. The Trust was founded in 1862 by London-based American banker
George Peabody, who in the 1850s had developed a great affection for London, and determined to make a charitable gift to benefit it. His initial ideas included a system of drinking fountains (comparable to the
Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association scheme actually set up by
Samuel Gurney and
Edward Thomas Wakefield in 1859), or a contribution to the "
ragged schools" of the
Earl of Shaftesbury. In March 1859, however, he settled on establishing a
model dwellings company. Three years later, in a letter to
The Times on 26 March 1862, he launched the Peabody Donation Fund, with an initial gift of £150,000. The aim of the organisation, he said, would be to "ameliorate the condition of the poor and needy of this great metropolis, and to promote their comfort and happiness". The paper reported, "We have today to announce an act of beneficence unexampled in its largeness and in the time and manner of the gift". Shortly before his death in 1869, Peabody increased his gift to £500,000. The Peabody Trust was later constituted by
Act of Parliament, stipulating its objectives to work solely within London for the relief of
poverty. This was to be expressed through the provision of
model dwellings for the capital's poor. ,
Spitalfields. A wood-engraving published in the
Illustrated London News in 1863, shortly before the building opened. The first block, designed by
H. A. Darbishire in a red-brick
Jacobethan style, opened in
Commercial Street,
Spitalfields, on 29 February 1864. It cost £22,000 to build, and contained 57 "dwellings" (i.e.
flats) for the poor, nine shops with accommodation for the shopkeepers, and baths and laundry facilities on the upper floor.
Water-closets were grouped in pairs by the staircases, with one shared between every two flats. This first block was followed by larger estates in
Islington,
Poplar,
Shadwell,
Chelsea,
Westminster,
Bermondsey, and elsewhere. By 1882 the Trust housed more than 14,600 people in 3,500 dwellings. By 1939 it owned more than 8,000 dwellings. In its early days, the Trust imposed strict rules to ensure that its tenants were of good moral character. Rents were to be paid weekly and punctually; there was a night-time curfew and a set of moral standards to be adhered to; and the dwellings could not be used for certain trades. ==Current mission==