Abel Collin

Abel Collin
Born Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "{"., 1653
Nottingham
Died September Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "{"., 1705 (aged Expression error: Unexpected < operatorExpression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "{".)Expression error: Unexpected > operator
Nationality British
Occupation Benefactor
Known for Established Abel Collin's Charity

Abel Collin (1653-1705) was a benefactor in Nottingham. He established Abel Collin's Charity.

Family

He was the son of Laurence Collin.

His sister, Fortune Collin, married Thomas Smith, founder of Smith's Bank in Nottingham.

History of the Charity

By his Will, published in 1704, twenty four alms houses were built in Nottingham. The initial purchase of land was made by Thomas Smith in 1708 for the purpose of building

some little houses and endowing same for some poor men or women to dwell in.[1]

As time went on, further land and property was purchased. In 1709 a new building was erected on Friar Lane. In 1831 the Almshouses on Carrington Street were largely rebuilt. Early in 1909 the 80 years leases of the Nottingham property fell in, the income from that source increasing sevenfold. £17,000 (£1,550,000 as of 2015),[2] was also received from the Nottingham Corporation for land acquired for street widening and taken largely out of the ground of the almshouses.

The site occupied by twenty almshouses in Carrington Street was sold and new houses were erected on Derby Road, Beeston.

In 1954, the remainder of the Almshouses on Carrington Street were demolished. In 1956, the Almshouses on Friar Lane were demolished to create room for Maid Marian Way. Pevsner thought that this was

one of the best almshouses of its date in England.[3]

Current status

The Charity The United Charities of Abel Collin still exists over 300 years from its founding. It is the oldest charity in Nottingham.

It now has 63 houses and bungalows in Beeston, Nottingham. Four bungalows were completed in 2010 - designed by the Nottingham firm Marsh Grochowski for the tercentenary year.

The charity is run by a board of Trustees, the current Chairman is Colin Muge.

External links

References

  1. Nottingham. Official Handbook. Tenth Edition.
  2. UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Gregory Clark (2014), "What Were the British Earnings and Prices Then? (New Series)" MeasuringWorth.
  3. The Buildings of England. Nottinghamshire. Nikolaus Pevsner