almshouses in Arabic

Almshouses بيوت الفقراء

Sentence patterns related to "almshouses"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "almshouses" from the English - Arabic Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "almshouses", or refer to the context using the word "almshouses" in the English - Arabic Dictionary.

1. What are Almshouses? Almshouses are run by independent local charities

2. The Almshouses were really interesting

3. ©2021 King Edward VI Almshouses

4. The Beauchamp Almshouses at Newland

5. The City of Wells Almshouses is a registered charity which owns and manages 32 Almshouses in Wells, Somerset

6. They were known as Boone’s Almshouses and predated the beautiful ones behind, known as Merchant Taylors Almshouses by 140 years.

7. Almshouses – Cheap Retirement Accommodation, Free Sheltered Accommodation, Affordable Housing Accommodation

8. Almshouses – Cheap Retirement Accommodation, Free Sheltered Accommodation, Affordable Housing Accommodation. Almshouses are charitable affordable housing provided to enable the elderly and people in retirement to live in their chosen community. Almshouses can trace their history back to the 10th century up to the present day.

9. Clarence House marked the prince's visit to the Almshouses with a tweet

10. The Removal of Children From Almshouses in The State of New York

11. ‘The Almshouses are arranged college-style around a courtyard, and thirteen poor men had board and lodging.’ ‘His name lives on in the town through the Almshouses and school he founded.’ ‘With its laundry, library, Almshouses and handsome non-conformist church, Saltaire was a grand achievement.’

12. The other Almshouses in Guildford are Abbot's Hospital, at the top of the High Street opposite Holy Trinity church, Stoke Hospital on Stoke Road and the Hillier Almshouses on the…

13. An early example of Philadelphia Almshouses, the Friends Almshouse was built in 1713

14. The next continuous account of the Almshouses is the Trustees Minute Book (1906 -88)

15. FOUNDLINGS, Asylums, ALMSHOUSES AND ORPHANAGES: EARLY ROOTS OF CHILD PROTECTION Dona Schneider' Edward 1

16. Almshouses often consisted of groups of dwellings, sometimes with a chapel and dining-hall

17. The Almshouses are located in: John Street King Street Church Street Chesterton St Anthony's…

18. By the 1920’s nearly 70% of all residents in Almshouses were the elderly poor

19. Modern building work has revealed Iron Age remains,(Sentencedict.com) old almshouses and a Quaker burial ground.

20. The Almshouses belong to the Corporation of Trinity House, an organisation going back over 500 years

21. The history of Almshouses stretches back to medieval times when religious orders cared for the poor

22. The Almshouses were built in 1660 by Sir George Cooke at the bequest of his deceased brother Bryan

23. The Almshouses and St Mary's church in the village of South Dalton, East Riding, Yorkshire, August 1997

24. Many rural Almshouses were working farms, providing food for residents and a profit to the county government

25. In the first half of the century a Visiting Committee (elected by the Trustees) inspected the Almshouses regularly

26. Almshouses are charitable affordable housing provided to enable the elderly and people in retirement to live in their chosen community.

27. Media in category "Almshouses in the United States" The following 33 files are in this category, out of 33 total

28. Almshouses were established from the 10th century in Britain, to provide a place of residence for poor, old and distressed people

29. Almshouse definition: Almshouses are houses in Britain which were built and run by charities to provide Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

30. Victorian London - Houses and Housing - Housing of the Poor - Almshouses, list of Westminster contains several of these munificent foundations as the Red Lion Almshouses, in York-street, founded in 1577, for eight poor women, by Cornelius Van Dun, of Brabant, a soldier who nerved under King Henry VIII., at Tournay.

31. Many English Almshouses were erected following the dissolution of the monasteries: some are very simple terraces of houses, but others, e.g

32. Almshouses are a charitable form of self sufficient, low cost community housing that is held in trust for local people in housing need

33. Almshouses in London and the South East – Find cheap and affordable charitable housing accommodation for the elderly and for those in need in the South East. Almshouses are affordable retirement housing and sheltered accommodation for the elderly and mainly for those of retirement age with limited financial means who live in the vicinity.

34. Along with the tangible population of old people, Almshouses sheltered the intangible: The composite distresses of abandonment, disgrace, poverty, loneliness, humiliation, and degradation.

35. The church was designed by John Loughborough The Prince of Wales meets wellwishers during a visit to the Nicholas Chamberlaine Almshouses in Bedworth, during a …

36. Today, the Almshouses consist of 69 units, most of them in the splendid 1863 building, the largest, and arguably the finest, scheme of its kind in Kent

37. Goring and Almshouses Bowls is a new club formed by the amalgamation of Goring Bowling Club and Goring Heath Bowls Club (Almshouses) We have two greens: All OTL League matches and 2:30pm Tuesday roll-ups are played at The Gardiner Recreation Ground, RG8 9BD next to the cricket field in the delightful river-side village of Goring-on-Thames.

38. Almshouses are charitable housing provided to enable people (typically elderly people who can no longer work to earn enough to pay rent) to live in a particular community.

39. ‘Most of their income went on schools, Almshouses, and the poor, and their charity attracted so many beggars that there was bad feeling in the village.’

40. The Archives has census records of inmates in Almshouses and poorhouses for the period 1826-1921, the bulk of which date from 1875-1921 (series A1978)

41. Almshouses trace their history back to monastic times where the terms bedehouse, hospital, maison dieu, almshouse and others described the provision of accommodation for those in need

42. Almshouses have offered respite out of necessity for ten centuries: they are less of a panacea and more symbolic of a lack of attention to vulnerability in older people.

43. The Tenth Annual Report of the State Board of Charities of the State of New York, released in 1877, reported 64 poorhouses and Almshouses in the state housing 12,614 residents

44. The site for the Almshouses on Lee High Road between Boone’s Chapel and Brandram Road was given to Masters and Wardens of the Merchant Taylors’ Company in a deed of 1683

45. Poorhouses (Almshouses were simply the same thing with the old English word “alms” for charity used) started out rather small, sometimes in private homes, and at first were scattered in America.

46. CUC owns twenty-eight one-bedroom unfurnished Almshouses which are available, in general but not exclusively, to people over 55 with limited financial resources who have lived in Cambridge for at least two years

47. From the late seventeenth century to the early twentieth century, Almshouses offered food, shelter, clothing, and medical care to the poorest and most vulnerable, often in exchange for hard labor and forfeiture of freedom.

48. Bristol Charities, which specialises in Almshouses for older people and has been advising the Haberdashers, has obtained planning consent for a new Almshouse, consisting of 24 one-bedroom flats, together with 10 houses for sale.

49. Chapter 140 of the laws of 1875 required Almshouses and poorhouses in New York State to keep records on individual inmates and to send copies of these records to the State Board of Charities each month

50. The Almshouses are three minutes walk to Camden Town tube station and the renowned Camden Market with old pubs, modern bars and well known music venues like the Jazz Cafe, the Blues Kitchen and Kokos