User:Hails.ak/Magdalen Society of Philadelphia

The Magdalen Society of Philadelphia, a private charitable organization was founded in 1807. The stated purpose of Philadelphia's Magdalen Society was "restoring to the paths of virtue those unhappy females who in unguarded hours have been robbed of their innocence." The president of the Society was Bishop William White, rector of Christ Church; the vice-president was Robert Wharton, mayor of Philadelphia.

To accomplish its mission, the Society in 1808 opened the Magdalen Asylum on the northeast corner of Schuylkill Second (now 21st) and Race Streets, at 39.958°N 75.174°W. It was operated by the Society's Board of Managers, and initially housed about a dozen prostitutes and other errant women. The Magdalen Asylum stood on this site for more than a century, until 1916. In 1988-1898, an archeological investigation of the site was conducted in connection with the construction of the Franklin Institute's Futures Center, which now overlaps the site.

While many women's societies existed at the time, The Magdalen Society stood out in its belief that "fallen" women could be rehabilitated and returned to society to live successful lives. One such woman was Elizabeth Ogden. After her stay at The Magdalen Society, Elizabeth went on to open a school. Other society women followed this same path, marrying into better families and finding new ways to contribute to society. Not every woman experienced a lifestyle change like Elizabeth, but if they wanted access to other options, the Magdalen Society was an easy place to access it. This was especially important for those who turned to prostitution and other illegal means of living because they had no other choice.

The women that the asylum admitted were called magdalens and were assigned a number in the order they entered the facility. They were mostly young immigrant women between the ages of 17 and 23 who were on their own and unsupported. They generally did not share the Magdalen Society's image of their "guilt and wretchedness," but instead simply sought a sanctuary from disease, the prison or almshouse, unhappy family situations, abusive men, and dire economic circumstances.

In its early years, the Magdalen Society Asylum functioned as a refuge for prostitutes. Most of these stayed only a few days or weeks. In 1877, the asylum was changed into a home for wayward girls, with a rule requiring a stay for twelve months. As the Magdalen Society Asylum became more selective, relaxed its emphasis on personal guilt and salvation, and standardized in some respects the treatment of the inmates, its rate of failure diminished.

A much larger Magdalen Home was erected at the same locality in the 1840s. This building separated the inmates ("magdalens") from the staff, and recalcitrant inmates from new arrivals. Fences and eventually a 13-foot wall were built around the property to keep the magdalens from seeing or otherwise interacting with the encroaching city.

The Philadelphia Magdalen Society lodged 2,726 women in all, attempting to change them into domestic servants, factory workers, seamstresses or laundresses—and sometimes even returning the inmates to their families, hopefully with a more "proper" mindset. Still, even the Board of Managers conceded that few magdalens were converted to lives of virtue. So the Society began to focus on preventing waywardness and providing education to girls.

The Home for Magdalens moved to Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, in 1915, about the time that it was becoming clear that the refuge had outlived its usefulness. Other private organizations and state institutions had become concerned with the treatment of "delinquent" girls, and the asylum's functions had been taken over by city courts, which placed youthful offenders on probation rather than committing them to institutions.