CHAPTER 7: CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS OF ST. GEORGE'S FIELDS
A large stretch of easily accessible land like St. George's Fields,
cheap because it was undeveloped and undrained, and with frontages to
main roads, inevitably attracted the attention of the promoters of some of
the many charitable institutions which came into being in the 18th and early
19th centuries. A brief history of the more important of them is given in this
chapter.
The Fishmongers' Almshouses
The Fishmongers' Almshouses, which formerly stood at the corner
of St. George's Road and Newington Butts, were built in 1618 at the expense of
several members of the Company on ground bought from Jacob Smith. (ref. 179) John
Aubrey relates (ref. 108) that they were named St. Peter's Hospital by King James I
"as he came by it from Scotland, in allusion to St. Peter, the Tutelar Saint
of the Fishmongers." They were described in 1814 as "twenty-two neat
houses in three Courts, with a garden behind, and having a neat Chapel" (ref. 118)
(Plate 51a). South of them and within the same enclosure was another
almshouse, founded by James Hulbert of the Fishmongers' Company in
1719 for 42 men and women. (ref. 118) The almshouses stood with but little alteration
until 1851, when they were moved to Wandsworth. (ref. 180)

Fishmongers' Company
The arms of the Fishmongers' Company on a restaurant at the
corner of St. George's Road and Pastor Street recalls the connection of the
Company with this neighbourhood.
The Drapers' Almshouses
In 1642 John Walter, Clerk to the Drapers' Company, offered to
build almshouses in the parishes of St. George the Martyr, Southwark, and
St. Mary, Newington, as many of the poor "had lately perished by lying
abroad in the cold for want of habitation, to the great dishonour of God." (ref. 181)
He expressed a wish to remain anonymous until after his death, and his gift
was conditional on the parishes providing sites for the almshouses and keeping
them in repair once built. By his will he left property in trust for the maintenance of the almsfolk.
The parishioners of St. George's obtained from the City Corporation
a grant of "a wast peece of ground lyeing between the pound and the style" (ref. 9)
"att the entrance into St. George's fields" (i.e., near the spot where Borough
Road now joins Borough High Street). Two houses, with four rooms in
each, to accommodate 16 almspeople, were built, and, in 1653–54, a chapel
and a room for the Trustees to use for the distribution of pensions were added
on ground taken out of the pound. (ref. 9) A century later the Trustees for the
Surrey New Roads rebuilt the almshouses further back and most of the old
site was absorbed into the roadway of the newly-formed Borough Road (ref. 9)
(Plate 53).

Drapers' Company
The last move of the almshouses took place in 1819–20. The
frontage of Borough Road was being developed and the City Corporation
offered the parish a new site next to the Rowland Hill Almshouses in what
became Hill Street (now Glasshill Street), together with £1,250 towards the
rebuilding, in exchange for the old site. (ref. 9) The existing two-storey brick
almshouses between King's Bench Street and Glasshill Street were built in
1820 (Plate 83b).
The almshouses for the parish of St. Mary, Newington, were built
on a piece of waste ground granted by the Lords of the Manor on the north
side of what is now Draper Street, Newington Butts. They were last rebuilt
in 1888, (ref. 136) and consist of blocks of three-storey houses. They and two shops
opposite were the only buildings in the street to escape destruction by
bombing during the last war.

Figure 20:
Drapers' Almshouses, Glasshill Street

Figure 21:
Draper's Almshouses, 1951
The Magdalen Hospital
The Magdalen Hospital for the reception and training of penitent
prostitutes was founded by Robert Dingley, Jonas Hanway and others in
1758 in premises previously occupied by the London Hospital in Prescot
Street, Whitechapel. (ref. 182) The institution was so successful that ten years after
its inception the Governors purchased from the Rev. Thomas Clarke 6 acres
of land in St. George's Fields for the erection of new premises. (ref. 9) The land
was subject to rights of common by the other occupiers of the fields, so that
before building could begin an Act (ref. 183) had to be obtained by the Governors to
enable them to consolidate and enclose their holding. The Act included
a clause forbidding building within 10 feet of the roads to be made from
the south end of Blackfriars Bridge. Building operations were begun in the
summer of 1769 with Joel Johnson (fn. a) as architect and surveyor, and the
foundation stone was laid by the Earl of Hertford on 28th July. The building
was ready for occupation early in 1772.
The notorious Dr. William Dodd, who was hanged for forgery in 1777,
was Evening Preacher at the hospital during its early years in St. George's
Fields. Large contributions were made to the charity through collections at
the chapel services, but after 1800 these steadily declined while the amount
spent on upkeep and repairs increased. For these and other reasons the
Governors decided to move the institution to its present site in Streatham. (fn. b) (ref. 184)
The old buildings were closed at the end of 1868 and the site was sold to the
Peabody Trustees for the erection of a block of dwellings (Plate 34).
The Freemasons' School
The Royal Freemasons' School for Girls, on the site of the present
No. 28 on the north side of Westminster Bridge Road, was opened in temporary buildings rented from James Hedger in 1788. After protracted
negotiations the Governors obtained a lease of the ground from the City
Corporation, (ref. 185) and a school for up to 100 children was built.
The children, daughters of masons of at least three years' standing,
entered the school between the ages of 5 and 10. They were taught needlework and domestic subjects and every effort was made "to impress strongly
on their minds a due sense of subordination, in true humility and obedience
to their superiors." No child who had not had the smallpox or who had
any defect or infirmity was admitted. The girls were apprenticed out at the
age of 15. (ref. 186)
The building in St. George's Fields was in use until 1852, when the
school was moved to Wandsworth. (ref. 187)
The Philanthropic Society
In the 18th century responsibility for the care of deserted and
vagrant children lay legally with the parish where they were found wandering,
provided no other place of settlement could be discovered, but the obligation
appears to have been generally ignored, (ref. 188) and these children were among the
most miserable and neglected elements in the population. The Philanthropic
Society was founded in 1788 to protect and reform one section of these
children, those who were "the offspring of convicted felons" or who had
"themselves been engaged in criminal practices." (ref. 189) The charity started in a
small house in Cambridge Heath, (ref. 186) but in 1793 it acquired (ref. 9) a lease from the
City Corporation of a piece of ground near the London Road in St. George's
Fields and built workshops and houses there (Plate 26). Further leases were
obtained in 1805 and 1811 and the land was subsequently purchased. The
society was incorporated by Act of Parliament in 1806. (ref. 189) Its income was
derived partly from collections at services held in the large chapel in St.
George's Road (Plate 27), opened in November, 1806, (fn. a) which was built
with a view to making a profit for the institution, and partly from the sale of
work done by the children. The boys were taught printing, book-binding,
shoe making, tailoring, rope making and twine spinning. The girls were
trained to be "menial servants"; they made their own clothing and shirts
for the boys, and washed and mended for the manufactory. (ref. 186)
By the 1840's the income of the society had declined and it was
compelled to limit its exertions "to the Reformation of criminal Boys." In
1848 it procured parliamentary permission (ref. 190) to sell or lease the St. George's
Fields site and to move further out, where running expenses would be lower
and the boys could be employed in agriculture. The Royal Philanthropic
Society's School at Redhill is now an Approved School under the Children
and Young Persons Act of 1933.
The site of the institution is bounded by Gladstone Street, Garden
Row and St. George's Road. A row of houses in Gladstone Street bears the
inscription "ALBERT TERRACE 1849." The chapel was used for a
number of years as the parish church of St. Jude. (ref. 191) The present church,
consecrated in 1899, stands on the same site. (ref. 192)
The Joseph Lancaster (British and Foreign Society) Schools and Borough Road Training College
In 1798 a Quaker named Joseph Lancaster, then a young man in
his early 20's, opened a school on non-sectarian lines for poor children of
Southwark. (ref. 186) His monitorial system, an adaptation of the Madras system
advocated by Dr. Bell, and his strong personality, enabled him to control and
to give some instruction in the three Rs to large numbers of children. From
the initial 90 children in one room their number increased to 500 or more.
At first he charged a small fee, (ref. 193) but realizing that this prevented the very
poorest from benefiting he sought financial help from wealthy patrons.
His Outline of a Plan … issued in 1806 had this end in view, and the
Royal Lancasterian Society was formed in 1808 by Joseph Fox, William
Allen and Samuel Whitbread. (ref. 186) In 1810 Lancaster applied (ref. 9) to the City
Corporation for a new lease of the land on the west side of Union Street
(now Lancaster Street, north of Borough Road) of which he was already
in occupation. (fn. b) He planned to build both a girls' and a boys' school there,
but this plan seems to have fallen through mainly because of Lancaster's
financial difficulties and partly perhaps because the opposition of the established church, begun as a result of Mrs. Trimmer's pamphleteering, boiled
up in 1811. (ref. 194) Nevertheless, the teaching of children by Lancaster's methods
continued to spread both in Southwark and elsewhere. The society, renamed
the British and Foreign Society in 1812, took over the management and
finances of the schools and Lancaster was employed at a salary as Teaching
Superintendent. He soon regretted his lost independence and resigned the
position to start a boarding school at Tooting. He emigrated to America
in 1818 and never returned to this country. (ref. 25)
In 1816 the society applied for and obtained a lease (ref. 9) of ground on the
south side of Borough Road, and there permanent buildings were erected for
boys' and girls' schools and for the training of young teachers (Plate 7b).
The training college continued in the Borough Road until 1888 when the
remainder of the lease was bought by the Executive Committee of the South
London Polytechnic Council. After extensive structural alterations the
premises were opened in 1892 as the Borough Road Polytechnic Institute
(now the Borough Polytechnic). (ref. 195) Parts of the old school buildings still
exist behind the later façade. The training college was moved to Isleworth.
The School for the Indigent Blind
The School for the Indigent Blind, the first institution of its kind in
London, was one of four schools for the blind started in the United Kingdom
on the model of the school in Paris, the others being in Liverpool, Bristol and
Edinburgh. (ref. 196) A committee was formed in 1799, of which Thomas Boddington, Samuel Bosanquet, James Ware and William Houlston were the leading
members, and in 1800 they began the school in a small way with 15 pupils in
the Long Room at the Dog and Duck. (ref. 186) A year or so later they took over the
lease of the tavern and its gardens, and in a short while the school had 35 male
and 17 female pupils, who were completely clothed, boarded, lodged and
instructed by the society. The head lease to James Hedger was due to
expire in 1810 and, as the City Corporation was contemplating letting the
land to the Governors of Bethlem Hospital, the school committee, having
discussed and decided against the idea of building on land in the Gray's
Inn Road belonging to the Foundling Hospital, (ref. 186) obtained a lease from the
City Corporation of just under 2 acres of ground between the obelisk at St.
George's Circus and the premises of the Philanthropic Society. (ref. 9) The building
shown on Plate 31, described by Elmes (ref. 167) as "more commendable for utility
than for its beauty" was erected from the designs of George Tappen, (fn. a) (ref. 197)
at the angle between Lambeth and London Roads in 1811–12. It formed
the entrance to the grounds of the school, the main buildings of which lay
behind the houses in Crescent Place and had no frontage to Lambeth Road.
The building encroached on the area of the circus as defined by Act of
Parliament (ref. 162) and the Trustees for the Surrey New Roads demanded its
demolition, but they finally agreed to the insertion of a clause in a new Act (ref. 163)
which enabled the building to stand, and provided for the erection of concave
flanking walls on either side of it.
The institution was incorporated by Act of Parliament in 1826. (ref. 198)
It was given power to buy and sell land in 1831, (ref. 199) and in the following year
bought the freehold of the ground on which the school stood. (ref. 196) By 1833 the
school included 55 males and 57 females and it became necessary to enlarge
the buildings. (ref. 200) An additional piece of ground was leased from the City
Corporation, (ref. 9) and extensive new premises, incorporating parts of the old,
were erected from the designs of John Newman (ref. 25) in 1835–38 (Plate 32b).
The school continued to train blind pupils in the traditional trades of mat
making, basket making, knitting, etc. After 1874, many of its trainees were
employed in a workshop which was established in the basement, the predecessor of the Blind Employment Factory in the Waterloo Road. (ref. 196) In 1901,
the school site was purchased under compulsory powers by the Baker Street
and Waterloo Railway, and the school was moved to Leatherhead. (ref. 196) The
Tube depôt, with one-storey shops in front, now occupies the site.