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Settlement Houses

Descended from their predecessors in London, the first settlement houses in the United States made their appearance in poor urban neighborhoods during the last quarter of the 19th century. Seeking to improve the lives of those in the surrounding community, settlement houses developed into neighborhood centers for civil, social, and philanthropic work. Though they often collaborated with charitable organizations, settlement houses set themselves apart by stressing betterment through one's own efforts rather than through philanthropy. Their efforts were typically focused not on the utterly destitute, but the working poor.1

Settlement workers usually lived in neighborhoods where the local population was of diverse ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds and seldom spoke English. Most American settlements came to be organized and staffed by women who held college degrees but found the professions closed them, seeing settlement work as an extension of their education and an acceptable way to apply their skills. The settlement house philosophy originally held that if middle-class residents and staff actually lived in the neighborhoods they were serving, their relationship would be more equal to those they sought to help. Living side by side with poor immigrants, they would gain new insights into the causes of poverty, and have an added right in seeking to improve neighborhood conditions as members of the community.2

A survey conducted in 1935 found that there were 80 settlements operating in New York City, 55 of them in Manhattan, with over half of these on the Lower East Side. During the 1930s, as the New Deal rapidly shifted the burden of public welfare to the federal government, settlement houses such as Henry Street shifted its focus in part to provide government agencies with surveys of neighborhood problems geared toward supporting social change. The aim of these surveys was to "personalize reality with descriptions of individuals experiencing the problems they were asking the government to rectify."3

The post-World War II years brought about a new relationship with government agencies and public funding for social service programs. Settlements such as Henry Street were able to establish a mental hygiene clinic and agencies to provide needed services to the residents of the new public housing projects. In 1957, Henry Street helped create a program to institute social services with the aim of reducing juvenile delinquency. The result was Mobilization for Youth, a prototype for the nation's War on Poverty. Subsequently, the War on Poverty elaborated on Mobilization for Youth's model of directly involving the poor in policy-making through community action.4

In the 1970s, settlement houses on the Lower East Side adapted to changing conditions in the neighborhood including the aging of older remaining European immigrants and the severe shortage of public housing. The Educational Alliance, for example, expanded its facilities and programs to include a senior citizens' apartment building and a day care center. Henry Street developed a transitional housing facility, the Urban Family Center, which gave families previously housed in "welfare" hotels temporary apartments and provided critical services to help these families improve their living skills so that they could afford more permanent housing. In 1977, the program was expanded to include one of New York's first battered women's shelters, as well as a housekeeping service that allowed the disabled and elderly to remain in their homes.5

See also: Immigration; Lower East Side
.
1 Kenneth T. Jackson, The Encyclopedia of New York City (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995).
2 Ibid.
3 Henry Street Settlement, Voices of Henry Street: Portrait of a Community (New York: Henry Street Settlement, 1993).
4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.

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