Historical Note
Florence Crittenton homes are residential care facilities for teenage
girls who are pregnant, parenting or at-risk. Originally opened as refuges for
young prostitutes, the homes soon became maternity centers for young, often
poor, unmarried pregnant women, providing medical care, therapy, support
services and educational opportunities. After 1960, many homes discontinued
in-house medical services and focused on counseling, education and support for
young women and families, and public advocacy on behalf of at-risk teenagers,
particularly unmarried, pregnant girls.
The first Florence Crittenton home was opened on Bleecker Street in
New York on April 19, 1883. Charles Crittenton, a wealthy New York businessman,
had become despondent after the death of his four-year-old daughter Florence
from scarlet fever. Finding comfort in religion, he began evangelizing to young
prostitutes. Realizing that they would need lodging and support in order to
have hope of leaving such circumstances, Crittenton devoted the rest of his
life to providing a safe haven and rehabilitation for these women. In 1890,
Crittenton decided that such homes should be established nationwide; thirteen
homes were opened by 1893.
In 1893, Crittenton met Kate Waller Barrett, a woman who was to become
a major force in the Crittenton program. The wife of Reverend Robert Barrett,
she became, through his work, exposed to the hardships of unwed mothers and
their babies. In affiliation with Crittenton, Barrett opened a rescue home for
young women in Atlanta . Together, Barrett and Crittenton opened a home in
Washington, D.C. which became the national headquarters of the Florence
Crittenton Mission. After Crittenton's death in 1909, Barrett became the
organization's president, until her death in 1925. Barrett was instrumental in
helping to shift the focus of the rescue-home movement away from the
reformation of prostitutes and toward the social welfare of the unwed
mother.
In 1950, the Florence Crittenton Association of America, an autonomous
federation of Crittenton Homes, was established. Among the Association's stated
purposes was to promote a better understanding of the problems of unmarried
mothers and their babies and to work with other organizations in related
fields. In 1976, the Association became a division of the Child Welfare League
of America. Today, there are a number of Florence Crittenton agencies across
the country.
The Florence Crittenton Home of Seattle
Crittenton arrived in Seattle in March 1899 to evangelize, and with
hopes of opening a new home. Soon, a newly organized Seattle group purchased a
27-room house overlooking Lake Washington in Dunlap, the location from which
the home would operate until it closed in 1973.
The Florence Crittenton Home of Seattle was opened on November 21,
1899, with two maternity wards and space for 50 women. A larger home, built on
the same property, was opened in 1926. The home closed temporarily during World
War II, when the city of Seattle leased the Florence Crittenton building and
property for use as a venereal disease quick treatment center. In the late
1940s, the delivery of babies was moved out of the Home itself and into a local
hospital; by 1951, all medical care was handled by staff doctors at Swedish
hospital.
A 1953 wing added residential and administrative space; in 1965, four
cottages increased capacity from 40 to 90 residents. Though there was a waiting
list for beds in the 1960s, by the 1970s the climate had begun to change.
Society became more accepting of unwed mothers, for whom more resources were
available; the number of residents at the Seattle home dropped dramatically. In
1973, the Seattle Home, already in debt, lost crucial funding from the United
Way because of a lack of need for its services. On March 15, 1973, the facility
was closed.
The building currently houses the Thunderbird Treatment Center,
operated by the Seattle Indian Health Board, and providing treatment for Native
Americans with chemical substance dependency.
Content Description
The collection contains eight annual reports from the Florence
Crittenton Home of Seattle, spanning 1956-1968, as well as two of the Home's
handbooks. It also includes two academic papers written by Robinson: a paper on
the history of the Florence Crittenton homes in general and the Seattle home in
particular, and a master's thesis on Dr. Kate Waller Barrett, a major force in
the Crittenton program who was president of the Florence Crittenton Mission
from 1909 to 1925. A 1988 article from the Northern Virginia Heritage Magazine
discusses Barrett and Ivakota, the Florence Crittenton Home established by
Barrett in Virginia. The collection also includes a 1960 annual report for the
Ruth School for Girls, the Burien school for wards of the Juvenile Court.