O'Hanlon writes that at the official opening of Spring House in 1921, Lady Foster (wife of the Governor) spoke about the hostel:
'There are far too many opportunities for evil and far too few opportunities for good, and I think it is in meeting that difficulty that … Hostels are the greatest boon we can confer upon the young people of our cities and towns'.
Commissioner Hay of the Salvation Army also spoke, saying that Spring House was intended as a place of shelter for 'the many unprotected girls in our midst'.
Spring House was larger than the Salvation Army's other hostel for young women, Allenby Lodge in Hawthorn. It could accommodate up to 170 women in single, double and dormitory rooms. O'Hanlon describes the accommodation:
'Each floor, bar the basement, had a bathroom and toilet. The ground floor contained a dining room and the first floor a residents' lounge. The two upper floors also had a sewing room … There was also a roof-top garden, where residents could sit out or play games with fellow residents (O'Hanlon, 1999, p.122).'
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Last updated:
04 June 2021
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/vic/E000273
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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