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263:. The latter role included touring and speaking throughout the country. After Theodore Roosevelt endorsed women's suffrage in his 1912 independent bid for president, Bowen campaigned for him. In 1916, she organized a march of 5,000 women through pouring rain to the Republican National Convention, arriving dramatically just after a speaker had said that women did not want the vote. Along with other upper-class women in leadership positions in the Illinois suffrage movement, Bowen's role as leader and spokesperson helped give the movement legitimacy and was an important factor in the success of Illinois suffrage in 1913.
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247:, Bowen became its first president. Through this position, which she held for 35 years, Bowen authored numerous studies, including a 1913 report called âThe Colored People of Chicago,â in which she detailed "racial prejudice and discrimination in education, employment, housing, law enforcement, and entertainment.â
156:. She made substantial financial donations to numerous organizations, raised funds from her association with Chicago's elite families, and while not trained as a social worker, she served in the field as a competent and respected policy maker and administrator. She worked with the settlement movement at
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Bowen received considerable recognition for her public service during her lifetime, including being honored as a citizen-fellow of the
Chicago Institute of Medicine in 1939 for her long service to hospitals and health organizations, and receiving the first Gold Medal for Distinguished Service awarded
242:
Soon, "Bowen succeeded
Lathrop as the groupâs top officer, and during Bowenâs seven-year tenure the Court Committee procured the salaries of probation officers, administered the civil service exam used to select probation officers, investigated complaints of neglect, sat in juvenile court to advise
168:
organizations. A primary passion of hers was the reform of dance halls in
Chicago. At the end of her 94 years, she had provided care to the impoverished and disenfranchised through her extensive public service and activism, especially attending to "the welfare and betterment of women, children, and
213:
to lead the settlement house's Women's Club. She soon became a Hull House trustee and treasurer, holding the latter position for 53 years. She was a major donor and the primary fundraiser for the organization. She built a Boys' Club building, and in 1912, she endowed a summer camp for Hull House's
274:
she recounts how she "collected all my arguments regarding women working at night" and personally appealed to
International Harvester Company president Cyrus H. McCormick regarding poor working conditions for women and the need for a minimum wage for women in his company's twine mills.
291:
of
Chicago from 1914â1924. "Beginning with her presidency, the Woman's City Club's views on public policy were sought out by both city of Chicago and Cook County officials." She also served as vice president of the United Charities of Chicago. "During
315:, already in retirement, she continued her activism, which had remained largely unchanged despite major social and political disruption. In fact, the post-war period saw rising affluence, rapid growth of suburban living, among other achievements.
266:
After women got the vote, Bowen worked to register women voters and encourage womenâs participation through voting and running for office. She herself almost ran for the Cook County Board and for mayor of
Chicago.
185:
pioneers, DeKoven was an only child with a large inheritance; she was raised with the expectation that she should give back to her community. Her community service as an adult began at
703:
222:). Bowen continued her association with Hull House for the remainder of her professional life; after Jane Addams died in 1935, Bowen was Hull House board president for nine years.
340:
Bowen married the banker, Joseph Tilton Bowen, in 1886. Their four children were John DeKoven Bowen (b. 1887); Joseph T. Bowen (b. 1889); Helen
Hadduck Bowen (1890â1972), wife of
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movement in
Illinois, serving as president of the Chicago Equal Suffrage Association, vice president of the Illinois Suffrage Association, and auditor of the
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201:
Bowen's civic involvement extended to secular organizations throughout the city of
Chicago, and to leadership positions at both state and national levels.
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Council of
Defense," using her network of women activists to coordinate the war efforts of womenâs organizations throughout the state. By appointment of
165:
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opened in Chicago in 1899. The Juvenile Court Committee of Chicago helped monitor the new court system, and was part of what was known as the
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Born in 1859 in Chicago, Illinois, Louise DeKoven Bowen's parents were Helen Hadduck and John deKoven, a banker. In 1875, she graduated from
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Bowen also used her influence as a corporate stockholder to influence policy and treatment of workers. In her autobiographical account,
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189:, where she taught Sunday School and established a boys' club. Though she became frustrated with the limitations for women within the
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234:, other reformers, and the Chicago Bar Association, Bowen âsuccessfully lobbied for a new juvenile court in Chicago.â This
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Louise DeKoven Bowen's papers are part of the Richard J. Daley Library Special Collections and University Archives at the
186:
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judges, and established a juvenile detention home." When the Juvenile Court Committee was reorganized in 1907 into the
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146:; February 26, 1859 – November 9, 1953) was an American philanthropist, civic leader, social reformer, and
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344:; and Louise DeKoven Bowen (b. 1892). Bowen died of a stroke in 1953 in Chicago and is buried in
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The Oxford History of Anglicanism, Volume IV: Global Western Anglicanism, c. 1910-present
806:. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press (published 1926). pp. 158â159.
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The Transformation of the Woman Suffrage Movement: The Case of Illinois, 1850-1920
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Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary
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612:"In Memoriam: Louise DeKoven Bowen 1859-1953; Harriet Vittum 1872-1953".
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Bowen's numerous additional civic roles included the presidency of the
209:
In 1894 Bowen first became involved in Hull House after being asked by
902:(Public domain ed.). Howard-Severance Company. 1922. p. 185.
150:. She was born to a wealthy family and raised with a strong sense of
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625:
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Policing Women: The Sexual Politics of Law Enforcement and the LAPD
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The Westminster Handbook to Women in American Religious History
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Women Building Chicago 1790-1990. A Biographical Dictionary
450:
Women Building Chicago 1790-1990. A Biographical Dictionary
495:"The Blairsâand the Bowens Fort Dearborn to Astor Street"
307:, she was the official representative of the US at the
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508:
710:. University of Illinois at Chicago. Archived from
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324:to a woman by the Rotary Club of Chicago in 1941.
515:Lindley, Susan Hill; Stebner, Eleanor J. (2008).
828:"Louise DeKoven Bowen 1859â1953 Social reformer"
738:Poe, Cynthia R. (1999). "Louise DeKoven Bowen".
27:American philanthropist and activist (1859â1953)
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576:Sicherman, Barbara; Green, Carol Hurd (1980).
469:. Northwestern University Press. p. 40.
376:Safeguards for City Youth at Work and at Play
8:
751:
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521:. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 22.
250:
542:Prelinger, Catherine M. (March 14, 1996).
296:, she was the only woman appointed to the
42:
31:
787:Schultz, Rima Lunin; Hast, Adele (2001).
548:. Oxford University Press. pp. 21â.
448:Schultz, Rima Lunin; Hast, Adele (2001).
388:Open Window: Stories of People and Places
236:first juvenile court in the United States
214:poor children, the Bowen Country Club in
463:Sawyers, June Skinner (March 31, 2012).
452:. Indiana University Press. p. 101.
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674:"How the Bowen Country Club Came To Be"
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584:. Harvard University Press. pp.
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261:National Womanâs Suffrage Association
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678:Bowen Country Club official web site
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1038:20th-century American women writers
759:. University of Illinois at Chicago
654:. University of Illinois at Chicago
493:McKinney, Megan (August 26, 2018).
416:. Temple University Press. p.
336:Bowen's grave at Graceland Cemetery
251:Woman's suffrage and women's causes
193:, she remained a lifelong member.
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358:University of Illinois at Chicago
164:, and numerous women's clubs and
160:, court reform for youth via the
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309:Pan-American Conference of Women
802:Bowen, Louise de Koven (2002).
245:Juvenile Protective Association
162:Juvenile Protective Association
466:Chicago Portraits: New Edition
408:Appier, Janis (January 1998).
1:
1023:Philanthropists from Illinois
983:Works by Louise DeKoven Bowen
881:Bowen, Growing Up With a City
757:"Louise deKoven Bowen papers"
370:The Colored People of Chicago
865:Beuchler, Steven M. (1986).
279:Additional civic involvement
989:(public domain audiobooks)
869:. Rutgers University Press.
791:. Indiana University Press.
740:American National Biography
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255:Bowen was a leader in the
187:St. James Episcopal Church
1028:Suffragists from Illinois
947:www.gracelandcemetery.org
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620:(1): 94â95. March 1954.
499:Classic Chicago Magazine
287:, and presidency of the
240:"child-saving movement."
173:Early life and education
919:Oxford University Press
913:Morris, Jeremy (2017).
853:Growing Up With a City,
600:united charities bowen.
328:Personal life and death
272:Growing Up With a City,
181:. The granddaughter of
804:Growing Up With a City
652:collection description
382:Growing Up With a City
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978:at Wikimedia Commons
704:"Louis deKoven Bowen"
614:Social Service Review
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226:Juvenile court system
90:Chicago, Illinois, US
48:DeKoven Bowen in 1922
1033:Writers from Chicago
976:Louise DeKoven Bowen
648:"Bowen Country Club"
285:Chicago Woman's Club
144:Louise deKoven Bowen
140:Louise DeKoven Bowen
36:Louise DeKoven Bowen
18:Louise deKoven Bowen
1018:People from Chicago
883:. pp. 167â168.
636:– via JSTOR.
346:Graceland Cemetery
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216:Waukegan, Illinois
100:Graceland Cemetery
974:Media related to
684:on March 18, 2011
555:978-0-19-534452-3
528:978-0-664-22454-7
476:978-0-8101-2649-7
427:978-1-56639-560-1
319:Honors and awards
305:Warren G. Harding
289:Womanâs City Club
179:Dearborn Seminary
169:their families."
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68:February 26, 1859
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395:References
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158:Hull House
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