Dickens had included "A Visit to Newgate", referring to
Newgate Gaol, in his collection
Sketches by Boz (1836). He was keen on visiting London prisons, particularly in 1838–9. For Urania Cottage, he often went to the Coldbath Fields prison, to find women who might come to the house, and is thought to have based his character Mr Creakle of
David Copperfield on the magistrate
Benjamin Rotch he met there. Rotch was an opponent of ideas in
penology that Dickens had floated in
American Notes (1842), an advocate of the
separate system, and a leader in the group of Middlesex magistrates who in 1847 were trying to impose that system in the county's prisons. Places in the house were filled through Dickens's contacts George Laval Chesterton, governor at Coldbaths Fields prison, and Augustus Tracey, Chesterton's counterpart in
Westminster; Dickens had introduced both men to Maconochie. A personal recommendation came through the Rev. Henry Drage, vicar of
St. Margaret's Church, Rochester, formerly a neighbour of the Dickens family in
Chatham, Kent. A refuge named for
Elizabeth Fry opened in 1849 at 195
Mare Street, Hackney, as a
half-way house, and referred some women to Urania Cottage. In 1850
Elizabeth Gaskell was concerned to help a 16-year old called Pasley, and applied to Dickens to see if she could be admitted to Urania Cottage. After some discussion involving also Burdett-Coutts, Pasley was found a place with a family emigrating to South Africa. Over time, those admitted to the house became more varied: imprisoned
sex workers were joined by women or girls convicted of crimes such as theft not connected to prostitution, and those who were
homeless or
destitute. John Hardwick of
Marlborough Street Magistrates Court in 1855 recommended to Dickens the domestic servant Susan Mayne who had a record of drunkenness and prostitution charges. A report in 1853, not associated with the founders' names, discussed the outcomes for 56 "inmates", mostly young women, with average age about 20. Of those, 30 had emigrated to Australia where seven were known to have married. ==After Dickens==