Building    From 1827  To 1974

Sailors' Home - Ensign Street & Dock Street

Categories: Social Welfare

A group of philanthropists, led by Rev. George Charles ‘Boatswain’ Smith (1782–1863) founded the Destitute Sailors' Asylum in 1827, based in a converted warehouse in Dock Street and providing shelter and food for shipwrecked and destitute seamen. We've not found any memorials to that home and assume it long gone.

Then, when the Royal Brunswick Theatre in neighbouring Well Street (now Ensign Street) collapsed, Smith and his colleagues acquired that large site for another home, a Sailors' Home for the use of all sailors. The main building on Ensign Street opened in 1835. This site stretched across the block from Ensign Street to Dock Street, where the large extension was built in 1865.

UCL's Survey of London give a summary of the buildings as: "The Sailors’ Home, also known at first as the Brunswick Maritime Establishment, was built in 1830–5 with Philip Hardwick as its architect. Enlarged to Dock Street in 1863–5, substantially altered in 1911–12, rebuilt on the Dock Street side in 1954­­–7, adapted to be a hostel for the homeless in 1976–8, and again converted to be a youth hostel in 2012–14... As the first purpose-built short-stay hostel for sailors anywhere, it represented in its original form the invention of a building type, the Royal Hospital for Seamen in Greenwich notwithstanding. It was to have seminal influence on the development of lodging-house architecture. ... In 1893–4 the original building’s south range and a stable yard beyond were replaced by a Mercantile Marine Office, which building survives on Ensign Street."

The UCL page is extremely informative but for additional information:  Victorian London provides a lot of detail of how the home operated and this 1890 map shows the layout of the buildings, with dormitories, dining hall, etc.

The remaining sections of the Ensign Street building can easily be recognised on the street even without the portico and the south range.

The 1950s Dock Street frontage is rather fine. Google Maps provides many photos of the interior of this building, now, 2022, a Wombat City Hostel, and the basement is surely from the 1865 building if not from the 1828 theatre. UCL have a photo of the 1865 exterior, and provide a link to photos of its interior showing the sleeping accommodation.

When we last checked the link to the map was failing.  If this is still the case: look for "Insurance Plan of London Vol. XI: sheet 342" in the wonderful Old Maps Online.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Sailors' Home - Ensign Street & Dock Street

Commemorated ati

Sailors Home extension

This chief stone of the new building, in extension of the Sailors' Home was l...

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Other Subjects

Elizabeth Fry Refuge

Elizabeth Fry Refuge

Otherwise known as the Elizabeth Fry Institute for Reformation of Women Prisoners.  JaneAusten (don't ask) gives some information; to quote: "Following {Fry's} death in 1845, a meeting chaired by t...

Group, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Settlements

Settlements

The settlement movement was a reformist social movement that began in the 1880s and peaked around the 1920s in England and the United States. Its goal was to bring the rich and the poor of society ...

Concept, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Notting Hill Housing Trust

Notting Hill Housing Trust

A social enterprise and charity providing affordable housing for Londoners. It was founded by Bruce Kenrick who had moved to Notting Hill in 1963 (which was then a far cry from the desirable area i...

Group, Property, Social Welfare

2 memorials
Lady Isabella Somerset

Lady Isabella Somerset

President of the British Women's Temperance Association , 1890 - 1903, founded of the first industrial farm for inebriate women and set up a home for training workhouse children. Born in London as...

Person, Food & Drink, Philanthropy, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Rhaune Laslett-O'Brien

Rhaune Laslett-O'Brien

Lived most of her life in and around West London.  After WW2 the housing conditions, the poverty and the racial mix in Notting Hill brought out her skills as a community champion.  In 1965 she intr...

Person, Community / Clubs, Race Issues, Social Welfare, Tourism / Traditions

1 memorial