There is very little evidence of Amelia Scott's initial education or of the first thirty or so years of her life, although she probably participated in conventional philanthropic, Church-related activities such as running mothers' meetings and teaching Sunday school classes. She had a strong, Anglican faith and in 1898 her book,
Women of Sacred History, was published. In 1894 Scott attended a conference of the
National Union of Women Workers (NUWW) at Bristol. This event was an epiphany: '[i]n those days in Tunbridge Wells we lived in our own small, self-satisfied circles, both in religion, politics and class,' she later recalled. 'At Bristol I walked into a wholly different atmosphere, and it was an atmosphere where I would be'. Inspired by this conference, she formed an NUWW branch in Tunbridge Wells, holding the initial meeting in her own home and serving as its secretary for over thirty-five years. At the first meeting, the well-known workhouse reformer,
Louisa Twining (who had retired to Tunbridge Wells) took the chair. Twining, who was a
Poor Law Guardian (PLG) for the Tonbridge
Union, must have encouraged Scott to follow in her footsteps, as in 1901 Amelia was elected a PLG. Scott also undertook social work training in London provided by the
Charity Organisation Society (COS). In 1906 the Tunbridge Wells NUWW branch, under her direction, hosted the national NUWW conference in the town's new
Opera House. As a PLG Scott not only regularly inspected the workhouse premises at
Pembury but also visited people for whom the Union was responsible including those who had been sent to the
County Asylum at
Barming, near Maidstone. She served on the Union's Finance Committee as well as the Children's Committee, the House Committee and the Mental Deficiency Committee. Her career as a PLG continued until 1930 when the Board's functions were transferred to the
Kent County Council's
Public Assistance Committee. According to a semi-autobiographical work about the ending of the Poor Law entitled
The Passing of a Great Dread, Scott learnt a great deal from her experience as a PLG, not least from her dealings with a female vagrant to whom she gave the pseudonym 'Elspeth'. Her Poor Law work also opened her eyes to the needs of new mothers, both married, and unmarried; as well as those of young, sick and elderly workhouse inmates. Among the service improvements she championed was the construction of a proper mortuary, complete with space for the grieving relatives of the deceased. Amelia Scott's social activism focused primarily on the needs of young, working-class women and mothers. Among her many local community projects was a hostel for working women, opened in Tunbridge Wells in 1913. Along with many NUWW activists, she had become concerned by the lack of housing provision for poor working class single women and children, other than mixed common lodging houses. The Tunbridge Wells NUWW branch raised funds to take over and refurbish a former inn and reopen it as the Crown Hostel for Women and Children. In 1931 it was reported to house 100 women and 50 children in a week. Scott, together with her sister, Louisa and other local NUWW members also established a social club for working girls (particularly laundry workers) in Upper Grosvenor Road, Tunbridge Wells. Called the 'Leisure Hour Club for Young Women in Business', it opened its doors in 1900 and remained active for nearly twenty years. The club was supported by local philanthropists and ran excursions on bank holidays as well as holding club evenings. During the
First World War it was joined by the 'Comrades' Club', where young women were able to socialise with young soldiers, under the watchful eyes of the women volunteers. == Women's suffrage ==