(A former Rowton House in Birmingham, Wikipedia)
Although the majority of young and single working men lived
with their families in the Edwardian age, several left home for the bigger
cities, especially London. Here, they
often boarded in lodgings where they were provided with meals and perhaps cleaning. They were not allowed to cook in their
rooms. Many of these lodgings were cheap
and nasty, so philanthropists started to provide alternatives for these men. Some of these sound even worse!
Rowton Houses were built by Lord Rowton, for example, so
that men didn’t have to stay in squalid lodging houses. Here, the young men paid a shilling for a
cubicle, or a half and crown for a special which George Orwell in a later era
described as ‘practically hotel accommodation’.
There were strict rules in these houses.
Cooking and playing cards were not allowed, and there was no entry before
7 p.m. and the boarders had to leave before 9:00 a.m. each day. Alcohol was
forbidden and men could be punished for wetting their beds or other
misbehaviours. Jack London who lived in the Tower House in East London in 1902
thought that it was packed with life that was ‘degrading and unwholesome,’ but
George Orwell described the Rowton Houses as ‘splendid buildings’ and thought
that they were better than the other available accommodation.
Sometimes, men who worked in particular occupations were
actually provided with living quarters.
The London Road Fire Station in Manchester, opened in 1906, had flats
for single men and families. They were
well-cared for, with a laundry, gymnasium, billiard room and a playroom for the
children. This building with its sculptures by Milson seems to have been quite
an enlightened idea for its time.
Wealthier single men, such as MP’s, often had pied a’
tierres in London in buildings like the ‘bright and charmingly decorated’
Marlborough Mansions with its coffee rooms.
There were usually servant’s quarters and meals were sent up from
restaurants or kitchens. Mansion flats were very popular with their elegant
rooms and maid and laundry service.
Jack Worthing in The
Importance of Being Earnest lived in the luxurious Albany in London. This was the haunt of aristocrats and the
very wealthy. Lord Byron famously carried on his many affairs there in earlier
times. The Albany is the epitome of
elegance with its high ceilings, large windows and light-filled rooms. Some of
the occupants complained that their apartments were ‘cramped,’ however. This would definitely have been my choice!