Julia Lathrop

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Julia Clifford Lathrop (born June 29, 1858 – died April 15, 1932), was an American social reformer, a pioneer in the fields of child welfare and public welfare administration, and the first president of the Federal Children’s Bureau.

Life

Julia Lathrop was born in Rockford, Illinois, the first of five children of William Lathrop, prominent politician who helped establish the Republican Party and served in the state legislature (1856-57) and Congress (1877-79). He considered himself abolitionist and a supporter of women’s rights. Inevitably he influenced his daughter’s views on different social issues.

In 1876 Lathrop enrolled into Rockford Female Seminary where she met Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr. After graduating from Vassar College in 1880, she worked in her father's law office for 10 years. During that time her interest in various reform movements grew stronger, until she finally decided to move to Chicago.

In 1890 Lathrop moved to Chicago where she joined Jane Addams, Ellen Gates Starr, Alzina Stevens, Edith Abbott, Grace Abbott, Florence Kelley, Mary McDowell, Alice Hamilton, Sophonisba Breckinridge and other social reformers at Hull House. Soon she founded the Hull House Plato Group, a discussion group which met every Sunday afternoon to discuss on religious topics and current issues in the society. Lathrop quickly became core member of the Hull House Settlement.

In 1893 Lathrop was appointed as the first ever woman member of the Illinois State Board of Charities. She served there until 1909, working on raising the standards of care for the handicapped in state institutions. She introduced reforms such as the appointment of female doctors in state hospitals, and the removal of the insane from the state workhouses. Lathrop was also responsible for establishing, in 1899 in Chicago, the first juvenile court in the world, and setting up a psychiatric clinic for young offenders.

Lathrop became one of the most active members of the Hull House. She participated in Chicago Women's Club, was a trustee of the Immigrants' Protection League, and a member of the National League of Women Voters.

The women at Hull House were active in the campaign to persuade Congress to pass legislation to protect children. In 1912 President William Taft appointed Lathrop as the first head of the newly created Children's Bureau in the United States Department of Labor. She moved to Washington, D.C. Over the next nine years Lathrop directed research into child labor, infant mortality, mother mortality, juvenile delinquency, mothers' pensions and illegitimacy. In 1921 she helped pass the Sheppard-Towner Act, which provided federal aid to states to advance care for mothers and their children

Lathrop left the Children’s Bureau in 1922, and moved to her sister in Rockford, Illinois. She became active in the National Committee of Mental Illness, working on public awareness of mental illness as medical disorder. In 1925 Lathrop was appointed the member on advisory team to the Child Welfare Committee established by the League of Nations, and fought against the capital punishment for juveniles.

Julia Lathrop died in Rockford, on April 15, 1932.

Work

Julia Lathrop spent her whole life, altogether more than 50 years, as a social activist and reformer, advocating for the better quality of life of women, children, immigrants, mentally ill, and many other minority groups of society. Among her most important contribution is the establishment of the Federal Children’s Bureau, which recognized that children have rights, regarding education, workplace, court, and in home.

Lathrop became head of Children’s Bureau in 1912. Her first mission there, as she put it ahead of herself, was to raise the awareness of infant and maternal mortality. She conducted series of local studies that collected information on the rates of mortality in the United States. Lathrop formed volunteer groups of women, who went to the neighborhood and knocked door-to-door to collect necessary data. The results of the study were devastating – they showed that U.S. had one of the highest rates of infant and maternal mortality among all industrialized countries.

"We do not know how many children are born each year or how many die or why they die. We need statistics of nativity and mortality. Homeless and neglected children are going to be better cared for, because we are going to do more for all children as we begin to know more about the problems of childhood in general." (Lathrop, 1912).

Lathrop realized that women and children were dying from things that could be prevented - unsanitary conditions, contaminated water and the lack of adequate health care. She devised a series of brochures with information for mothers of how to prevent complications during and after pregnancy. She also started educational campaigns to help women learn proper prenatal care and proper nutrition for babies. Her effort resulted in the 1920 Shepherdtowner Maternity and Infancy Act, which became a model for other social welfare laws in this area.

Lathrop also fought for women’s rights to be full-time mothers. She believed that laboring whole day for wages prevented women from spending time on rearing of their children. She advocated for government or community support in providing funds that would allow mothers to spend more time at home with their children.

Another agenda on Lathrop’s schedule was the problem of child labor. It was a rather controversial issue, on which Americans at the time were deeply divided. Through her effort the Federal Child Labor Law was brought in 1916, which regulated children’s work. However, the law was invalidated two years later by the Supreme Court, and Lathrop’s fight continued.

Lathrop advocated for the establishment of facilities that would separately house people who were mentally ill, sick, aged, or disabled, contrary to the practice used in her time, when one facility would collectively house all those groups.

Lathrop’s social engagement was not without criticism. Accept from being a woman working in a traditionally oriented patriarchal society of Victorian era United States, she came under fire for touching the questions of child labor and women’s rights. They accused her of being a Communist supporter who tried to bring communist ideas into U.S. The most painful criticism however came from other women, who claimed that Lathrop was not competent to advocate for children and mothers, because she herself has never had any children.

Legacy

Julia Lathrop was an important figure in numerous social reforms, inducing changes like the improvement in the care for the mentally ill, reduction of child labor, raising of the awareness of infant mortality, and many others. Through her effort first juvenile court in the world was established in 1899 in Chicago.

Lathrop was vital in bringing up the issue of keeping the accurate statistical records. She and her volunteer network improved the collection of birth and death records in the U.S. and raised the awareness of the need of keeping up those records accurate.

Through her election as the director of the Federal Child’s Bureau, Lathrop became the first woman on the head of one Federal agency, on that way paving the path for other women to come.

Publications

  • Lathrop, Julia C. 1905. Suggestions for visitors to county poorhouses and to other public charitable institutions. Public Charities Committee of the Illinois Federation of Women's Clubs
  • Lathrop, Julia C. 1917. Shall this country economize for or against its children? National Education Association of the United States.
  • Lathrop, Julia C. 1918. Provision for the care of the families and dependents of soldiers and sailors. Academy of Political Science
  • Lathrop, Julia C. 1972. The United States Children's Bureau. Arno Press. ISBN 0405059884

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Addams, Jane. 2004. My friend, Julia Lathrop. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252071689
  • Glowacki, Peggy & Hendry, Julia. 2004. Hull-House. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0738533513
  • Morin, Isobel. 1995. Women chosen for public office. The Oliver Press. ISBN 188150820X
  • Smith, Karen M. 1998. New Paths to Power: American Women 1890-1920. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195124057
  • Stebner, Eleanor. 1997. The women of Hull House: A study in spirituality, vocation, and friendship. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791434885

External links

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