Hostel House and Chambers
Accommodating the Victorian and Edwardian Working Woman
Buy from bookshop'Hostel, House and Chambers' is the first comprehensive study of the campaigns to house a new generation of working women, the specialised design of the buildings, and the women whose lives were changed by this architectural movement.
After 1900, the rapid rise of women working as clerks, secretaries, or typists in London and other cities created an urgent need for affordable and respectable accommodation. Building on models of elegant Victorian ladies’ residential chambers and the vast working men’s lodging houses, a new type of single working women’s hostel emerged.
The handsome, if occasionally austere, façades blended into the Edwardian streetscape. However, architectural plans, literary descriptions, and historic photographs reveal distinctive interiors. The hostels featured efficiently planned tiny private spaces alongside generous communal dining and sitting rooms, as well as libraries, music rooms, and bicycle stores.
Emphatically not charitable or municipal affairs, these were business-minded enterprises, established and advocated by other Edwardian women. In turn, these little-known buildings supported, enabled, and empowered a new generation of intrepid working women. This book brings the buildings and the residents to vivid life through previously untapped sources.
Additional Information
- Series: Architectural History
- Publication Status: Completed
- Pages: 184
- ISBN: 9781836244554 (Hardcover)
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