Purpose | social reform |
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Headquarters | 95 Rivington Street |
Location |
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Coordinates | 40°43′12.3″N 73°59′19″W / 40.720083°N 73.98861°W |
Region served | Lower East Side of the Manhattan |
Headworker | Jean Gurney Fine Spahr |
Parent organization | College Settlements Association |
Rivington Street Settlement (also known as the New York College Settlement) was an American settlement house which provided educational and social services on the Lower East Side of the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York. Under the auspices of the College Settlements Association (CSA), it focused on the mostly immigrant population of the neighborhood. Originally located at 95 Rivington Street (1889-), other locations later included 96 Rivington Street (1892-1901), 188 Ludlow Street (1902–), 84-86 First Street (1907-), and Summer Home, Mount Ivy, New York (1900-). The Rivington Street Settlement was established by college women, was controlled by college women, and had a majority of college women as residents.[1] The Rivington Street Settlement was a kind of graduate school in economics and sociology, with practical lessons in a tenement–house district - a kind of sociological laboratory.[2]