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John H. Addams

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John H. Addams
Member of theIllinois Senate
In office
1854–1870
Personal details
Born
John Huy Addams

July 12, 1822
Sinking Spring, Pennsylvania,U.S.
DiedAugust 17, 1881(aged 59)
Green Bay, Wisconsin,U.S.
Resting placeCedarville Cemetery,Cedarville, Illinois,U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Sarah Weber
Anna H. Haldeman
Children9, includingAliceandJane
Residence(s)John H. Addams Homestead,Cedarville, Illinois
OccupationMill owner
ProfessionBusinessman

John Huy Addams(July 12, 1822 – August 17, 1881) was a politician and businessman from theU.S. stateofIllinois.Addams was born inPennsylvaniain 1822, where he married Sarah Weber (1817–1863). In 1844 the couple moved toCedarville, Illinois,and he purchased the Cedar Creek Mill. Addams quickly became a successful businessman working as a director for two railroad companies and a bank president. He constructed a prominentFederal stylehome in 1854 which still stands today. He and his wife Sarah (Weber) Addams had nine children, includingAlice Haldemanand social activistJane Addams.

Addams became active in state politics and eventually served as an eight-termIllinois State Senator,from 1854 to 1870. In 1863, his wife, Sarah, died and he was remarried in 1868 to Anna Haldeman, herself a widow.[1]He was a key influence on his daughter Jane and part of the reason she focused so much attention on social causes. He died inGreen Bay, Wisconsin,while on a family vacation in 1881.

Early life[edit]

Social activist Jane Addams was born in the house at John Addams' Homestead in 1860.

John Huy Addams was born inSinking Spring, Pennsylvania,in on July 12, 1822.[2]He married Sarah Weber, five years his elder, while still living inKreidersville, Pennsylvania.[2]Both families, Addams and Weber, were from old Pennsylvanian lineage; Addams' ancestors had been granted land byWilliam Pennin the 17th century.[3]In 1844 Addams, then 22, and his new bride arrived inCedarville, Illinois,near theIllinois-Wisconsinstate border inStephenson County.[2][3][4]

Addams established himself quickly as a successful mill operator when he purchased the Cedar Creek Mill in 1844.[3][4]When the couple first arrived in Stephenson County they lived in a small two-room home with a loft. In 1854 Addams completed construction on an addition which made the Addams' home a much larger, prominentFederal stylehouse.[3][4]Though the couple had nine children, only four survived to adulthood; their eighth child wasNobel Peace PrizerecipientJane Addams,[5]born at the Addams House in Cedarville on September 6, 1860.[4]

In January 1863 Sarah Addams, then pregnant with her ninth child, went to assist in the delivery of a baby for the wagon-maker's wife.[2]During the birth, she collapsed and was carried home. Sarah's own baby was deliveredprematurelyand as a result,stillborn.[2]Sarah died a week later; Jane was just 2 years and 4 months old at the time of her mother's death.[2]Jane Addams was cared for mostly by her older sisters after 1863.[5]

Career[edit]

Business[edit]

A 1910 depiction of Addams' successful Cedar Creek Mill

Addams' milling business became one of the largest operations in northernIllinois,comprising asaw mill,linseed mill,andgrist millalong Cedar Creek on the Addams' property.[4]The mill also represented the start of Addams' successful business career. From 1864 until 1881 he was the president of the Second National Bank inFreeport, Illinois.Addams also served in directorships with theGalena and Chicago Union Railroadand theIllinois Central Railroad,he was also a founder of the Mutual Fire Insurance Company in 1867.[4]Addams achieved a level of local fame due to his many successful business ventures and was regarded as Stephenson County's most successful entrepreneur.[6]

Illinois State Senate and American Civil War[edit]

Addams served for sixteen years in theIllinois Senate,where he acquired a reputation for integrity; as one historian phrased it, "he became famous as a man who not only had never taken a bribe, but had never been offered one.[7]He participated in the founding of theRepublican Partyand was a friend ofAbraham Lincoln's.[7]

During theCivil War,Addams helped to raise and equip a regiment that became known as "the Addams Guard."[7]

Influence on Jane Addams[edit]

Jane Addamsstated that her father, John, was a primary influence in her life.[5]In her 1910 autobiography she described various ways in which she attempted to imitate her father, as well as establishing him as her primary influencer. She stated that her father was her reason for civic involvement and interest in the "moral concerns of life."[8] It was Addams' deep civic involvement that had such a profound influence on his daughter, Jane.[6]John Addams was active in the Cedarville School Board and a trustee of the Rockford Young Ladies' Seminary, later known asRockford College,where Jane would earn her undergraduate degree.[6]Besides his role in founding the state's Republican Party he was also one of the key individuals who helped bring the secondLincoln-Douglas Debateto Freeport.[6]

Late life and death[edit]

In 1867, four years after Sarah Addams' death, John H. Addams was remarried to Anna H. Haldeman. Haldeman was herself awidowwho brought two additional children of her own into the family. One of her sons, George, would also have a strong influence on Jane Addams.[5]

In early August 1881, Addams decided to take his family on a vacation in northwesternMichigan,where he planned to inspect some of theironandcopperore mines as potential investments; they left on August 4.[9]A week later John Addams became ill while climbing in an ore mine and the family decided to return home by train. They made it toGreen Bay, Wisconsin,before Addams was too sick to travel any further and the family booked a hotel room.[9]John H. Addams died suddenly of acuteappendicitison August 17, 1881, in the hotel in Green Bay at the age of 59.[5][9]His death came as a shock to his daughter Jane, and she spent eight years in a state of (or in depression) depression after his death.[5]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Anna Hostetter Haldeman Addams had been the wife of William Haldeman from 1847 to 1866. The two of them had four sons, includingHenry Winfield Haldeman,who in 1875 married Addams's daughterSarah Alice.
  2. ^abcdefLinn, James Weber.Jane Addams: A Biography,(Google Books), University of Illinois Press: 2000, p. 4, (ISBN0252069048). Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  3. ^abcdBerson, Robin Kadisson.Jane Addams: A Biography,(Google Books), Greenwood Press: 2004, pp. 1-2, (ISBN0313323542). Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  4. ^abcdef"John H. Addams Homestead[permanent dead link],"(PDF), National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form, HAARGIS Database,Illinois Historic Preservation Agency,pp. 1-8. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  5. ^abcdefFox, Richard Wrightman andKloppenberg, James T.A Companion to American Thought,(Google Books), Blackwell Publishing: 1995, p. 14, (ISBN0631206566). Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  6. ^abcdElshtain, Jean Bethke.Jane Addams and the Dream of American Democracy: A Life,(Google Books), Basic Books: 2002, pp. 2-3, (ISBN0465019129). Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  7. ^abcMenand, Louis(2001),The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America,New York:Farrar, Straus and Giroux,pp. 306–307,ISBN0-374-52849-7.
  8. ^Addams, Jane.Twenty Years at Hull-House: With Autobiographical Notes,(Google Books), The Macmillan Co: 1910, pp. 1-22. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  9. ^abcKnight, Louise W.Citizen: Jane Addams and the Struggle for Democracy,(Google Books), University of Chicago Press: 2005, p. 114, (ISBN0226446999). Retrieved 20 August 2007.