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= Meredith Jemima Brown = Meredith Jemima Brown (1845/6- 5 November 1908) was a Scottish social reformer from Aberdeen who founded the Shaftesbury Institute, which offered a safe space for young women arriving in London.

Youth
Meredith Jemima Brown was born in Glasgow in either 1845 or 1846. Her mother was Catherine Dyce, sister of painter William Dyce, and her father was the Free Church minister Reverend David Brown. She was raised in Aberdeen and lived on Dee Street, and studied music and singing. After the death of her mother in the 1880s, Brown moved to London where she became concerned about for young women in working in factories and living in slums across the city.

Early career social reform
After moving to London, Brown developed an interest in the harsh working conditions and poverty suffered by factory girls in the East End and also in the West End of the city. Brown and a friend disguised themselves as factory girls to visit slums in the West End, and Brown documented their experiences in the book Only a Factory Girl, which raised £2000 that she used to purchase a property in Lisson Grove where she founded the Shaftesbury Institute.

The Shaftesbury Institute
The Institute initially provided a safe night shelter for women and a crèche, which Brown expanded to provide Bible classes throughout the West End, a training home for girls and a men's labour home. Brown served as the superintendent and honorary president of the Institute, which was funded by charitable donations. Brown was described as:"'A very remarkable woman, full of faith and of consequent zeal, in the noble cause of benefiting her poor and degraded sisters,' (The Times, 10 Nov 1908)"Brown continued to work on developing the Institute, including fundraising for new premises, until her death at the Shaftesbury Institute on 5 November 1908.