Sidney Ball was one of the very first Oxford students to offer his services to Rev Barnett in 1875 while still a student.I am not at this stage certain whether he was an undergraduate at New College[Druitt"s college] or Barnett"s college Wadham.
I quote from Canon Barnett"s" Life and Work" bk 1 page 308:
"After they graduated some of the men who had visited us [from Oxford colleges-which included New College Oxford ie Druitt"s college]came to reside in the EAST LONDON.
They lived together in twos and threes in lodgings or in the model dwellings.*
One group of five took a disused beer-shop in Leman Street**-where they established a delightful bachelor household and termed it "The Friary".They themselves often went back to Oxford to recruit for the East End work."...........
I understand from the records that ET Cook,Druitt"s school , college and debating colleague ,and a very early volunteer service worker at Toynbee Hall, resided in Blackheath after coming down from Oxford in 1881.He had family in Blackheath
" ......much fresh interest was rewakened-new recruits gathered around Arnold Toynbee-[ET Cook,from New College being one we know of for certain].
But it was to Mr Sidney Ball,whose alert mind wide sympathies,powers of organisation and fervent practical idealism made him then,as ever since, a strong force for progress....."
.......it was his discernment,which discovered powers in undergraduates that could be put to public uses.It was his energy that organised innumerable meetings,among them a memorable one at the Union ,when the abolition of the poor law was debated,march 8th 1877.And therefore it naturally followed that it was in his rooms that the meeting was held on November 17th 1883,when Toynbee Hall was born.It was he who founded in 1913....... Barnett House for the advancement of "economics and social studies"........of the work of University Settlements [such as had been started at Toynbee Hall]".
GR Sims apparently helped in these extended initiatives by his writings on "How the Poor Live"-as did a Mr Henry George and Mr Mearns" tract on "The Bittter Cry of Outcast London".
Below is a picture of Barnett House as it is today.It is very close to where the Crispin Street Refuge stands but in Bell Street which is a continuation of Crispin Street.
*such as those in Goulston Street Street where the graffiti was found.
** Mary Kelly"s old patch[allegedly].
I quote from Canon Barnett"s" Life and Work" bk 1 page 308:
"After they graduated some of the men who had visited us [from Oxford colleges-which included New College Oxford ie Druitt"s college]came to reside in the EAST LONDON.
They lived together in twos and threes in lodgings or in the model dwellings.*
One group of five took a disused beer-shop in Leman Street**-where they established a delightful bachelor household and termed it "The Friary".They themselves often went back to Oxford to recruit for the East End work."...........
I understand from the records that ET Cook,Druitt"s school , college and debating colleague ,and a very early volunteer service worker at Toynbee Hall, resided in Blackheath after coming down from Oxford in 1881.He had family in Blackheath
" ......much fresh interest was rewakened-new recruits gathered around Arnold Toynbee-[ET Cook,from New College being one we know of for certain].
But it was to Mr Sidney Ball,whose alert mind wide sympathies,powers of organisation and fervent practical idealism made him then,as ever since, a strong force for progress....."
.......it was his discernment,which discovered powers in undergraduates that could be put to public uses.It was his energy that organised innumerable meetings,among them a memorable one at the Union ,when the abolition of the poor law was debated,march 8th 1877.And therefore it naturally followed that it was in his rooms that the meeting was held on November 17th 1883,when Toynbee Hall was born.It was he who founded in 1913....... Barnett House for the advancement of "economics and social studies"........of the work of University Settlements [such as had been started at Toynbee Hall]".
GR Sims apparently helped in these extended initiatives by his writings on "How the Poor Live"-as did a Mr Henry George and Mr Mearns" tract on "The Bittter Cry of Outcast London".
Below is a picture of Barnett House as it is today.It is very close to where the Crispin Street Refuge stands but in Bell Street which is a continuation of Crispin Street.
*such as those in Goulston Street Street where the graffiti was found.
** Mary Kelly"s old patch[allegedly].
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