Page:Wives of the prime ministers, 1844-1906.djvu/230

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WIVES OF THE PRIME MINISTERS


and carry through philanthropic work of an important and useful kind, involving a large amount of actual personal service.

She began by visiting the House of Charity in Soho, founded in 1846, to provide shelter for a few of those persons, not of the ordinary vagrant class, who through misfortune or ill-health had become homeless wanderers, but could not bring themselves to ask for poor-law relief, and indeed for many reasons would not have been received into the casual wards of the workhouses. Mrs. Gladstone soon saw that something further was needed. Throughout her life she was a most successful beggar. She raised the sum of £1200 among her friends, rented some disused slaughter-houses in Newport Market, made the necessary alterations, and early in 1864 the place was opened as a Night Refuge. In October a woman's ward was added. All this was done mainly through Mrs. Gladstone's exertions. The interest of the public was thereby aroused in the question of casual relief, and the passing of the Houseless Poor Act[1] was the direct result. At the end of 1865 it was stated by the authorities that there was far less misery and distress about the streets of London

  1. 29th July 1864.

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