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{{notability|Companies|date=December 2014}}
{{notability|Companies|date=December 2014}}
[[File:MidnightMission.jpg|thumb|right|A view of The Midnight Mission.]]
[[File:MidnightMission.jpg|thumb|right|A view of The Midnight Mission.]]
The '''Midnight Mission''' is a human services organization in [[downtown Los Angeles]]' [[Skid Row, Los Angeles|skid row]].<ref name="AA">[https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/photos-midnight-mission/131404/ "Midnight Mission Provides Services to Skid Row Community"], ''[[NBC Los Angeles]]'' (August 19, 2019)</ref><ref name="CC">[https://www.kcrw.com/news/articles/fault-lines-a-trip-to-the-midnight-mission "Fault Lines: A Trip to the Midnight Mission"], Anna Scott, ''[[KCRW]]'' (September 19, 2014)</ref> It was founded in 1914.<ref name="BB">[https://www.latimes.com/food/la-fo-co-homeless-crisis-los-angeles-food-bowl-20180503-htmlstory.html "Q&A: L.A. has tens of thousands of homeless, hungry people. We ask Midnight Mission how it helps — and how we can"], Noelle Carter, ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' (May 3, 2018)</ref> A secular non-profit,<ref name="HC">[https://www.dailynews.com/2014/03/14/midnight-mission-celebrates-100-years-of-service/ "Midnight Mission celebrates 100 years of service"], Dana Bartholomew, ''[[Los Angeles Daily News]]'' (August 28, 2017)</ref> the organization provides food, drug and alcohol recovery services, "safe sleep" programs, educational training, a mobile kitchen, and family housing with an emphasis on developing [[Self sufficiency|self-sufficiency]].
The '''Midnight Mission''' is a human services organization in [[downtown Los Angeles]]' [[Skid Row, Los Angeles|skid row]].<ref name="AA">[https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/photos-midnight-mission/131404/ "Midnight Mission Provides Services to Skid Row Community"], ''[[NBC Los Angeles]]'' (August 19, 2019)</ref><ref name="CC">[https://www.kcrw.com/news/articles/fault-lines-a-trip-to-the-midnight-mission "Fault Lines: A Trip to the Midnight Mission"], Anna Scott, ''[[KCRW]]'' (September 19, 2014)</ref> It was founded in 1914.<ref name="BB">[https://www.latimes.com/food/la-fo-co-homeless-crisis-los-angeles-food-bowl-20180503-htmlstory.html "Q&A: L.A. has tens of thousands of homeless, hungry people. We ask Midnight Mission how it helps — and how we can"], Noelle Carter, ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' (May 3, 2018)</ref> A secular non-profit,<ref name="HC">[https://www.dailynews.com/2014/03/14/midnight-mission-celebrates-100-years-of-service/ "Midnight Mission celebrates 100 years of service"], Dana Bartholomew, ''[[Los Angeles Daily News]]'' (August 28, 2017)</ref><ref name="ZD">[https://www.lamag.com/citythinkblog/skid-rows-midnight-mission-running-club-racing-off-rome/ "Skid Row’s Midnight Mission Running Club is Racing Off to Rome"], Shayna Rose Arnold, ''[[Los Angeles Magazine]]'' (January 21, 2015)</ref> the organization provides food, drug and alcohol recovery services, "safe sleep" programs, educational training, a mobile kitchen, and family housing with an emphasis on developing [[Self sufficiency|self-sufficiency]].


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 17:18, 2 May 2020

A view of The Midnight Mission.

The Midnight Mission is a human services organization in downtown Los Angeles' skid row.[1][2] It was founded in 1914.[3] A secular non-profit,[4][5] the organization provides food, drug and alcohol recovery services, "safe sleep" programs, educational training, a mobile kitchen, and family housing with an emphasis on developing self-sufficiency.

History

The Midnight Mission was founded by businessman and lay minister Tom Liddecoat in 1914. Meals were served at midnight, after church services. The mission became an incorporated non-profit in 1922. During World War II, the mission began assisting with job placement and established job training programs.

In 2004, a campaign called Building a Home for Hope raised funds for an expanded facility, opened in April 2005.

In 2005, the shelter served three meals to approximately 170 residents and 500 guests each day. The shelter continues to emphasize their role as a "bridge to self-sufficiency," making this the first bullet point in their mission statement. The mission is not associated with a religious group.

References