Twenty years at Hull-house, with autobiographical notes . nnot limit Its friends to any one political partyor economic school. The Settlement casts aside none of those thingswhich cultivated men have come to consider reason-able and goodly, but It Insists that those belongas well to that great body of people who, becauseof toilsome and underpaid labor, are unable toprocure them for themselves. Added to this Is aprofound conviction that the common stock ofintellectual enjoyment should not be difficult ofaccess because of the economic position of him whowould approach it, that those best results
Twenty years at Hull-house, with autobiographical notes . nnot limit Its friends to any one political partyor economic school. The Settlement casts aside none of those thingswhich cultivated men have come to consider reason-able and goodly, but It Insists that those belongas well to that great body of people who, becauseof toilsome and underpaid labor, are unable toprocure them for themselves. Added to this Is aprofound conviction that the common stock ofintellectual enjoyment should not be difficult ofaccess because of the economic position of him whowould approach it, that those best results ofcivilization upon which depend the finer and freeraspects of living must be Incorporated into ourcommon life and have free mobility through allelements of society If we would have our democracyendure. SOCIALIZED EDUCATION 453 The educational activities of a Settlement, aswell as Its philanthropic, civic, and social under-takings, are but differing manifestations of theattempt to socialize democracy, as Is the very exist-ence of the Settlement INDEX Abbott, Grace, , John H., early impressions of, i. imitation of, 9. social views of, 13. religious discussion with, 14. discussion on death with, 20. cosmopolitanism of, 21. sense of fellowship with, 22. his estimate of Lincoln, 23. member of State Senate, 30. letters of Lincoln to, 31. address to Old Settlers meeting, 35. death of, , Bronson, , Governor, 206, , Sunday school, 91. his solution of injustice, 180. a safe type of, 185. newspaper editor arrested, 403, 406. attitude of Chicago police toward, 413-Anarchy, cure for, 178. and Hull-House, 412. attitude of public toward, 407, 411. dying down of, House, Law, , quotation from, , , 421. B Ball, Sidney, , Canon, reasons for Living in a Settlement,112. founder of Toynbee Hall, 121. warden of Toynbee Hall, 139. views on tainted money, 140. visit to Hull-House,
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