12022-03-02T20:23:31+00:00Kate Flynn7a93418b93b9db509597a67ae6311be88dcb38d65301Photograph of the Armour Mission kindergarten students and staff for the 1894-45 school year. Instituted with the founding of the Armour Mission in 1886, the kindergarten program was run by Mary Ely until it was closed in the fall of 1918. Photographer unknown.2022-03-02T20:23:31+00:00Armour Mission (Chicago Ill.)School children0360401-BB1-01-002No Copyright-United StatesOffice of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-19991894-1895University Archives and Special Collections, Illinois Institute of TechnologyBronzeville, ChicagoKate Flynn7a93418b93b9db509597a67ae6311be88dcb38d6
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12022-03-02T20:23:31+00:00Armour Mission in Bronzeville2Serving Children and Families on the South Sideplain2022-03-03T18:12:06+00:00
The Armour Mission was a non-sectarian Christian church congregation and quasi-settlement house on Chicago's South Side in the late 1800s. Built by brothers Joseph and Philip D. Armour of Armour Meatpacking Company, it stood at the south-east corner of 33rd St. and Federal St. on Chicago's South Side. The Mission was conceived of as a Christian Sunday School for neighborhood children, many of whose parents worked in the meatpacking industry, but soon expanded to offer Sunday services and Bible classes under the guidance of Rev. John D. McCord as well as sponsoring clubs for adults and children.
The children's Sunday School, which opened in 1874 as Plymouth Mission, was located at 31st and State Streets until the Armour Mission building was erected in 1886. The Mission building was designed by Burnham & Root, one of Chicago's most prestigious architectural firms. It was in this building that the Mission expanded its role to become a Kindergarten and trade school of sorts for its young members. Growing rapidly, Armour Mission Sunday School expanded from some 500 members in 1886 to 2,200 students and 130 teachers in 1895. It is said that by 1905, total aggregate attendance had exceeded 1,000,000 students.
The Armour Mission programs included a library, the monthly publication "Armour Mission Visitor," a music department, holiday celebrations, a summer camp, and a boys' military brigade and girls' drill corps. Sponsored lectures, concerts, and exhibitions offered cultural programming to congregation members, and a medical dispensary served some 13,000 patients in 1894. As such, the Armour Mission evolved into one of Chicago's 19th century settlement houses, filling a role on the city's south side like Jane Addams' Hull-House did on the west side.
After the Armour Mission Sunday School, Kindergarten, and congregation were dissolved, the Mission building continued to function as the auditorium for Armour Institute of Technology, which had been built across the street from Armour Mission.