THE HISTORY OF ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF THE NEWARK
FEMALE
CHARITABLE SOCIETY’S WORK, AS TOLD BY ITS OWN
RECORDS
...In 1836, Newark became a city. In place of
shady lanes were paved street, Churches multiplied, and these
began to care for their own needy. With immigration came poverty
and a multitude of struggling poor. Orphan asylums and Homes for
the aged and afflicted were built, and all demanded a share in the
beneficence of the rich; yet the Female Charitable Society kept on
the even tenor of its way. A religious or charitable occasion was
sure to be well attended, for in those days there were not so many
interests, and no such pressure of engagements upon the people as
now, and all felt it a religious duty to attend a sermon for the
benefit of the Charitable Society; that being the first expedient
to replenish an exhausted treasury.
In 1878 the Board of Managers was increased to
thirty. As the need of "training the poor to help
themselves" became apparent, industrial branches were
started, and work given out to be done at home.
In 1882 came another step in advance. A building
was rented for laundry and other work, where skilled teachers were
employed to "train the poor," and as a result many
became self-supporting; and as some became skilled, they in
turn were employed to teach those who came to take their places.
Then came the Day Nursery, where babies were cared for while the
mothers worked, and where they, betimes, were trained to give more
intelligent care to their children.
With the knowledge of suffering, gained by
visiting the poor in their homes, in crowded tenements during the
summer heat, came the thought of Fresh Air Work, when willing
hearts and hands were found for this service, and the work
was started by three enthusiastic members, who thought lightly of
their sacrifices of comfort and pleasure, since women and children
were to be benefitted in a way hitherto unknown in their poor
lives.
With multiplied activities in cramped quarters
came the demand for a building which these workers should own. It
seemed imperative that the Female Charitable Society should have a
habitation in the city where so long it had had a name. In 1887
the building was ready for occupancy, and with the increased
families the work enlarged. A laundry, kitchen-garden, day
nursery, kindergarten, cooking school, mother’s meeting and
sewing class came into existence, while at the same time the
relief for the suffering poor in their homes, with personal
Christ-like ministering, continued.
In the enlarged board of fifty-five managers of
the present day, are found many descendants of the eight devoted
women who organized it, and of the twelve who kept it alive in the
years of small things – when the avails of a concert, seventeen
dollars, seemed a munificent amount, and a donation of
fifty dollars a fortune. While in this day of great
things, legacies of ten thousand dollars are not unknown, and the
Society aspires to an Endowment Fund of an hundred thousand
dollars in its Centennial year.
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