
Drawing of Almshouses in Rochford,
1787.
Almshouses are
charitable housing provided to enable people (typically
elderly people who can no longer work to earn enough to pay
rent) to live in a particular
community. They are often targeted at the poor of
a locality, at those from certain forms of previous employment, or
their widows, and are generally maintained by a charity or the
trustees of a bequest.
Almshouses — so named — are European
Christian institutions.
Alms
are, in the
Christian tradition, monies or
services donated to support the poor and indigent. Almshouses were
established from the 10th century in Britain, to provide a place of
residence for poor, old and distressed folk.
The first recorded
Almshouse was founded in York by King Athelstan, and the oldest still in
existence is the Hospital of St. Cross
in Winchester
, dating to circa 990.
In the
Middle Ages the majority of
European
hospitals functioned as
almshouses. See the history of
hospitals.
Almshouses have been created throughout the period since the 10th
century, up to the present day. There is no strict delineation
between Almshouses and other forms of
sheltered housing, although Almshouses
will tend to be characterised by their charitable status and by the
aim of supporting the continued independence of their
residents.
In
physical form, and owing in part to the antiquity of their
formation, Almshouses are often ancient buildings comprising
multiple small terraced houses or apartments, and providing
accommodation for small numbers of residents; some 2,600 Almshouses
continue to be operated in the United Kingdom
providing 30,000 dwellings for 36,000
people. In the Netherlands
a number of hofjes
are still functioning as accommodation for elder people (mostly
women). The economics of Almshouses takes the form of the
provision of subsidised accommodation, often integrated with social
care resources such as wardens. The basis for modern civil
almshouses and
workhouses came into being
in 1597 when the English poor laws were enacted. These institutions
underwent various population, program, and name changes, but by
1900 85% of the population in these institutions were aged (Day
2009).
See also
References
- Day, P. (2009). A new history of social welfare(6th
ed.). Boston: Pearson.
- Hopewell, Peter. Saint Cross: England's Oldest
Almshouse, Chichester : Phillimore, 1995.
- Illustrated History of Long Term Care
Further reading
- Caffrey, Helen. Almshouses in the West Riding of Yorkshire
1600-1900. Kings Lynn: Heritage, 2006. ISBN 1-905223-21-8
- Rothman, David J. (Ed.). "The Almshouse Experience", in series
Poverty U.S.A.: The Historical Record, 1971. ISBN
0405030924
External links