Our History
The full name of the YWCA is the Young Womens Christian
Association, it was founded in 1855 during the industrial
revolution in Great Britain.
Young women, drawn by the prospect of jobs and opportunities
gave up rural living and moved to London city. The YWCA began in
response to their needs to access safe housing, skill development,
bible study and to meet other women. It was founded by Christian
women and has always been open to all faiths and backgrounds.
The YWCA Auckland began in 1885 and was incorporated as a
society in 1898.
What set the organisation apart from other early charitable
women's groups (in New Zealand and overseas) was that it did not
focus primarily on the fallen, widowed, destitute or sick, but on
the 'employed girls' of Auckland. At that time there was no sick
pay, holiday pay, guaranteed hours and not one lunchroom for city
working girls in Auckland.
The YWCA was most concerned with what the 'girls' did in their
leisure time. It was felt the 'girls' needed guardians to look
after their moral, physical and spiritual well-being.
The early mission of the organisation was to develop aspects of
the character dulled by the daily toil of the workrooms which were
the primary workplaces of young women in those times.
In those days, the YWCA did not see its role as changing the
conditions of working women and only rarely offered vocational
education to expand working opportunities. However, there was a
huge emphasis on other activities and in 1889, the YWCA was running
classes in a gymnasium with an average attendance of 20 to 40
women.
By the First World War women were entering business life in
increasing numbers and preparing for professional careers by
attending university. Trained women were taking over the running of
YWCA branches and the traditional religious work of the association
was no longer important due to the increased secularism of the
community.
Members of the Y were heavily involved in a number of activities
including household skills, gym work, swimming, tennis, holiday
camps and other outings which were morally suitable.
By 1928, the enquiry desk at the Auckland YWCA was fielding
90,000 telephone calls and 400 written enquiries per year. In their
new building on Queen Street next to Myers Park, the cafeteria
never closed and served 64,576 meals in that year.
During the depression, the YWCA set up training schools and
clubs and provided food vouchers to the growing number of young
women who were becoming unemployed.
The Second World War encouraged the YWCA to set up sewing
circles, first aid classes and study groups. An Air Raid
Precautions Women's Auxiliary was organized and firefighting and
vehicle maintenance became part of its repertoire. Later another
group was set up called the National Service Corps, which was a
more militaristic but popular organisation. Alongside these groups,
the YWCA provided a crèche for the wives of servicemen and the
highly popular DownTown Club for uniformed women and other women in
the city.
The war seemed to have definitively banished the concept of an
organisation exclusively for women. A large proportion of the
post-war activities included men. However, following the boom years
of the 40's, it became unfashionable during the 50's and 60's to be
part of an organisation with a reputation which included religion
and constraint.
The association paid a price for opening its doors to men and
the image of the YWCA as an organisation for young women was
diluted. Furthermore, the YWCA's constituency of young women
between school and marriage had dwindled. The most successful
aspect of the work of the YWCA at this time was the sex education
courses. On one occasion more than a thousand young women and their
mothers attended an evening seminar.
The accommodation role of the YWCA faltered during the 70's
after a series of security incidents at their hostel and a drop-off
in occupancy rates. Membership of the organisation was decreasing
and financial concerns were overwhelming.
The role of women had changed immeasurably over the 60's and new
problems such as 'role stress' were responsible for depression and
emotional collapse. Community programmes continued but the emphasis
was on recreational programmes for housewives. A Step Ahead course
assisted women who wished to move from the home into the workforce
and a community work model took the YWCA workers out into the
suburbs.
By the end of the 1970's, the YWCA was active with its Nearly
New second-hand shops, a new Hostel, a STEPS programme and self
defence courses. The organisation was moving into a new era with a
variety of new courses and activities.
Today the YWCA runs an active 162 room hostel in central
Auckland, which caters to a wide range of students from many
countries. The occupancy rate is usually around 90% and the hostel
supports the programmes and activities of the YWCA Auckland.
Our free community programmes for women have been geared up
again too. YWCA Future Leaders is a four year mentoring and skills
programme for young women from decile 1-4 schools. Started in 2002
it supports them to become leaders and role models in their
communities.
The YWCA Encore programme started in 2005 and is now a
nationally run eight week exercise programme for women who have had
breast cancer surgery. In addition, major fundraising events are
organised throughout the year.