Hopewell Society of Brooklyn annual reports and publications 1871-1945

ArchivalResource

Hopewell Society of Brooklyn annual reports and publications 1871-1945

0.42 Linear feet; in one manuscript box.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 6329912

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Home Association for Working Women and Girls (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.).

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6nt6ccr (corporateBody)

The Hopewell Society of Brooklyn was incorporated in 1870 as the Society for the Aid of Friendless Women and Children. Its building was located at 20 Concord Street between Fulton and Washington Streets. The Society administered aid to destitute women and children, providing temporary housing, employment assistance, and educational and recreational programs. The Society's name was legally changed to the Hopewell Society of Brooklyn in 1921, and a year later the Society moved into a ...

Brooklyn Industrial School Association and Home for Destitute Children.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68499b9 (corporateBody)

The Brooklyn Industrial School Association was founded in 1854 and formally incorporated in 1857 to provide education, food, and shelter to orphaned, abandoned, and otherwise impoverished children in Brooklyn. It operated schools throughout Brooklyn that enrolled several hundred students per year, as well as the Home for Destitute Children, built in 1862 on Butler Street (now Sterling Place) near Flatbush Avenue. The Association's approach to its work was expressly religious in nature, with a st...

Society for the Aid of Friendless Women and Children (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68j43z4 (corporateBody)

The Hopewell Society of Brooklyn was incorporated in 1870 as the Society for the Aid of Friendless Women and Children. Its building was located at 20 Concord Street between Fulton and Washington Streets. The Society administered aid to destitute women and children, providing temporary housing, employment assistance, and educational and recreational programs. The Society's name was legally changed to the Hopewell Society of Brooklyn in 1921, and a year later the Society moved into a ...

Hopewell Society of Brooklyn

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6zn10w3 (corporateBody)

The Hopewell Society of Brooklyn was incorporated in 1870 as the Society for the Aid of Friendless Women and Children. Its building was located at 20 Concord Street between Fulton and Washington Streets. The Society administered aid to destitute women and children, providing temporary housing, employment assistance, and educational and recreational programs. The Society's name was legally changed to the Hopewell Society of Brooklyn in 1921, and a year later the Society moved into a ...