CLOSEUNIVERSITY SETTLEMENT
The first settlement house in
the United States, University Settlement, on the Lower East Side, was founded
in 1886 by Stanton Coit, a divinity student influenced by the Social Gospel
movement and by Toynbee Hall, the original settlement in London. Based
on contact between university students and the working poor, it became
a model for more than 400 settlements in New York and other gateway cities:
multipurpose agencies addressing the needs and aiding the acculturation
of immigrants. In the impoverished and overcrowded Lower East Side, University
Settlement was a forerunner of both community organizing and professional
social work. Serving as a school, community center, research institute,
and welfare agency, it pioneered many services, including kindergartens
and public baths, that were later supported or assumed by municipal government.
It also was a hub of political reform, where leaders such as CHARLES B. STOVER,
Carl Schurz, Robbins Gilman, Nicholas Murray Butler, and Seth Low campaigned
for safer tenements, better working and sanitary conditions, abolition
of child labor, and for parks and playgrounds. University Settlement eventually
established a health clinic, cultural and anti-poverty programs, one of
the first senior citizens centers in the country, and an early mental health
clinic. More recent programs have also included daycare, Head Start, youth
counselling, and home management classes. Since 1911 it has also operated
a summer camp in Beacon, N.Y. Eleanor Roosevelt taught dance at University
Settlement; Franklin D. Roosevelt later called it "a landmark in the
social history of the nation."
NOTES: Both Seth Low and Nicholas M. Butler served as presidents of Columbia
University; Low also served a term as mayor.
© 1996-2004 Jeffrey Scheuer