PHILANTHROPIC INSTITUTES, SETTLEMENTS, AND HOSTELS.
There have been many
philanthropic institutions in West Ham. In the
town's early years voluntary efforts were directed
mainly towards providing elementary schools. (fn. 1)
After the formation of the school board (1871) other
needs became more pressing. These included
hospitals, clinics, and district nursing services. (fn. 2)
Poverty and the lack of facilities for recreation and
adult education were also urgent problems.
The churches of the different denominations
have played a major role in meeting these needs.
Christians also created some philanthropic institutions more or less independent of the local churches.
These, often sponsored by a university or a public
school, took various forms, of which the most important has been the slum 'settlement'. West Ham's
most notable settlements have been Mansfield
House and Dockland Settlement No. 1, later the
Mayflower Family Centre. The Young Men's Christian Association also did good work in the borough,
especially through its large club at Plaistow. Some
of the larger local firms, for example the Thames
Ironworks Co., (fn. 3) provided recreational facilities for
their workers. At least two, the Great Eastern
Railway and Henry Tate & Sons, built their own
institutes, while another was provided by the Carpenters' Company of London. At West Ham, as in
other poor districts, the leaders in voluntary social
work came mainly from outside the borough. Among
them were Sir Percy Alden of Mansfield House and
Sir Reginald Kennedy-Cox of the Dockland Settlement.
The institutions described below were of secular
origin or, if Christian, were more or less independent
of the local churches. Institutions closely identified
with particular churches in the borough have
usually been described in the sections relating to
those churches. Alms-houses are also described
elsewhere.
The Eastern Counties, later the Great Eastern
Railway Mechanics' Institution, was opened in
Angel Lane, Stratford, in 1851. (fn. 4) It held lectures,
classes, and penny readings with success, (fn. 5) and opened
a day-school. By 1864 it had 450 members and a
library of 3,000 books. (fn. 6) In 1877 it moved to new
buildings in Store Street, Stratford New Town. In
1881 the institution handed over its school (fn. 7) to the
school board, and concentrated on adult classes,
mainly in technical and vocational subjects. These
were strongly supported by the railway company.
The institution's most active period was c. 1900–14.
It later declined, and was finally closed in 1946. The
building was sold and demolished.
The Guild of St. Alban the Martyr, Balaam Street,
was an Anglo-Catholic settlement which came to
Plaistow from London in 1876, under the leadership
of George Malim, a bank clerk. (fn. 8) The 'brethren'
followed secular occupations, but in their spare time
wore monastic dress and worked in connexion with
St. Philip's church, a mission of St. Andrew's. They
lived at St. Dunstan's, formerly Ivy House. They
held radical views and in the general election of 1880
campaigned for the Liberals. This alienated many
of their financial supporters, and after the election
St. Andrew's severed its connexion with the guild.
The settlement closed in 1882.
The Carpenters' Company institute, Jupp Road,
Stratford, was built in 1886 to serve the Carpenters'
estate. (fn. 9) It provided evening-classes in technical
subjects, and included a gymnasium and indoor
swimming-bath. (fn. 10) In 1891 it became a day-school, but
evening-classes continued until the school was closed
in 1905. (fn. 11)
The Tate institute, Albert Road, Silvertown, was
built in 1887 by (Sir) Henry Tate (Bt.), for his sugarworkers. (fn. 12) In 1904 Sir William Tate, Bt., gave
£1,500 to renovate the institute and in 1906 a further
£1,200 to endow it. The institute was closed in 1933.
The building was sold and later became a public
library, but in 1961, when the library moved to new
premises, the institute was leased by Tate & Lyle
and reopened as a social centre. (fn. 13)
The Stratford Dockland settlement is the successor to the Trinity College (Oxford) mission and
St. Helen's House women's settlement. Trinity
College mission originated in 1887, when the Vicar
of St. John's, Stratford, erected an iron church in
Tenby (later Oxford) Road. (fn. 14) This was burnt down,
and was replaced by a brick church, dedicated to
St. Philip, which was in existence by 1888, (fn. 15) when
Trinity College took over the mission. The church
was later re-dedicated to the Holy Trinity, and a
hall was built beside it, with rooms for the missioner
and visitors. A boys' club was built nearby in Great
Eastern Road. (fn. 16) In 1898 no. 60 Romford Road was
rented as a settlement house. E. G. Howarth, head
of the settlement in 1905–9, directed a survey of
West Ham's social and industrial problems. (fn. 17) The
settlement later moved to Water Lane (fn. 18) and finally
to rooms above the hall in Oxford Road. After the
First World War the Tom Allen club was built in
Grove Crescent Road to commemorate a former head
of the settlement. In 1933 a conventional district
was formed for the mission. (fn. 19) During the Second
World War, however, the church and hall were
wrecked by bombing and closed. They and the club
in Great Eastern Road have since been demolished.
The Tom Allen club survived and in 1943–4
was taken over by St. Helen's House women's
settlement. St. Helen's House, Stratford, had been
founded in 1896 in connexion with St. Margaret's
House, Bethnal Green. From headquarters in the
Grove it collaborated with the Trinity College
mission. (fn. 20) In 1931 it moved to new buildings in
Water Lane. (fn. 21) After the Second World War it was
reconstituted as Dockland settlement No. 9. (fn. 22) In
1957 the Tom Allen club was rebuilt with help from
Trinity College; a small chapel was added in 1958.
In 1969 the club was the headquarters of this settlement, St. Helen's House being the warden's
residence.
Mansfield House University settlement was
founded in 1889 by students connected with Mansfield (Congregational) College, Oxford. The first
warden was (Sir) Percy Alden (1891–1901). (fn. 23) Two
shops in Barking Road, near the public hall, were
taken as residences, and a hall was built behind
them. (fn. 24) In 1897 a new residential block was built
farther west, near Canning Town station, the original
buildings becoming the men's club. (fn. 25) Fairbairn
boys' club, founded in 1891, and named after the
first principal of Mansfield, (fn. 26) moved in 1895 to the
present site in Barking Road (nos. 310–16), occupying converted premises until 1900, when Fairbairn
Hall was built there. (fn. 27) The settlement provided
many welfare and educational services. In some
fields it was a pioneer, e.g. in its legal-aid scheme.
Under Alden it was also very influential in local
politics. (fn. 28) After the First World War the settlement
declined and in 1923 had to sell the men's club
premises. (fn. 29) (Sir) Ian Horobin, honorary warden
1923–61, brought about a revival. Fairbairn hall was
extended in 1931 (fn. 30) and in 1935 new residences
were built behind it, replacing the old ones near the
station. (fn. 31) A chapel was added in 1938. (fn. 32) By then the
settlement had become undenominational. In 1968
the total membership of the Mansfield and Fairbairn
clubs was about 900. Fairbairn hall includes a library,
theatre, workshops, gymnasium, and canteen. (fn. 33)
The Canning Town women's settlement, Cumberland Road, was founded in 1892 by F. W. Newland,
pastor of Canning Town Congregational church. (fn. 34)
It has always been closely associated with Mansfield
House settlement. Rebecca H. Cheetham, warden
1892–1922, was prominent in West Ham public
life. (fn. 35) The settlement was originally at no. 461
Barking Road. In 1899 the Lees Hall, Barking Road,
named after its donors, was opened as headquarters
and offices. It was enlarged in 1913. (fn. 36) By 1910 there
was also a settlement house in Cumberland Road.
The settlement's early work included a small
hospital (fn. 37) and an out-patients' clinic. Its activities
were at first concerned mainly with women and
children but gradually widened. Among them was
a branch of the Metropolitan Association for Befriending Young Servants, which was primarily an
employment agency. During the Second World War
all the settlement's buildings were wrecked by
bombing except the house in Cumberland Road,
but the work continued. After the war the finances
of the settlement deteriorated, and in 1968 it was
taken over by the Aston Charities Trust. The
Canning Town settlement, as it has since been
named, was being rebuilt in 1969 on the Cumberland
Road site, to provide flats for old people, with
dining-rooms, club rooms, clinics, a theatre, and
premises for the citizens' advice bureau. (fn. 38)
The Mayflower family centre, Cooper and Vincent
Streets, Canning Town, originated as the Malvern
College mission. In 1894 the college erected an iron
church, dedicated to St. Alban and the English
Martyrs, on a site in Cooper Street given by Peter
Gellatly. (fn. 39) Other buildings were later added. (fn. 40) About
1905 (Sir) Reginald Kennedy-Cox, an Old Malvernian, joined the mission as a voluntary helper. In 1918
he became the first lay warden of the mission, and
began to build up the Dockland settlements and
Malvern College clubs, formally constituted in 1923.
Canning Town, called settlement No. 1, was the
headquarters of an organization which by 1937 had
six branches in the London area and others elsewhere. Kennedy-Cox subsidized the settlements
from his own income, secured royal patronage, and
raised large sums by appeals to private benefactors
and charity dinners and balls. (fn. 41) At Canning Town
new club rooms, gymnasium, dance hall, theatre,
and swimming-bath were built in 1924–9. The
settlement chapel was replaced in 1930 by a new
one dedicated to St. George and St. Helena. (fn. 42) A new
staff residence for men was added in 1931 and one
for women in 1934. In 1937 Kennedy-Cox retired.
During the Second World War most of the club
activities ceased. In 1947 Kennedy-Cox returned
for a few months to reorganize it. By 1957 it was
again in difficulties. (fn. 43) It was saved by the Revd.
David Sheppard, who reconstituted it as the Mayflower family centre, of which he became warden.
He worked there from 1958 until he became
suffragan bishop of Woolwich in 1969. (fn. 44) The centre,
managed by an undenominational committee, provides facilities for people of all ages, but specializes
in youth work and runs a nursery school. In addition
to a small staff there are about 20 residents. The
residential blocks, in 16th-century style, occupy two
sides of a quadrangle. Connecting them at one end
is the chapel, designed to imitate Lincoln's Inn hall.
When the Mayflower centre was formed the headquarters of the Dockland settlements were transferred to Romford Road, Stratford.
The Society of St. Francis (Church of England),
Balaam Street, is the successor of the Society of the
Divine Compassion, founded in 1894 by Hon. J. G.
Adderley (Superior 1894–7), H. R. Chappel, later
Father Henry (Superior 1897–1906), and H. E.
Hardy, later Father Andrew (Superior 1912–16 and
1924–35). (fn. 45) The S.D.C., which was monastic and
Anglo-Catholic, became responsible for the mission
church of St. Philip, Plaistow. (fn. 46) It was originally
housed in Meredith Street but later moved to Balaam
Street. In 1901 the society established printing and
watchmaking shops at Plaistow. (fn. 47) For many years
Father Andrew wrote and produced Nativity and
Passion plays which won more than local recognition.
In 1953 the society was dissolved. Its premises and
work were taken over by Franciscans from Cerne
Abbas (Dors.). (fn. 48)
The Church of England Missions to Seamen
institute, Victoria Dock Road, Custom House, was
in existence by about 1900. (fn. 49) In 1936 a large new
institute was completed on and in front of the old
site, and this became the headquarters of the
Missions to Seamen. (fn. 50)
The Bancroft's boys' club, Prince Regent Lane,
Canning Town, was founded in 1911. Until 1965
it was financed entirely by the old boys' association
of Bancroft's school, Woodford. New premises were
built in 1939 on the corner of Alnwick Road. (fn. 51)
The Young Men's Christian Association was
active in West Ham by 1884, when it helped to build
the Conference Hall, West Ham Lane. (fn. 52) In the
present century its main centres have been at Forest
Gate and Plaistow. It had a branch at Forest Gate
by 1906 (fn. 53) and in 1913 erected a hostel in Woodgrange Road. (fn. 54) That building was badly damaged
by bombing during the Second World War and was
finally closed in 1959. (fn. 55) Red Triangle club, Greengate Street, Plaistow, was opened in 1921 at a cost of
about £100,000. (fn. 56) It included a theatre, swimmingbath, gymnasium, and sports ground, and was very
successful until the Second World War. It was
closed and sold in 1956. The proceeds of the sale
of the Forest Gate and Plaistow premises were used
to build a new Y.M.C.A. hostel at Walthamstow. (fn. 57)
Durning Hall Christian community centre, Earlham Grove and Woodgrange Road, Forest Gate,
replaced an earlier Durning Hall, founded about
1885 at Limehouse (Lond.). (fn. 58) Premises in Woodgrange Road were registered for worship in 1953, (fn. 59)
and in 1959 the main buildings of the centre were
opened in Earlham Grove, containing a church,
hall, offices, gymnasium, and chaplain's flat. A
hostel, with shops below, was later completed on
the Woodgrange Road frontage. Durning Hall, which
is undenominational, is administered by the Aston
charities trust, founded in 1930 by Miss Theodora
Durning-Lawrence. It caters for all age-groups.
The church of the Holy Carpenter, designed by
Shingler and Risden Associates, has a fine altar wall
of stained glass.
Anchor House, Barking Road, Canning Town, is
a large residential club for seamen opened in 1962
by the Roman Catholic Apostleship of the Sea. (fn. 60) It
stands on the site of Lees Hall (Canning Town
Women's Settlement) and adjoining properties.
Among institutions narrower in scope is the John
Barnes Memorial home for old people, Hamfrith
Road. (fn. 61) About 1888 John Barnes of Stratford started
private charitable work among old people. Friends
joined him and in 1904 the John Barnes Philanthropic Society was constituted. About 1908 the
society opened an old people's home in a house in
Keogh Road. (fn. 62) It proved too small and by 1917 (fn. 63) a
larger one had been taken in Hamfrith Road. An
adjoining property was later acquired, and in 1932
a new home was built on the site.