany
Signed
Autogrammkarte mit eigenhändiger Unterschrift, Ort und Datum "Columbia University December 31, 1923" in Tinte signiert, mit s/w-Reproporträtfoto unter dunkelgrünes Passepartout gerahmt (1 S. 4°) BEILAGE : Original-Briefumschlag dazu aus New York 1923 an den cubanischen Sammler Antonio Barreras (1904-73, kubanischer Schriftsteller und Anwalt (Verfassungsrechtler), gründete die Zeitschrift "Contemporary World" ) in La Habana (Havanna) (dito zum gleichen Preis : Brief (1 S. 4° mit gedrucktem Kopf und Adresse : Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) mit Ort, DAtum, eigenhändiger Unterschrift signiert New York City, December, 28, 1931 - an S.J. Woolf in New York, der ihm sein Buch mit Papers and sketches geschickt hatte).
Seller: Herbst-Auktionen, Detmold, Germany
Signed
Autogrammkarte, in Tinte schön mit Ort und Datum eigenhändig signiert Hull House, Chicago / Dec. 29 th 1929 - mit s/w-Reproporträt unter schwarzes Passepartout (4 to) gerahmt.
Seller: Main Street Fine Books & Mss, ABAA, Galena, IL, U.S.A.
Signed
This pioneering social worker, activist, philanthropist, suffragette, writer, founder of Chicago's famed Hull House, was the first American female to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize (1931); in 1910 she published her remarkable memoir, "Twenty Years at Hull-House." Handsome PS, heavy stock 8" X 10", n.p., n.y. Very good. Faintest of wear only. Well-known half-length portrait of the reformer in later years, taken by Moffett in 1924 (so noted in lower left corner of image), showing an unsmiling Addams gazing straight at the viewer. Along the blank lower margin, she pens, "Faithfully from Jane Addams," the ink lightening somewhat as the writing progresses. Quite attractive -- and scarce.
Seller: Herbst-Auktionen, Detmold, Germany
Signed
Eigenhändiger Brief (1 S. kl. 4° Doppelblatt, mit gedrucktem Kopf AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND LETTERS) in Tinte mit Ort, Datum, eigenhändiger Unterschrift signiert February, 11, 1926 - Glückwünsche an den Präsident der PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, President WILLIAM MILLIGAN SLOANE (1850-1928, American educator and historian), von 5 weiteren Mitgliedern der Academy zusätzlich signiert : ROBERT UNDERWOOD JOHNSON (1853-1937, n American writer and diplomat. His wife was Katharine Johnson), HAMLIN GARLAND (1860-1940, American novelist, poet, essayist, short story writer, Georgist , and psychical researcher ), CASS GILBERT (1859-1934, prominent American architect), THOMAS HASTINGS (1860-1929, American architect ) und ARCHER MILTON HUNTINGTON (1870-1955, philanthropist and for his scholarly works in the field of Hispanic Studies).