The roots of the project go back to 1989 when three local church leaders, Revd Peter Larkin of St Matthias Church, Capt Jim McKnight, Torquay Salvation Army Commander and Revd Mike Blunsum, chaplain at Brunel Manor began praying about how the local Christian community could respond to a growing crisis on the streets.
In the autumn of 1990 Rev Blunsum persuaded the Woodland House of Prayer Trust to back a homeless project in Torquay with money and resources. A small ad hoc committee began visiting homeless centres around the Westcountry to gather information.
Separately Leonard Stocks, a member of St John’s Church in Torquay was deeply moved one day when he saw a woman begging and holding a sign which read: “I am homeless please help me.”. He raised the issue at the next meeting of the Deanery Synod. Leonard was put in contact with Rev Blunsum and his committee which led to a meeting in October 1990 attended by representatives of 40 South Devon churches together with 20 local agencies looking for a community response to the homelessness crisis.
These agencies included the CAB, Youth with a Mission, Social Services, WRVS, Shelter and officers from Torbay council, notable among them Head of Estates, Paul Lucas, himself a committed Christian
Funding from the Woodland House of Prayer Trust, a considerable personal contribution from Leonard Stocks and the redeployment of builders involved in restoration work at St John’s at short notice saw the hostel open on Christmas Eve 1990. The original lease was for just three months but such was the need it has never been able to close.
Residents were housed in a single male dormitory sleeping 14. There was no provision for women.
The hostel was initially run with the help of another Christian homeless trust in Margate but in 1995, a separate, locally based charitable trust was formed to run it drawing trustees from the church community in Torbay – the Torbay Churches Homeless Trust. Rev Mike Blunsum and Leonard Stocks were founding trustees.
The project expanded steadily. Bequests and donations allowed the Trust to purchase and refurbish three other properties in Factory Row. This provided move-on accommodation for those who wanted to move to more independent living. Further expansion came with the launch of the Government’s Supporting People programme which allowed TCHT to take on the lease of properties in the community. By 2001, the Trust was looking after 70 men and women in both Factory Row and community houses.
The Torbay Churches Homeless Trust decided to merge with the Langley House Trust in 2003 when it became clear that the project could benefit from the robust management systems and training provision which Langley provided. TCHT trustees were attracted by the strong Christian ethos of Langley and the decentralised nature of the organisation. The two trusts formally merged in October 2005 and a trustee of TCHT joined the Langley board to ensure close ties continued.
The merger unlocked the full potential of the town centre site with Langley obtaining Government funding for a £1.7million rebuild of the entire street involving the demolition of three properties and the original hostel building which had housed the single male dormitory.
The total re-build cost just short of £3million. For the first time men and women were able to be accommodated in separate en suite rooms under one roof. It was named the Leonard Stocks Centre in memory of one of its founders
Contracts to run the organisational side of the operation have changed in the intervening years. Chapter 1 and more recently Plymouth-based Shekinah have made a massive contribution to the success of the hostel as a foundation for recovery for hundreds of rough sleepers over the years.
In 2023, Torbay Council, which had been instrumental in setting up the hostel in 1990, took over the operation in house.
54%
54% increase in rough sleeping in Torbay in last 12 months
17
Rough sleepers rose from 7
to 17 in Torquay last Autumn
872
People have been looked after
via Factory Row
49+
We have over 49 volunteers
that help to keep Factory Row open