WE MAKE HISTORY

Museum of Homelessness is building the national collection for homelessness, preserving and sharing histories of homelessness, poverty and social action.

The Museum of Homelessness has a small but growing collection of objects and archival records drawn from various organisations, individuals and through its projects. Our focus is on recent history from the post-war period.

This section of the site contains a selection of objects, stories and essays chosen by a range of contributors that say something about homelessness history and what is going on today. We occasionally add new things and anticipate sharing more entries in the coming years.

At the moment we are developing our new space in Finsbury Park. We are currently unable to arrange viewings of the archive but we anticipate this changing after our public opening later in 2024. At the present time we are therefore unable to collect unsolicited donations to the archive and collection.

The Dosser’s Bible 1957-1963

Noise Matters, May 2018

Steph Evans – What Is Homelessness? 1978

The Baccy, 2018

This Stuff Matters Vol. 1, Dec 2017

The Picture, 2018

The Bottle, 2018

The Symbol, 2018

The Nit Comb, 2018

The Asbo, 2017

The Roundabout, 2018

The Bag, 2018

The Candle, 2018

The Naloxone, 2017

The Hat, 2018

MUSEUM OF HOMELESSNESS COLLECTION (AND OTHER RESOURCES)

Museum of Homelessness is a small organisation, run almost entirely by volunteers. Although we hold a range of records, objects and art in trust we are still young and don’t have our own space.

Since we don’t have a space and large online database yet, we hope this section will give you more info about what to do if you wish to explore our collection or even give us something.

MUSEUM OF HOMELESSNESS COLLECTION AND ARCHIVE

Our archive and collection holdings are small and can be separated into two parts. The first is a collection of a small number of objects, including personal effects, ephemera, signs, art, and important possessions. A large number of these items were donated by people who have been homeless. These objects have been collected since 2017, and are always collected with an oral testimony. We use this testimony as the basis for interpretation of the object, working with actor storytellers. A number of the stories we have collected are shown on this page and we have just over 40 objects in the collection. These objects have also been used in unique collaborations and projects. In 2023 the collection was used by poet in residence Surfing Sofas for his remarkable album Objects and Concepts.

The second part is a paper-based collection covering a period of history in the mid-twentieth century from the late 1950s to the present day. The mid 20c period was a time when the term 'homelessness' was increasingly being discussed, thought about and debated, not as an inconsequential aspect of poverty, but as a more complicated societal phenomenon. The archive is comprised of records of a number of smaller grassroots and voluntary groups, who have historically operated in the UK.

VISITING OUR COLLECTION AND ARCHIVE

Since we were setup in 2015 we have not had our own space, but it is possible to visit the archive and collection by contacting Matt Turtle (matt@museumofhomelessness.org), to arrange a visit. As we develop our space at Finsbury Park we are not able to organise viewings but this will change later in 2024. We are working to fully catalogue the collection and archive and make it more publicly accessible. We will also be hosting more regular history related events at activities after we open.

Links and other resources

There are some great resources out there for those interested in other histories and homelessness now. Please send us other recommendations if you have them.

Homelessness Now: Invisible People is a great source for opinion. Both Homeless Link and Crisis blog regularly and consistently on policy. We recommend following grassroots, lived experience led organsations such as The Outside Project, Streets Kitchen, Simon Community on social media for unfiltered accounts of what’s happening now on the ground.

Workhouse History: Peter Higginbotham has spent decades researching, documenting and sharing the story of the workhouse in Britain.

History of Social Housing: John Boughton’s Municipal Dreams (now a book) is a comprehensive survey of the rise and fall of social housing in the UK from the slums of 19th century Liverpool to Grenfell. The Social History Sound Archive and social housing history resources are good too. There are some great local projects like Southwark Notes and Cardboard Citizens also created a fantastic legacy resource too from their 2017 Home Truths Project.

Poverty and VagrancyThe London Lives resource is vital for anyone looking at the social history of poverty from the late 1600s through to the 1800s. Peter Jones’s Stray Voices is a great source of opinion and contains some rich and varied articles. The Connected Histories platform is also great for researchers. Finally, anyone interested in poverty in the 1800s will find Booth’s digitised poverty maps at the LSE a must see.

Squatting and resistance: The ASS is a great source for squatting history and present day news. Check out the brilliant Frestonia archive project here for a history of that famous north-west London squat of the late 1970s. Alex Vasudevan also published a book on the international history of squatting that includes a chapter on the UK. There are also resources that ICA created from their show with Mark ‘Smiler’ Cawson who documented squats in the 1980s. For anyone interested in going back further into history you can find info on the history of the Diggers here. 56a is an amazing squatting archive centre in south London - well worth a visit.

Contemporary Collecting Toolkit (Edited by Ellie Miles, Susanna Cordner, Jen Kavanagh), 2020
Museum of Homelessness cofounders wrote a chapter on working with trauma, p. 22.

 LATEST ARCHIVE NEWS

"Move over, 20th century museums. This is the new, 21st century model of how museums should be."

David Anderson, Director General, National Museum Wales