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The St Vincent de Paul Society was first active and in NSW in 1881 and is still providing assistance to people experiencing disadvantage. Vinnies Shops celebrated their centenary of operation in 2022.
The St Vincent de Paul Society was founded in Paris in 1833 by 20‑year‑old university student, Frederic Ozanam and his friends.
Charles Gordon O'Neill joined the St Vincent de Paul Society in Scotland at just 23 years of age. He moved to Sydney in 1881 where he founded the first St Vincent de Paul Society Conference in NSW at St Patrick’s Church Hill in Sydney's Rocks District.
The first Special Work of the Society was founded in Surry Hills.
Until 1922 Parish Conferences had organised wardrobes of clothes for people in need by collecting local donations. When this practice became too difficult to manage, the idea of Vinnies Shops where people could purchase second‑hand items was born.
The Matthew Talbot Hostel was opened by Bishop Norman Gilroy in Kent Street to help the many men experiencing homelessness in Sydney. It moved to Woolloomooloo in 1965, where it remains to this day.
The Ozanam Learning Centre in Woolloomooloo opened. It offers a range of educational programs, recreational activities, a drop‑in day centre and extensive information and referral services for men and women experiencing or at risk of homelessness. In the same year, the first Vinnies CEO Sleepout was held at Sydney Olympic Park, with a handful of CEOs raising around $5,000.
The Matthew Talbot Hostel celebrated 50 years at its Woolloomooloo location, a site now synonymous with the service.
We supported over 4,500 households and made an on‑going commitment to support communities devastated by the Black Summer bushfires with funds raised from the Vinnies Bushfire Appeal, which raised $25.2 million nationally.
The Build Homes, Build Hope social housing petition was debated in NSW Parliament due to the strength of members who collected more than 10,000 signatures calling for 5,000 new social houses to be built each year for the next decade.
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