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An ‘ordinary’ woman, an extraordinary legacy


In 1866 Charles Spurgeon wanted to open an orphanage. Anne Hillyard was crucial in making it happen a year later. On International Women's Day, let’s celebrate the life of this unassuming Christian whose act of selfless giving continues to have an impact, writes Sara Willcocks 

 

Spurgeons Anne Hillyard - wind
 

Level playing field or not, the lack of gender equality hasn’t stood in the way of many women leaving their marks on the world. And you don’t have to be rich, famous or boasting an army of Twitter followers to make an impact. Any woman can change the world. One small step at a time.

For some, International Women’s Day is a day of celebration; for others, it’s a day of action. Personally, I’d like to use this day as an opportunity to honour an ‘ordinary’ woman named Anne – a woman the world knows little about, but who became a catalyst of change for thousands of lives. 

The story of Spurgeons Children’s Charity began in 1867 and was initially started as an orphanage for ‘fatherless’ boys in Victorian London. Ten years later, a girls’ wing opened. In 1979, the orphanages closed and gave way to the rise of a charity that continues to support vulnerable children and families across the country. 

Anne Hillyard (1803 – 1880), a devout Christian and widow of an Anglican preacher, is one of the great unknowns behind the remarkable story of our 150 year legacy. The charity exists today because of Anne’s devotion to Jesus Christ and the financial bequest she gave to renowned preacher Charles Haddon Spurgeon.

Born as Anne Field, in Warwickshire, she waited until she was 38 to marry. Her husband, Reverend John William Hillyard, was the Curate of an Anglican Church at Ingestre in Staffordshire. He died just one year after their 1841 marriage.

It has long been a widely held misconception that the money Anne donated to the orphanage came from her husband’s estate. She had, however, inherited funds from her uncle prior to marrying, and was a self-sufficient woman in her own right. Though not rich, Anne was moderately wealthy - a wealth she happily gave to ease the burden of marginalised children. It was some years after her husband’s death before she acted, but I think we can assume that Anne had considered for some time what to do with her money. Through a series of providential events, she found an answer to her prayers in Charles Spurgeon.

In 1855, Spurgeon travelled to meet George Muller, the founder of a famous orphanage in Bristol. At the conclusion of a worship service, Muller invited Spurgeon to say a few words, but he declined because he had “been crying all the while.” Spurgeon later said of Muller’s orphanage, “I never heard such a sermon in my life as I saw there.” Upon his return from Bristol, Spurgeon told his congregation, “I sometimes think we will try the power of faith here. Then we may have a tabernacle of faith as well as an orphan-house of faith. God send us that.”

Anne Hillyard was God’s answer to Spurgeon’s prayer. 

Inspired by one of Spurgeon’s articles in his magazine, The Sword and the Trowel, Anne felt compelled to put her faith into action. She wrote a letter requesting a meeting that would set them on a united path to right some of the wrongs felt keenly through the social injustices prevalent in London’s slums.

 



Spurgeons Anne Hillyard - wind

Anne with Charles Spurgeon and William Higgs, Treasurer of Stockwell Orphanage, in a stained glass window image


 

With the sum of £20,000 (donated through railroad bonds, stocks and shares, and worth around £2.5 million today), Anne joined Spurgeon and a group of friends to found the Stockwell Orphanage. Before its construction, she sold some of her household belongings, even the family silverware, to provide sanctuary to the first four orphan boys. 

At the opening ceremony of the Orphanage, Spurgeon said of Anne: “When Mrs. Hillyard’s munificent contributions was first announced in the newspapers, people said it had been given by a duchess, but I say no, it is given by a princess—one of the blood imperial—a daughter of the King of kings. She has given it in the most unostentatious manner, desiring that her name should not be known, and I and my friends have dragged her into the light today contract to her wishes.

"She is a simple, earnest, Christian woman, who has devoted by far the largest portion of her property to God without asking honour from anyone. She only asks help to this great work. I hope to see not 200, but 2,000 boys in the Orphanage, and I ask all those who now hear to break through their Christian rule and give three cheers for Mrs. Hillyard.”
 


 

Spurgeons Stockwell Entrance D

The entrance to the Stockwell Orphanage




But the story doesn’t end at that opening ceremony; it has continued for more than a century and a half. And it continues still to this day. Thanks to the life’s work of Spurgeon, and the generosity of an almost anonymous Christian woman, we have a long lasting legacy that benefits vulnerable children today. The Christian faith that motivated and inspired Anne is still very much alive in all we do.

The face of our work may have changed, but the heartbeat remains the same: to rescue, “the poor who cried for help, and the fatherless who had none to assist them” (Job 29:12). Our work is needed in the 21st century just as much as it was in the 19th. With the increasing gap between the rich and poor, and with the enormous pressure on our welfare state, the space for charities like ours will only increase.  
 
Anne died in January 1880 surrounded by the children whose lives she changed forever. Her last words, reported in a telegram announcing her death, were “My boys! My boys!” The memory of these children, as Spurgeon said, stands as “living monuments.”   

I couldn’t tell you if Anne was a feminist. Nor do I know whether she’d join me in marking International Women’s Day. She was much more comfortable working behind the scenes than standing on the stage. But what I do know is this: women like Anne who are modest, unassuming and—though I use the word reluctantly, ‘ordinary’—have the potential for greatness. In my mind, Anne embodied everything worth celebrating in women, or in anyone. Her enduring legacy, despite being a well-kept secret, lives on through the countless generations of families who have benefited from her act of selfless giving. To me, that’s a life worth celebrating.  




To find out more about Anne Hillyard, Charles Spurgeon and the legacy they created, email: info@spurgeons.org or visit the website: www.spurgeons.org 

Sara Willcocks is head of marketing and communications for Spurgeons Children’s Charity

 




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Baptist Times, 08/03/2019
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