Social Work History
 
Since the first social work class was offered in the summer of                1898 at Columbia University, social workers have led the way  developing               private and charitable organizations to serve  people in need. Social               workers continue to address the  needs of society and bring our               nation’s social problems to  the public’s attention.
	Today, Americans enjoy many privileges because early social workers               saw miseries and injustices and took action, inspiring others along               the way. Many of the benefits we take for granted came about because               social workers—working with families and institutions—spoke               out against abuse and neglect.
	- The civil rights of all people regardless of gender,                           race, faith, or sexual orientation are protected.
- Workers enjoy unemployment insurance, disability                           pay, worker’s compensation and Social Security. 
- People with mental illness and developmental disabilities                           are now afforded humane treatment. 
- Medicaid and Medicare give poor, disabled and elderly                           people access to health care. 
- Society seeks to prevent child abuse and neglect. 
- Treatment for mental illness and substance abuse                           is gradually losing its stigma.
	The social work profession celebrated its centennial in 1998.               That year, several important artifacts from across the country               were donated to the Smithsonian Institution to commemorate 100               years of professional social work in the United States.
	Social work pioneer 
	
	
	
	Jane Addams was one of the first women to               receive a Nobel Peace Prize, which was awarded in 1931. Known best               for establishing settlement houses in Chicago for immigrants in               the early 1900s, Addams was a dedicated community organizer and               peace activist.
	Frances Perkins, a social worker, was the first woman               to be appointed to the cabinet of a U.S. President. As President               Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor, Perkins drafted               much of the New Deal legislation in the 1940s.
	Social worker and civil rights trailblazer 
	
	
	
	Whitney M. Young,               Jr. became the executive director of the National Urban League               while serving as dean for the Atlanta School of Social Work. He               also served as president of NASW in the late 1960s. A noted expert               in American race relations, Time Magazine acknowledged Young as               a key inspiration for President Johnson’s War on Poverty.
	Other famous social workers include 
	
	
	
	Harry Hopkins (Works Progress Administration), Dorothy Height (National Council of Negro Women), and Jeanette       Rankin (the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress).