In Darkest London
Description
In 1925 the journalist Ada Elizabeth Chesterton decided on a dare to live on the streets of London. In Darkest London chronicles her two week experience.
What she found was a class of individuals, all without permanent homes, traveling between shelters in which overly bureaucratic organizations made life incredibly difficult. Chesterton concludes that the number of shelters, in particular those catering to women, were insufficient to handle the volume of people needing help, and those that did exist were too often unnecessarily restrictive. She claims that the government-run shelters in particular were designed not to help women, but to reform them, which are two very different propositions.
Chesterton portrays the women she meets sympathetically. At the time, there were many unflattering portraits of the homeless, some of which linger to this day. Claims of drug or alcohol problems, mental health issues, criminality, and low morals or intelligence are shown to be exaggerations if not outright fabrications. The problem of homelessness should instead considered as both a political and an economic issue, which leads to the conclusion that people have a right to be treated with a dignity that was too often lacking.
The publication of In Darkest London led to increased interest in the lives of homeless people and improving public shelters. Chesterton herself went on to found the Cecil Houses, a system of shelters still in operation today, and named after her late husband Cecil Chesterton, G. K. Chesterton’s brother.
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