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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The penny sit-up was one of the first homeless shelters in central London created for the people of Blackfriars. It was established during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The shelter was operated by the Salvation Army to provide support to its destitute clients.[1] What made this shelter unique was that in exchange for a penny, clients would be allowed to sit on a bench in a reasonably warm room all night. They were not allowed to lie down and sleep on the bench. A penny sit-up was the cheapest homeless shelter at that time. There were more expensive shelters available in London, such as a "four penny coffin" (where the clients were provided with a coffin-sized box so that they can sleep lying-down), and a "two-penny hangover", in which clients were allowed to sleep on a bench in an upright position, with a rope to stop them falling over when as they slept.

By today's standards, the penny sit-up would be considered inadequate and callous. However, at the time it was considered a well-meaning, inexpensive, and compassionate attempt to deal with the recent explosion in homelessness caused by the rapid urbanisation of 19th century England. The Salvation Army believed these shelters provided relief from the harsh London winters and provided new followers of Christianity. Others, such as Professor Howard Sercombe of the University of Strathclyde, have argued that such institutions were more likely to have been designed to control the homeless, or at the very best were a compassionate response to the harsh "moving on" laws of the time, which made it illegal for people to remain vagrant upon the streets.[2]

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  • Sleeping Rough in Victorian England (Penny ‘Sit-Ups’, Two-Penny ‘Hangovers’, Four Penny ‘Coffins’)
  • Eating Out in Victorian London (Fast Food for the Poor in the 19th Century)
  • Starving in Victorian London (A Family’s Fight for Survival)

Transcription

See also

References

  1. ^ Sims, George R., ed. (1906). Living London: Its Work and Its Play, Its Humour and Its Pathos, Its Sights and Its Scenes. Vol. 1. Cassell. pp. 334, 337.
  2. ^ Youth studies journal of Australia

This page was last edited on 27 June 2024, at 06:40
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