National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers

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The National Federation of Settlements (NFS) was founded in 1911 by leaders in the settlement house movement, including Jane Addams, Graham Taylor, and Robert A. Woods. The NFS was a social welfare organization devoted to the promotion and improvement of the settlement movement throughout the United States. The social settlement was based on the idea that those who wanted to help the poor would live ("settle") in the neighborhoods that they hoped to improve, often in a building purchased or donated by a benefactor. Often, settlement workers were young, female graduates of education and nursing programs or women's colleges. They endeavored to improve the lives of their working class, often immigrant, neighbors though social reform, educational programs, health services, and "friendly example" or "uplift." The Federation worked with member settlements to strengthen and develop their programs and the well-being of their surrounding neighborhoods, to represent settlement concerns in public affairs, and to educate the public about social issues affecting neighborhoods. The NFS renamed itself the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers in 1949. In 1979, the Federation's name was changed again to United Neighborhood Centers of America (UNCA). UNCA continues to advocate nationally for social legislation and work with local member agencies to address social problems at the neighborhood level.

From the description of National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, 1891-1984. (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis). WorldCat record id: 436028046

The National Federation of Settlements was founded in 1911 by leaders in the settlement-house movement, including Jane Addams, Graham Taylor, and Robert A. Woods. The NFS is dedicated to working with member settlements to strengthen and develop their programs and the well-being of their surrounding neighborhoods, to represent them in public affairs, and to educate the public about social issues affecting neighborhoods. The NFS renamed itself the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers in 1949: in 1979, the name was changed again to United Neighborhood Centers of America.

From the description of National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, supplement 1, 1897-1978. (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis). WorldCat record id: 63300277

As the association devoted to the coordination and improvement of settlement work in the United States, the NFSNC worked with member houses in efforts to improve neighborhood conditions and press for social reform. Topics found in the collection include child welfare, civil rights, housing, political reform, public health, promotion of music and drama, and unemployment.

From the description of National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, 1891-1965. (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis). WorldCat record id: 63313632

Founded in 1911 by Jane Addams, the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers worked to solve social problems through local development and community involvement. In 1979, the Federation changed its name to the United Neighborhood Centers of America, Inc. (UNCA), though its mandate remained the same.

From the description of National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records 1944-2001 (inclusive). (University of Chicago Library). WorldCat record id: 648000235

From the guide to the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. Records, 1944-2001, (Special Collections Research Center University of Chicago Library 1100 East 57th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 U.S.A.)

The National Federation of Settlements (NFS) was founded in 1911 by leaders in the settlement house movement, including Jane Addams, Graham Taylor, and Robert A. Woods. The NFS was a social welfare organization devoted to the promotion and improvement of the settlement movement throughout the United States. The social settlement was based on the idea that those who wanted to help the poor would live (“settle”) in the neighborhoods that they hoped to improve, often in a building purchased or donated by a benefactor. Often, settlement workers were young, female graduates of education and nursing programs or women’s colleges. They endeavored to improve the lives of their working class, often immigrant, neighbors though social reform, educational programs, health services, and "friendly example" or “uplift.” The Federation worked with member settlements to strengthen and develop their programs and the well-being of their surrounding neighborhoods, to represent settlement concerns in public affairs, and to educate the public about social issues affecting neighborhoods. The NFS renamed itself the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers in 1949. In 1979, the Federation's name was changed again to United Neighborhood Centers of America (UNCA). UNCA continues to advocate nationally for social legislation and work with local member agencies to address social problems at the neighborhood level.

The NFS developed out of nearly 20 years of growing inter-agency cooperation and informal conferences. As early as 1892, pioneers in the U.S. settlement movement met to share their experiences, hopes, and enthusiasm, and collaborated on national issues of concern to them and their neighborhoods. Seventeen settlement leaders who met in New York City in 1908 took initial steps toward forming the NFS. Instrumental at this meeting, and in later years, were Jane Addams, Gaylord S. White, Robert A. Woods, Albert J. Kennedy, Graham Taylor, and Lillian D. Wald. After two years of planning and fund raising, the NFS was launched in June, 1911, at a meeting attended by roughly 200 delegates from settlement houses around the U.S. Jane Addams of Hull House in Chicago became the first president of the new organization. Its first executive secretary, Robert Archey Woods, was associated with Boston's South End House. New York settlement leaders John L. Elliott, Lillian Wald, and Mary K. Simkhovitch also played prominent roles in the new organization. Despite its small and largely voluntary staff, the emerging Federation quickly became involved in a host of progressive social issues that concerned its members. The Federation's general policy, as stated in its 1920 articles of incorporation, was: to federate the social settlements, neighborhood houses and similar institutions for the purpose of promoting the welfare of the settlements and the neighborhoods in which they were located; to encourage the development and maintenance of settlements in cooperation with neighborhood residents; to organize conferences, groups and studies; to cooperate with private and governmental agencies; to consider and act upon public matters of interest to settlements and their neighbors and to act in an advisory capacity to settlements and neighborhood houses.

Many early NFS initiatives anticipated continuing activities in the decades that followed. Influential in the 1912 founding of the United States Children's Bureau, the Federation would later express a repeated interest in day care services (1942, 1965-67, 1971-72). Its early report, Young Working Girls (1913), foreshadowed such subsequent NFSNC initiatives as the 1962-1965 series of Training Center courses on youth employment. Its 1917 resolution in favor of national health insurance was reiterated by comparative studies of the British health system in 1938 and, again, in 1954. Its 1920 conference focus on housing anticipated the formation of an NFS Housing Division in 1933 and its major report on public housing in1955.

Early social meliorism was dampened by concerns regarding the potentially explosive immigrant areas that settlements served and by efforts to provide special wartime services during World War I. During the 1920s, a more individual and cultural focus in settlement work joined the social and political emphasis of the preceding decade. A Music Division was founded in 1922; a Dramatics Division appeared in 1926; and in 1930 the trend culminated in the creation of a Division of Visual Arts. But the cultural emphasis did not completely preclude continuing social involvement. In fact, the 1926 report, Settlement Goals for the Next Third of a Century, placed primary emphasis less on arts projects than on the need to transform charity into social education and action. In keeping with this insight, the Federation produced major studies of prohibition (1927) and unemployment (1930-1931).

In the 1930s, the NFS pressured New Deal officials to pursue progressive measures in employment, social security, and labor policies. Internally, the organization struggled with the consequences of the Great Depression. It recognized the financial hardships affecting its members, who were often on the "front lines" in dealing with the results of the Depression. Consequently, it waived delinquent membership dues. In spite of this measure, and though it was attempting to broaden its membership base, the Federation retained only 160 of the 230 houses that were members in 1930. NFS also lost its constituency of music school settlements during the 1930s and failed to include a significant number of African American settlements, which were represented by the National Urban League.

The 1930s also saw a significant change in leadership. Early NFS executives, Robert A. Woods (1911-1922) and Albert J. Kennedy (1923-1933), were replaced by Lillie M. Peck (1934-1945), whose career was heavily identified with international initiatives on the part of the Federation. NFS had been involved in the formation of a parallel International Federation of Settlements (IFS) in 1921. A string of international conferences in the 1920s and 1930s was interrupted by World War II, but contacts were resumed almost immediately after peace was declared. Lillie Peck became the first postwar president of the IFS (1949-1951) and the organization once again had American leadership from 1963 to 1971, when NFS executive Margaret Berry presided. NFSNC arranged for reciprocal visits of social workers; for cooperation with the United Nations, especially UNESCO; and maintained contacts with a growing number of international settlements.

At home, the Federation continued with social action on employment and economic planning (1944-1946), a committee on housing (1955-1958), and concerted lobbying on juvenile delinquency (1956-1957). During World War II and the Korean War, services to temporary residents near military facilities or to military personnel was an area of vital concern. Under the directorship of John McDowell (1946-1958), the Federation strengthened its ties with religious-based settlement work. It also developed its educational outreach and professional recruiting functions. In 1949, NFS changed its name to the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers (NFSNC).

By the late 1950s, NFSNC was pursuing a host of new issues, best articulated in the report of the 1958 Arden House Conference, Neighborhood Goals in a Rapidly Changing World . Education for settlement workers was also important. Federation staff conducted workshops for settlement executives, program directors, and departmental supervisors. It also held institutes conducted by schools of social work with the cooperation of national agencies. In addition, the NFSNC conducted miscellaneous seminars on topics of interest to settlement workers. The late 1950s also saw the institutionalization of the NFSNC educational function in the formation of the NFSNC training center, located initially at Hull House in Chicago. Between 1960 and 1971, the center trained nearly 2000 settlement workers on a wide variety of social problems and administrative skills.

NFSNC's small staff of about seven full-time professional workers provided a variety of field services to a membership of some 255 member houses and city federations. Experienced professional personnel visited communities that had, or wanted to establish, settlements. On these visits, the NFSNC personnel met with the local settlement workers to exchange information about current programs, appraise the local programs, and to suggest plans of action. They also met with other local figures, such as the heads of community chests and city planning councils, regarding settlement work. In addition, the field representatives screened centers that were prospective members in the NFSNC. Staff also prepared special studies of individual houses or cities, usually a few each year on request of the local agencies. These studies were used to determine locations for new facilities, to appraise services, or to resolve administrative or programmatic issues.

Social education and action were a major function of the NFSNC. This involved providing information on social issues and legislation of special concern to settlements, coordinating local settlement studies of social conditions, and publishing the study findings. The NFSNC employed a research consultant who prepared maps, population data, city planning reports, housing data, and reports on existing social welfare studies for many of the Federation's members. These were used in self studies and field reports. The Federation also worked with other national groups, such as the advisory committees of Community Chests, the National Conference of Social Work, and the Consumers National Federation.

In 1959, The appointment of a new director, Margaret Berry, coincided with a shift in Federation priorities to racial and economic justice. Settlements participated in many of the major struggles of the Civil Rights movement. NFSNC's Race Relations Project produced a major report in 1967, just as the tenor of the times changed to a note of interracial confrontation. The 1969, the NFSNC "Techniculture" conference brought to a head the demands of settlements' constituencies of color for greater community control of Federation affairs. The "techniculture" movement reflected trends in the wider society, responding to complex War on Poverty bureaucracies and the professional remoteness of a non-resident settlement staff. Ultimately, the movement accomplished most of its major goals in the years from 1969 to 1971, culminating in the 1972 appointment of the Federation's first non-white executive director, Walter Smart. Meanwhile, in a more traditional mold, NFSNC channeled settlement aid to a number settlements with minority constituencies in the South during its Mississippi Project.

The social frictions of the late 1960s and the economic problems of the early 1970s cut into NFSNC's base of financial support, leading to serious administrative problems. However, the Federation continued to press for social and economic justice. Its Poverty Program Committee produced a federally funded study of the War on Poverty and community organization strategies in 34 communities in 1968. Beginning in 1972, Walter Smart advocated, with some success, for economic development programs in the minority business community. Once again, the perennial issue of housing returned as a priority item. The Federation also devoted considerable energy to advising its members on strategies for obtaining federal funding. Throughout the 1970s, there was a proliferation of programs involving federal agencies and supported by federal funding. These projects involved such issues as teenage parents, training programs for the elderly and teenagers, and juvenile justice.

A more complete account of the Federation is available from Peter Romanofsky, ed., "National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers" in Social Service Organizations ( Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Institutions, 1978) vol. 2, pages 533-540.

From the guide to the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, 1891-1984, (University of Minnesota Libraries. Social Welfare History Archives [swha])

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records 1944-2001 (inclusive). University of Chicago Library
creatorOf United Neighborhood Centers of America. Miscellaneous publications, 1944- University of Chicago Library
referencedIn Harleigh B. Trecker Papers., undated, 1921-1981. Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.
referencedIn Friendship House Association (Washington, D.C.). Other organizations series, 1923-1981 (bulk 1960-1975) George Washington University
referencedIn Taylor, Lea Demarest, 1883-1975. Lea Demarest Taylor collection, 1894-1969. University of Illinois at Chicago Library, UIC
referencedIn Northwestern University Settlement Association General Administrative Records, 1892-1995 Northwestern University Archives
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, supplement 2, 1894-1984. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. Letter, 1944, to Lewis Mumford. University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt Library
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. [Miscellaneous pamphlets, programs, etc.]. Chicago History Museum
referencedIn Northwestern University Settlement Association Clubs and Classes Attendance and Registration Cards, 1886-1953 Northwestern University Archives
referencedIn Central Seattle Community Council Federation records, 1945-1984 University of Washington Libraries Special Collections
referencedIn Fischer, Greta. Greta Fischer papers relating to Kloster-Indersdorf displaced children's center and to UNRRA's postwar work in Europe letters reports name lists photographs map memoranda. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, 1891-1984. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn Northwestern University Settlement Association. Northwestern University Settlement Association general administrative records, 1892-1995. Northwestern University
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, supplement 1, 1897-1978. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn Helen Hall papers, 1898-1982 University of Minnesota Libraries. Social Welfare History Archives
referencedIn North East Neighborhood House records., 1889-1961, 2002-2003. Minnesota Historical Society
creatorOf West Side Community House (Cleveland, Ohio). Records 1890-1973. Western Reserve Historical Society, Research Library
referencedIn Phyllis Wheatley Community Center (Minneapolis, Minn.). Organizational records, 1924-1977. Minnesota Historical Society, Division of Archives and Manuscripts
referencedIn Hall, Helen, 1892-1982. Papers, 1898-1982. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn Hall, Helen, 1892-1982. Helen Hall Papers, 1898-1982. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements: [microfilm], 1897-1965. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers : [microfilm] : 1899-1958. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn East Side Neighborhood Services, Inc. (Minneapolis, Minn.). North East Neighborhood House records, 1889-1961, 2002-2003. Minnesota Historical Society Library
referencedIn Unitarian Service Committee. Administrative Records, 1948-1953 Andover-Harvard Theological Library
referencedIn Taylor, Lea Demarest, 1883-1975. Lea Taylor papers, 1901-1967. Chicago History Museum
referencedIn Hillman, Arthur, 1909-. Papers, 1930-1965. University of Illinois at Chicago Library, UIC
referencedIn Records, 1890-1950. Houghton Library
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, 1891-1965. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers records, 1891-1984 University of Minnesota Libraries. Social Welfare History Archives
referencedIn Central Seattle Community Council Federation (Seattle, Wash.). Central Seattle Community Council Federation records, 1945-1984. University of Washington. Libraries
referencedIn National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. Training Center. National Federation of Settlements, Training Center at Hull-House records, 1960-1972. Chicago History Museum
creatorOf National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers. Records, 1944-2001 Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library,
Role Title Holding Repository
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
United States
United States
United States
United States
Subject
Community development
Community organization
Music
Social settlements
Social settlements
Social settlements
Social settlements
Social group work
Social group work
Social group work
Social service
Social service
Urban renewal
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1897

Active 1978

Information

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