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The Return Of Vicky Moses

June 13, 2023
by the gentle author

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Vicky outside the former Providence Row Shelter where she stayed as a ten-year-old in 1958

When Vicky Moses returned to Spitalfields for the first time in over fifty years while house-hunting she had the strange experience of encountering her younger self at the Providence Row Shelter in Crispin St, where she had once stayed as child. Then Vicky moved into a flat nearby in the Petticoat Tower and revealed that it is no accident that after all these years she chose to make her permanent home in Spitalfields.“The place feels comfortable to me,” she confirmed when I met her in Crispin St outside the former Providence Row Shelter.

“During the winter of 1958, my mother took myself, aged ten, with my sister and brother aged six and four, and a six-month-old baby, to London to get away from my violent father. Arriving at Victoria Station with just the housekeeping money, Mum had no option but to seek help. She went first to what is now The Passage, a charitable hostel in Carlisle Place in Victoria, but there was no help there for a family such as ours. Eventually – having walked right across London looking for somewhere to stay – by that evening we arrived at the doors of Providence Row in Spitalfields where we were given beds and this became our temporary home.

As a ten-year-old, I was able to take it all in and remember it well, even now. It was such a contrast to our suburban life, but we were safe and secure and with our mother, our rock.

My memories of Providence Row are these – From the street you went up steps to the door, and inside was a long large room with a huge wooden table running through the middle, and, on either side, along the walls, were wooden benches. Women and children were separated from the men who were downstairs.

Each night, before going to bed, we were given a mug of cocoa and a thick slice of bread and butter. We all went to bed about the same time. The dormitory had beds arranged, hospital-style, around the walls, facing into the room, and a double row ran down the centre. We were in the women’s dormitory, my sister and I sharing a single bed, Mum sleeping with my brother with the baby in-between. In the bed next to ours, an old woman slept fully clothed, muttering and snoring which I found most disturbing.

In the mornings, we went down for breakfast – a mug of tea and another thick slice of bread and butter. Then we had to go out as the refuge was closed during the day, so there was nothing to do but walk the streets.

Mum took this opportunity to show us the sights of London that were within walking distance. She showed us Billingsgate Fish Market and we went to St Paul’s, to Petticoat Lane Market where the crockery seller enthralled me with his banter and where I first tasted hot chestnuts, and to Fleet St and the Tower of London and Tower Bridge. I remember waiting and then eventually seeing the Bridge open and close for a ship to pass through.

There were the bomb sites too, fascinating places for a child. I read ‘An Episode of Sparrows’ by Rumer Godden when I was twelve and I saw the film version ‘Innocent Sinners’. It was all familiar to me because I knew the location, I’d lived there. ‘A Kid for Two Farthings’ was another film I saw not long after our stay – I must watch it again to relive those days, to see it again through my child’s eyes.

The days were very long and we had to be fed, which meant food on park benches. And it was cold. But eventually 5pm would come round and we could return to the refuge.

We should have been at school, of course, and my eleven-plus exam was approaching. I’d been learning long division of pounds, shillings and pence, so Mum taught me this at the shelter in the evenings. I knelt at the bench with a piece of paper on which Mum had written some sums and next to me were her spare coins to help me. The other residents must have thought this odd, but Mum was not to be deterred, the eleven-plus was important and preparation continued regardless of circumstances.

Next to us on the bench, sat another mother with her two daughters, the only other family I can remember. One daughter was my age, and the other was younger. I played with the older girl and we became friends, even though there was nowhere for us to go and play or even talk, other than by sitting beside each other on the bench.

The other residents came from an existence very different to mine. They were poor, desperate people from a Dickensian world – people whose problems were not solved by the new welfare state, but I didn’t feel threatened, and the nuns and lay staff were kind, and our Mum was our star.

When the time came for us to leave – we were moving on to stay with my uncle – I remember a nun came to the door to see us off. I can see her standing at the top of the steps. Mum needed to pop back inside to say goodbye to someone, and asked me to hold onto the pram and watch the others. She put her purse under the pram cover and went inside. Five minutes later she reappeared and went for her purse. It had gone. Someone had seen her go and distracted me from my task.

Those were strange days but ones I will never forget and, in many ways, I’m glad I had this experience though I wish the circumstances that led us there had been different.”

Vicky passed her eleven-plus exam in 1959.

Vicky (far right holding the baby) with her brothers and sisters in the spring of 1959, six months after their stay in the Providence Row Shelter.

The dormitory – Vicky’s mother and her two youngest children slept in the bed in the foreground, while Vicky and her sister shared the next bed in the front of the picture.

Sister Fidelma outside Providence Row’s Gun St entrance, pictured in Catholic Life, 1976.

Vicky stands in Gun St where Sister Fidelma once stood.

The shelter seen from the corner of Crispin St and Whites Row, a century ago.

Vicky is now a resident of Spitalfields and the shelter has been converted as student accommodation.

Extracts from a pamphlet produced by Providence Row in 1960.

Click here to read about the continuing work of Providence Row in Spitalfields.

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The Dosshouses of Spitalfields

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9 Responses leave one →
  1. Amanda Bush permalink
    June 13, 2023

    Vicky’s mother sounds like a wonderful determined woman and l hope she lived to be proud of her children.

  2. Cherub permalink
    June 13, 2023

    Vicky’s mother must have been a strong lady. I hope she found happiness and a better life with her children, but in their photo they look to have been thriving which is good.

    I found the part about them having to leave the hostel for the day and mum showing them the sights to keep them occupied very poignant. A mother in very difficult circumstances trying to do the best by her children. Vicky and her siblings must have loved her very much.

  3. June 13, 2023

    Vicky Moses’ mother was a very courageous woman. She has all my admiration.

  4. June 13, 2023

    A heart-warming story about life in Spitalfields. Thank you for this historical view! – The wonderful film “A Kid For Two Farthings” (shot on location in London in 1954, still partly in ruins) is actually now on YouTube and is an incredible document:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWsWumqSoRg

    Love & Peace
    ACHIM

  5. June 13, 2023

    I can imagine Call The Midwife’s Sister Julienne referring families to Sister Fidelma and the Sisters of Mercy, despite their different forms of Christianity. Fact and fiction merge.

  6. Jill Wilson permalink
    June 13, 2023

    Fascinating stuff! I have often wondered what the building had been in the past and what the Men and Women signs signified.

    And good to hear that it provided shelter for those in dire need like Vicky’s family. Her mother sounds like a star.

  7. Barbara permalink
    June 13, 2023

    So many would not have made it through without charity , the Welfare State , the Church and the kindness of others . Most importantly, they would not have made it through without the love of their mother .

  8. Jane Clouston permalink
    June 13, 2023

    What a wonderful story ..so,positive even in dire circumstances..
    I remember that place last time we were in spittalfields.
    Thank you

  9. Georgina Briody permalink
    June 15, 2023

    The strength and courage of Vicky’s mother – and resilience of the children – what a story from the 1950s and there was I living near Tower Bridge whilst this family had to endure such difficult times.

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