Quick Facts
Born:
Dec. 15, 1861, Madura, India
Died:
Oct. 9, 1954, Wellesley, Mass., U.S. (aged 92)

Vida Dutton Scudder (born Dec. 15, 1861, Madura, India—died Oct. 9, 1954, Wellesley, Mass., U.S.) was an American writer, educator, and reformer whose social welfare work and activism were predicated on her socialist beliefs.

Scudder was the daughter of a Congregationalist missionary. In 1862 she and her widowed mother moved from India to the United States, settling in Boston. Scudder graduated from Smith College in 1884 and then studied Elizabethan literature for a year at the University of Oxford. In 1887 she was appointed an instructor of English at Wellesley (Massachusetts) College, becoming a full professor in 1910. Smith College awarded her an M.A. degree in 1889.

In 1888 Scudder joined the Companions of the Holy Cross, a semimonastic group of about 50 Episcopalian women devoted to prayer and the accomplishment of social harmony. She was active in a number of social welfare organizations and helped found the Denison House Settlement in Boston later that year. In 1903 she helped organize the Women’s Trade Union League. Her support of the striking textile workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts, led to widespread criticism of her and of Wellesley in 1912, but the college remained steadfast in defense of her right to speak and act freely.

Scudder wrote numerous books on both literature and her socialist ideals, including The Life of the Spirit in the Modern English Poets (1895), Introduction to the Study of English Literature (1901), Socialism and Character (1912), and her autobiography On Journey (1937). Scudder retired from teaching in 1928.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Quick Facts
Date:
1870 - 1920
Location:
United States
Areas Of Involvement:
Christianity
labour
reform

Social Gospel, religious social reform movement prominent in the United States from about 1870 to 1920. Advocates of the movement interpreted the kingdom of God as requiring social as well as individual salvation and sought the betterment of industrialized society through application of the biblical principles of charity and justice. The Social Gospel was especially promulgated among liberal Protestant ministers, including Washington Gladden and Lyman Abbott, and was shaped by the persuasive works of Charles Monroe Sheldon (In His Steps: What Would Jesus Do? [1896]) and Walter Rauschenbusch (Christianity and the Social Crisis [1907]). Labour reforms—including the abolition of child labour, a shorter workweek, a living wage, and factory regulation—constituted the Social Gospel’s most prominent concerns. During the 1930s many of these ideals were realized through the rise of organized labour and the legislation of the New Deal by U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Kara Rogers.