On Equal Terms: Educating Women at the University of Chicago
Web Exhibits - Special Collections Research Center The University of Chicago Library
  • Introduction

  • Envisioning a Place for Women at the University
  • Marion Talbot - Dean of Women
  • The Debate Over Sex Segregation
  • Women's Academics
  • Housing Women on Campus
  • Women's Clubs
  • Women's Athletics and Physical Culture
  • Ida Noyes Hall - A Center for Women on Campus
  • Social Life
  • Home Economics
  • Alumnae Club and Early Women Graduates
  • Women's Philanthropy and Social Settlements
  • Women's Politics and the Welfare State
  • Women in the Era of World Wars
  • Courtship and Dating at Mid-Century
  • Married Women and the Postwar University
  • Expansion of Student Housing
  • Faculty Wives' Dinners
  • Postwar Student Movements
  • "Second-Wave" Feminism on Campus
  • Women's Health and Abortion Rights
  • "The Women Question in Acadamia"
  • Women's Place in the University, Revisited
  • Student Life Today

  • Exhibit Checklist
  • About this Exhibit
  • Rights and Reproductions

Women's Philanthropy and Social Settlements

Philanthropy and community service provided opportunities for women graduates and faculty wives to remain connected to the University.  These initiatives also solidified social and professional networks and addressed pressing community needs.  The major campus philanthropic organization, the exclusively female Settlement League, was formed in 1895 to support the University of Chicago Settlement House. The wife of the University President served as the honorary leader of the League, while the settlement workers lived amidst residents. 

Like Hull House, the University Settlement was located in an impoverished neighborhood to the west of campus populated by unskilled industrial workers.  According to the League's president, Mary MacDowell, the Back of the Yards neighborhood "doubles its population in a decade and changes its nationality every fifteen years."  The settlement house aimed to improve neighborhood conditions through education and reform and to help immigrants adjust to life in the United States. 

The Settlement League included women faculty, faculty wives, students and alumnae.  Early League members provided many services to settlement house residents, from leading classes and trips to the countryside to building a library and mending residents' clothes.  By the 1910s, the League took on a more indirect role, sending money and donated goods to the settlement house instead of volunteers.  After World War II, the Service League maintained its philanthropic spirit, but shifted its organizational focus toward service work in the University's own Hyde Park neighborhood.

7 7. University Settlement Exterior, n.d. Archival Photographic Files.
8. Settlement Library, n.d. Archival Photographic Files. 8. Settlement Library, n.d. Archival Photographic Files.

League members conducted book drives to bring used books from Hyde Park to the Settlement library.

9. Sewing class at the University of Chicago Settlement Trade School, 1918. Archival Photographic Files. 9. Sewing class at the University of Chicago Settlement Trade School, 1918. Archival Photographic Files.
On Equal Terms: Educating Women at the University of Chicago. Monica Mercado and Katherine Turk.
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