Jane Addams Burial Site
Death
Jane Addams, a social activist famous for her affiliation with Hull House in Chicago, died of cancer on May 21, 1935. Her death sparked a public outpouring of grief, with some commentators comparing her to Abraham Lincoln. Telegrams arrived by the hundreds, offering condolences from all over the world, including Japan, India, and England. One famous eulogy from Walter Lippmann stated, "She had infinite sympathy for common things without forgetfulness for those that are uncommon." A cartoon in the Chicago Herald and Examiner summed up her accomplishments as "carved in imperishable granite".
Burial
Before her death, the Episcopal Bishop of Washington, D.C. offered Addams burial in the National Cathedral, beside U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. Addams refused this offer and instead opted to be buried in the small family plot at the Cedarville Cemetery in her hometown of Cedarville, Illinois. Two days after her death, May 23, Addams' funeral was held in the courtyard of the Hull House; it was attended by thousands. Her body was transported by train to Freeport, Illinois where it was removed and taken to the Addams Homestead and then to Cedarville Cemetery for burial.
Grave
The Addams family plot is marked with an obelisk, in Cedarville Cemetery, a short distance from her birthplace at the John H. Addams Homestead. At Addams' request, her tombstone epitaph mentions her as associated with Hull House and the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, but neglects to mention her Nobel Peace Prize. Addams penned this epitaph herself.
In August 2004, the obelisk monument at the Addams family plot underwent a restoration, headed by Flachtemeier Monuments, a Freeport company. The monument restoration was funded by a donation from the Jane Addams Peace Association. Work included repairs to the monument's base, and the restablization of the marker.
Notes
- ^ Daniel, Catherine Lundy. "Hull House Incorporated: CEO," Hull-House Incorporated: The Professionalization of Social Work, January 2001, Trachtenberg Hypertext Extension, University of Virginia. Retrieved September 14, 2007.
- ^ Elshtain, Jean Bethke. The Jane Addams Reader, (Google Books), Basic Books: 2002, p. xxviii, (ISBN 0465019153). Retrieved September 14, 2007.
- ^ Klein, Maragaret. "Cedarville Cemetery," Cedarville: Birthplace of Jane Addams, June 2005, University of Illinois-Chicago. Retrieved September 14, 2007.
- ^ "Jane Addams," Jane Addams Trail, official site. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
- ^ Sklar, Kathryn, et al. Social Justice Feminists in the United States and Germany: A Dialogue in Documents: 1885–1933, Cornell University Press: 1998, p. 67, (ISBN 0801484693).. Retrieved September 14, 2007.
- ^ Klein, Maragaret. "Cedarville Cemetery: Virtual Tour," Cedarville: Birthplace of Jane Addams, June 2005, University of Illinois-Chicago. Retrieved September 14, 2007.