British Charitable Fund
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There are charities called the British Charitable Fund in a number of countries, providing financial support to impecunious British subjects and their dependents.
Paris
[edit]The British Charitable Fund in Paris was founded in 1823[1] by the British Ambassador to France, Viscount (later Earl) Granville, to provide financial support to British subjects in poverty in France. It was originally aimed at migrant workers and their families in Paris. It now covers the whole of France and often assists migrants whose plans for a better life in France do not flourish.
The fund in Paris was supported by the British embassy in the 19th century: fundraising events including balls, and a reading by Charles Dickens in 1863.[2] Donations from Richard Wallace supported thousands of Britons during the Siege of Paris in 1870–71, during the Franco-Prussian War. In 1896, Lieutenant Colonel Hylton Brisco left half of his personal fortune, £90,000, to the charity. The charity assisted civilians to return to the UK after the outbreak of the First World War.
Until the Second World War, the charity was based at Avenue Hoche near the Arc de Triomphe. It is now based in the Paris suburb of Levallois-Perret. It became a registered charity in the UK in 1969.
Spain
[edit]The British Benevolent Fund (BBF) is one of the oldest English speaking charities in Spain with records dating back to at least 1933.[3] It operates with the support of its honorary president, HM Ambassador to Spain, and HM Consul General. It is run by an independent chairman and committee, all of whom know Spain and its people, and are very familiar with the issues British citizens living there face, be they tourists or long-term residents. They donate their time and knowledge for free with no remuneration whatsoever.
Other British Charitable Funds
[edit]An earlier British Charitable Fund was founded by the Duke of Wellington in Brussels in 1815, to assist the families of servicemen in need after the Battle of Waterloo.
A British Charitable Fund was founded in Portugal in 1827, and there are also separate funds in Italy (the British Charitable Fund for Liguria), Egypt[4] and Tunisia.
References
[edit]- ^ "Our History". The British Charitable Fund, Paris. The British Charitable Fund, Paris.
- ^ Collins, Philip (Summer 1969). "Dickens' Public Readings: The Performer and the Novelist". Studies in the Novel. 1 (2): 118–132. JSTOR 29531322.
- ^ "The British Benevolent Fund: Who we are". British Benevolent Fund. British Benevolent Fund. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
- ^ "Charity no. 258364". Registered charities in England and Wales. UK Government. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
External links
[edit]- The many faces of British poverty in France, BBC News, 22 June 2014
- The British Charitable Fund, Paris
- Are you British, in France, and in need of help?, britishinfrance.com
- Photograph of Sir Richard Wallace and other members of the British Charitable Fund after the Siege of Paris, 10 March 1871, National Portrait Gallery
- British Charitable Fund, Portugal, British Community Council, Lisbon
- British Charitable Fund, Belgium
- British Charitable Fund, Belgium, Brussels British Community Association
- Charity Commission: