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Henry Street Settlement
Photograph courtesy of Henry Street Settlement.
Lilian
Wald and Mary Brewster in their Henry Street Office, 1895.
Photograph courtesy of the Visiting Nurse Service of New York.
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Lillian Wald (1867-1940), nurse, social
worker
The three-story Federal style homes located
on Henry Street comprise the Henry Street Settlement and Neighborhood
Playhouse, one of the nation's first settlement homes founded in response
to the miserable urban conditions faced by the poor as a result of rapid
industrialization and increased immigration. Lillian Wald was a student at
the Women's Medical College in New York when she was asked to organize a
course of instruction in home nursing adapted to the needs of the
immigrants living in New York City's Lower East Side. Wald discovered
first-hand the squalid conditions in which many immigrants suffered, and
in 1895, Wald created the Henry Street Settlement, determined to live
among the poor to better provide a variety of volunteer services. Nursing
was central to Wald's idea of neighborhood service, and she introduced the
pioneering concept of "public health nursing," which placed
medical care within the reach of the poor. By 1940, nearly 300 nurses
worked from 20 branches throughout New York City. Wald's most innovative
experiment was a "Public School Nursing Service" designed to
increase school attendance by having Henry Street nurses provide care at
public schools. This was so successful that the New York City Board of
Health soon organized a public school nursing program, the first such
service offered anywhere in the world.
The Henry St. Settlement and
Neighborhood Playhouse, a National Historic Landmark, is located at
263-267 Henry St. and 466 Grand St. in New York City, NY. For further
information visit the Henry
Street Settlement website.
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notes
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Henry
Street Settlement, 263, 265, Henry
Street. 1827.
One of America’s pioneering settlement houses, it was established in
1893 by Lillian D. Wald to bring visiting nurses into the crowded
tenements of the Lower East Side. Wald was a leader in the fight for
better health and working conditions, and improved housing and schools.
The settlement provides a wide-range of social and educational services
and operates the nearby Abrons Arts Center. |