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Sunderland Guild of Help was founded in 1907 following a sermon preached
by the Rev A. Wylie Blue, who
referred to the plight of the poor in Sunderland and made a special
plea "that measures might be taken by voluntary effort to overcome
the evils and mitigate the distress".
Since its foundation Sunderland Guild of Help has been involved
in meeting the needs of the poor and needy of Sunderland by setting
up soup kitchens, establishing convalescent homes and helping people
in need at their point of need. In 1927 the Guild was appointed by
SSAFA as their local agent to help ex-servicemen and their families
and subsequently appointed similarly by the Royal Alfred Merchant
Seamen's Society.
In 1977 the Guild was active in setting up one of the first Victim
Support Schemes in the country in Sunderland and maintained this association
until 1999 when the Victim Support Scheme obtained separate charitable
status.
In recent years statutory agencies such as Social Services have taken
on much of the work pioneered by the Guild, whilst other organisations
such as SSAFA and the Citizens Advice Bureau have become independent
from the Guild and set up their own agencies.
Presently Sunderland Guild of Help still administers welfare cases
through small funds and operates as an enabling charity through its
premises in Toward Road, Sunderland, where other small charities are
provided accommodation at rents that reflect their charitable status.
The following charities are similarly based in the Guild's premises:
Sunderland Victim Support Scheme, Sunderland
Volunteer Bureau, Wearside Women in Need and Warm
Up Wearside.
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