Hartley House (New York City)
Hartley House, formerly known as Hartley House Settlement, is a New York not for profit corporation, operating since 1897 as a charity serving the Hell's Kitchen community of Manhattan, New York. From the day of its founding, the Hartley House has been operating from 413 West 46th Street in Manhattan.
Hartley Farms
The Hartley Farms are affiliated with the Hartley House Settlement.
Leadership
- May Matthews, head of Hartley House in the 1920s[1]
- Grace Hartley Jenkins Mead (1896–1991) was president of Hartley House from 1940 to 1965; she was the great granddaughter of Robert Milham Hartley[2][3]
Other settlement houses in New York City
- Lincoln House Settlement – 202 W 63rd Street, Manhattan; founded by the leaders of the Henry Street Settlement to serve New York's African American community[4]
- Henry Street Settlement – Lower East Side, Manhattan; founded in 1893 by Lillian Wald
- Third Street Settlement – 235 E 11th Street, now called Third Street Music School Settlement; founded in 1894 by Emilie Wagner
- Lenox Hill Neighborhood House – 331 E 70th Street; founded in 1894 by the Alumnae Association of Hunter College
- University Settlement House – the oldest settlement house in the United States, founded in 1886 by Stanton Coit, Charles B. Stover, and Carl Schurz
- Union Settlement Association – founded in 1895 by alumni, faculty, and students of Union Theological Seminary at 202 E 69th Street in response to the desperate conditions of immigrants struggling to make a new life in America ... within five months, the agency moved to its present site at 237 E 104th Street
See also
External links
- Hartley Farms
- United Neighborhood Houses of New York
- Finding aid for the Hartley House records in the Social Welfare History Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.
References
- ↑ Mary E. Hauser, Learning from children: the life and legacy of Caroline Pratt, Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., New York (2006)
- ↑ Biography Index, A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines, Volume 17, September 1990 thru August 1992, H.W. Wilson Company (1992)
- ↑ Grace H. J. Mead, 95, Foundation President, The New York Times, Apr 12, 1991
- ↑ Iris Carlton-LaNey, PhD, and N. Yolanda Burwell, PhD, African American Community Practice Models: Historical and Contemporary, Haworth Press (1995)
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