Philanthropy in 1900 London: The Alexandra Trust
Arthur H. Beavan continued his survey of philanthropy in Imperial London, published in 1901, with this look at the Alexandra Trust:
The most sensational, as well as the most practical, effort to lessen the
cost of daily sustenance to our countless toilers in the East-end, is the "Alexandra
Trust."
In August 1898, the public were surprised by a Gazette announcement to the effect
that a petition had been presented to "Her Majesty in Council by Her Royal
Highness the Princess of Wales, the Duke of Norfolk, the Right Honourable Sir
Francis Jeune, Sir Francis Knollys, James Knowles, Esq, and Sir Thomas Johnstone
Lipton, praying for the grant of a Charter of Incorporation to 'The Alexandra
Incorporated Trust,' for the purpose of providing meals at a cheap rate for poor
men and women."
Sir Thomas Lipton, on being consulted by Her Royal Highness,
saw, with the keen insight of the practical man of business, that there was every
reason to anticipate that restaurants for the working-classes could be maintained
upon the sound lines of honest trade, as much as tenement dwellings or the Rowton
Houses, and expressed himself as ready to contribute for her gracious purpose
a sum that was originally fixed at £100,000, but which has since been much
increased.
The great building in which well-cooked meals are served at a cost below anything
previously attempted commercially in London, is close to the important tram and
omnibus junction at Old Street, and is in the midst of a crowded population of
workers.
The most interesting department of the great scheme is, of course, the kitchens,
which, in accordance with the latest ideas, are at the top of the building, on
the fourth floor.
It is, naturally, only by working with prodigious quantities that cheap rates
can be maintained, but even then, it is a little startling to be told that "those
steam-chests for potatoes can cook a ton and a half an hour."
For boiling operations, there are steam jacketed tanks, deeply fluted, in which
in the natural process of expansion in cooking, the contents mark themselves off
into the halfpenny portions for sale.
Thirty-two hams can be dressed simultaneously, and the roasting-ovens can contain
ten and seven hundredweights respectively of viands at a time.
For soup-making, six vast boilers are provided, with an aggregate capacity of
500 gallons.
In general plan, that of the famous Volkskuche, started
by Dr. Kuhn in Vienna, has been followed.
The hungry customer in want of a meal finds in the bill of fare items that start
from a halfpenny.
For that sum, a cup of tea, coffee, or cocoa, a bowl of soup or porridge, a slice
of bread, with butter, jam, or marmalade, a piece of cake, a portion of pastry,
pudding, or vegetables or pickles, may be had.
The penny alone does not seem a much-favoured coin, and a bloater, kipper, or
sardines, or mineral waters are the chief items it purchases.
With, however, an additional halfpenny, it allows of a choice of a rasher of bacon,
a haddock, two sausages, a buttered tea-cake, a small steak-pudding, a pork-pie,
or two boiled eggs.
Cold meat, ham, or large-sized haddock are sold for twopence a plate, and a special
feature daily is boiled fish and potatoes for twopence-halfpenny.
Perhaps, however, the triumph of all is the three-course dinner for fourpence-halfpenny.
This consists of soup, a choice at will of a large steak-pudding, roast pork,
roast or boiled beef, roast or boiled mutton, Irish stew, boiled pickled pork,
stewed steak, or liver and bacon.
It includes two vegetables and bread, and a choice between pastry, or a mug of
tea, coffee, or cocoa.
There is a staff of a hundred waitresses, in a neat uniform of black dress and
white cap and apron, whose duties are primarily to remove the dirty plates and
cups.
Each of the three halls can accommodate 500 people, so that 1500 meals may be
simultaneously consumed, and 12,000 meals can be easily provided during the day.
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