Chapter 5: Pg.14
place-names. ) Her father was the Cedarville miller, John Huy Addams,
a Quaker immigrant to Illinois from Pennsylvania. He was a hardworking, rather austere man with a reputation for strict honesty who
eventually extended his business operations into railroads, banks, and
a life insurance company. A political associate of Lincoln, he served
sixteen years in the Illinois legislature, from 1854 to 1870. His wife
Sarah, Jane Addamss mother, died of a fall and subsequent complications in childbirth in 1863. The child was her ninth; five survived her:
Mary, seventeen; Martha, thirteen; James Weber, ten; Alice, nine;
and Jane, two. Martha died of typhoid fever three years later, a shattering event at the time for Addams but suppressed, like many other
personal sorrows, in Twenty Years at Hull-House, where she identifies
her "first direct contact with death" as the death of her old nurse, Polly
Bear, when Addams was fifteen. Addams herself had a number of illnesses in childhood, the most serious of which was spinal tuberculosis,
which left her with a curved spine, a pigeon-toed walk, and her head
cocked to one side, defects of which she was perhaps overconscious.
John Addams, five years after the death of his first wife, married
Anna Haldeman Addams, a widow with two children, Harry, eighteen, and George, seven. Anna Addams was an intelligent, strongwilled woman who read hooks and played the piano, ran her new
household rigidly, and insisted upon a level of culture and even elegance unusual in small-town Illinois at the time.
Jane Addams was hound by what she called "the family claim" to an
extent that she does not reveal in Twenty Years at Hull-House, andprobably she could not tactfully have revealed it in 1910. Her relationship with her stepmother was tense and troubled and remained so
until Anna Addams died at the age of ninety-three. Her oldest sister,
Mary, married a Presbyterian minister named John Linn about the
time her father remarried. Always in fragile health, she died in 1894,
leaving four children and a husband who could not take care of them.
Jane took over major responsibility for the children and became the
legal guardian of the youngest. Alice Addams married her stepbrother
Harry Haldeman when she was twenty-two, over the strong objections
of both their parents. Harry became a brilliant surgeon hut abandoned
medicine to become a banker in Kansas; after his premature death
Alice took over the bank and ran it successfully for many years. Addams
had comparatively little contact with Harry and Alice in later years,