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Julian Trust | Who we are

juliantrust.org.uk
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SEO audit: Content analysis

Language Error! No language localisation is found.
Title Julian Trust | Who we are
Text / HTML ratio 91 %
Frame Excellent! The website does not use iFrame solutions.
Flash Excellent! The website does not have any flash contents.
Keywords cloud Trust Julian Shelter Night Bristol Caring Christmas years year Street building Meg St public Grimes Council buildings money Dean received
Keywords consistency
Keyword Content Title Description Headings
Trust 20
Julian 20
Shelter 13
Night 13
Bristol 12
Caring 11
Headings
H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6
1 0 5 4 0 0
Images We found 10 images on this web page.

SEO Keywords (Single)

Keyword Occurrence Density
Trust 20 1.00 %
Julian 20 1.00 %
Shelter 13 0.65 %
Night 13 0.65 %
Bristol 12 0.60 %
Caring 11 0.55 %
Christmas 10 0.50 %
years 8 0.40 %
year 6 0.30 %
Street 6 0.30 %
building 5 0.25 %
Meg 5 0.25 %
St 4 0.20 %
public 4 0.20 %
Grimes 4 0.20 %
Council 4 0.20 %
buildings 4 0.20 %
money 4 0.20 %
Dean 3 0.15 %
received 3 0.15 %

SEO Keywords (Two Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density
Julian Trust 20 1.00 %
Night Shelter 12 0.60 %
of the 11 0.55 %
at Christmas 9 0.45 %
The Julian 9 0.45 %
Caring at 9 0.45 %
the Julian 8 0.40 %
to the 7 0.35 %
for the 6 0.30 %
on the 5 0.25 %
Trust and 5 0.25 %
the Bristol 5 0.25 %
the Night 5 0.25 %
and Caring 5 0.25 %
able to 4 0.20 %
Trust is 4 0.20 %
the first 4 0.20 %
The Night 4 0.20 %
two years 4 0.20 %
Meg Grimes 4 0.20 %

SEO Keywords (Three Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
The Julian Trust 9 0.45 % No
Caring at Christmas 9 0.45 % No
the Julian Trust 8 0.40 % No
and Caring at 5 0.25 % No
Julian Trust and 5 0.25 % No
the Night Shelter 4 0.20 % No
Julian Trust is 4 0.20 % No
The Night Shelter 4 0.20 % No
Trust and Caring 4 0.20 % No
of the Julian 3 0.15 % No
Bristol City Council 3 0.15 % No
B Dean Street 2 0.10 % No
of the building 2 0.10 % No
the building and 2 0.10 % No
Trust is a 2 0.10 % No
founder Meg Grimes 2 0.10 % No
Night Shelter was 2 0.10 % No
for the first 2 0.10 % No
had to be 2 0.10 % No
Unit B Dean 2 0.10 % No

SEO Keywords (Four Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
and Caring at Christmas 5 0.25 % No
the Julian Trust and 5 0.25 % No
Trust and Caring at 4 0.20 % No
Julian Trust and Caring 4 0.20 % No
The Julian Trust is 3 0.15 % No
of the Julian Trust 3 0.15 % No
to spend its income 2 0.10 % No
Unit B Dean Street 2 0.10 % No
the Bristol Night Shelter 2 0.10 % No
a member of the 2 0.10 % No
Ferguson Mann Architects were 2 0.10 % No
of the Night Shelter 2 0.10 % No
Julian Trust is a 2 0.10 % No
spend its income on 2 0.10 % No
was able to spend 2 0.10 % No
able to spend its 2 0.10 % No
the next two years 2 0.10 % No
great advantage of both 1 0.05 % No
both charities and had 1 0.05 % No
of both charities and 1 0.05 % No

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Julian Trust | Who we are DONATEHomeTemporary ClosureGet involvedWhat we doNews and eventsWho we areContactMoreFounded by Meg Grimes in 1986Website created by Modular Digital LtdAddress:  The Night Shelter, 16 Little Bishop Street, St Pauls, Bristol, BS2 9JFContact us© Julian Trust 2018 Julian Trust is a registered charity, No 294751Recent tweetsPhone:  0117 924 4604 (evenings only)AwardsFollow usLearn well-nigh the history of the trust and who we work with to provide the services we doWhy we startedThe Julian Trust started life in 1986 when a small group of concerned individuals, including our founder Meg Grimes, felt there was a need to do something for those who were sleeping on the municipality streets of Bristol in doorways, derelict buildings, cemeteries, and car-park stairwells to name just a few of the uncomfortable and unsafe locations. They decided that an Emergency Night Shelter was required to provide the first rung on the ladder out of homelessness. Volunteers and money were needed. So the news spread, mainly by word of mouth, and the public responded. But nothing could happen until a towers was found from which the Night Shelter could operate. How we grewFirst Year. The organisation was granted charitable status and the Catholic denomination of St Nicholas of Tolentino generously offered one of their subsection buildings in Pennywell Road as a temporary wiring for our first premises. The Night Shelter opened its doors to its first guests on 26th September and there it stayed in cramped conditions for over a year until December 1987.   Second & Third Years. In December 1987 theDenominationof England made misogynist the hall and other rooms within St. ThomasDenominationand we relocated there near to Bristol Bridge. This provided a larger dormitory, a largest kitchen and sleeping quarters for volunteers in the tintinnabulate tower!  The teammate diocesan secretary responsible for redundant churches, Ron Harwood- Smith, was instrumental in this provision. He became a member of the Julian Trust and at the same time with others worked a new charity, Caring at Christmas. Together, the Julian Trust and Caring at Christmas, ran the first Christmas Shelter offering 24-hour provision for five days. The Night Shelter stayed at St Thomas’ for the next two years, finally moving in April 1990.   Fourth & Fifth Years. In April 1990 the Bristol BusVisitorkindly offered its empty offices and garage workshop in Marlborough Street near the bus station for our use. This move would provide largest facilities yet then with much increasingly room to organise. But first the deep bus inspection pits had to be filled in with tons of sand—the volunteers who helped on that weekend will never overly forget it! The Night Shelter was based here for just over two years until July 1992.   Years Six to Nine. In July 1992 the Night Shelter moved to Unit B Dean Street for the first time rent had to be paid! It was now well-spoken that theSoft-heartednessitself was really without a long-term home of its own having to move every two years into buildings that were not entirely suitable for its purposes. Furthermore, needing to ask the public for donations to pay a commercial rent was not the weightier use of their money. Could they instead be asked to fund a permanent home for the Night Shelter? It would need to be purpose-designed to have all the weightier features of our previous buildings and to meet BristolMunicipalityCouncil planning requirements.   So began the Bristol Night Shelter Project. For three years Ron Harwood-Smith, who became the joint Chairman of the Julian Trust and Caring at Christmas, led the venery for a suitable warehouse property for us to convert. Surprisingly, without looking at many possibilities, an opportunity arose just wideness the courtyard from the Dean Street site, in Units D&E! Caring at Christmas purchased this towers for £123,000. The Julian Trust then widow £121,000 from its funds for the first phase of refurbishment of the towers and for planning and publicity costs.   Over the next two years public donations, received by the Bristol Night Shelter Appeal (jointly organised by the Julian Trust and Caring at Christmas), then paid a remoter £237,000 to well-constructed the refurbishment work. The ventilation system, gas inside heating and the toilet/shower woodcut took up the largest proportion of this money. Ferguson Mann Architects were responsible for overseeing this.Home at LastJuly 1996, ten years without its foundation and exactly four years without moving into Unit B, Dean Street, the Julian Trust moved into its new home wideness the courtyard to Little Bishop Street with facilities that met upper standards in environmental health and a 50 year lease from Caring at Christmas. It would of undertow be wonderful if the need for a Night Shelter had disappeared long surpassing 2046 arrived!  Further Milestones2006 saw the twentieth year-end of the Julian Trust, culminating in a commemorative reception held at the Council House, College Green. Our founder Meg Grimes was moreover awarded the Lord Mayor’s Gold Medal.   2011 was not only the 25th year-end of the Night Shelter, but the year that The Julian Trust received the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service! Sadly Meg Grimes died suddenly and was not worldly-wise to go to the reception. This was a huge loss to us, but Meg had gathered a strong team virtually her who were unswayable to siphon on the work. The Lord Lieutenant, Mrs Mary Prior, came to our AGM that year to present the crystal and document from Her Majesty the Queen.   2014The Julian Trust purchased the towers and became the Landlord and Caring at Christmas became the Tenant. This was to the unconfined wholesomeness of both charities and had the full clearance of theSoft-heartednessCommission. The Julian Trust, a wholly voluntary organisation with no staff wages, was worldly-wise to spend its income on the maintenance and resurgence of the towers while Caring at Christmas was worldly-wise to spend its income on staff wages and a wide range of services to the homeless rebranding itself as Caring in   was flipside remarkable year. Negotiations between the Julian Trust and Caring at Christmas during 2013, led by their new Chair, Phil Summerhayes, resulted in a radical role reversal! . Both charities were made stronger and empowered to help the homeless in variegated ways. None of this could have happened however if not for a benefactor, who wishes to remain anonymous, providing the money for the Julian Trust to buy out Caring in .   By 2018 the standing generosity of local businesses, polity organisations, faith groups, and many individual citizens had built up our reserves then to such an extent that we were worldly-wise to siphon out major refurbishment works re-building and re-equipping the kitchens and toilet shower woodcut as well as installing fire safety & ventilation improvements. Once then Ferguson Mann Architects were chosen as the Project Managers. ABOUT THE TRUSTThe Julian Trust is registered as a charitable company. Its finance are annually audited and misogynist to the public. It holds an AGM in November each year. TheVisitorhas a guarantor membership of 60 individuals who act rather like shareholders. They elect the Board of Directors / Trustees from amongst their membership.   The Board is moreover the Management Committee of the Night Shelter. There are 12 Directors who are moreover Trustees. Each Trustee serves for three years and can stand for re-election for remoter terms. The Board annually appoints four of its members to the offices of Chair, Vice-Chair, Secretary and Treasurer. You can contact the Officers as detailed on our Contact Us page.   The Julian Trust is subject to the Registrar of Companies, theSoft-heartednessCommissioners and BristolMunicipalityCouncil. The Julian Trust complies with all the standards on Health & Safety required by BristolMunicipalityCouncil and we have been awarded a 5 Star Food HygieneDocumentby them. We take translating whenever necessary from Avon Health Authority officials to update our policies.   Since our foundation in 1986 considerable professional help and translating has been received from Clive Westlake of Westlakes Solicitors, now Wards, and from Janet Stone of Stone & Partners Accountants, now Elliott Bunker, some of this has been pro bono for which we are immensely grateful.   We fully participated in the Government’s original consultations on the Rough Sleepers’ Initiative. The Julian Trust is a member of the Bristol Homeless Forum, the Bristol Shelters Steering group and Voscur.   The Julian Trust has unsalaried to the Survival Handbook and Bristol Homeless Connect, which are printed and website guides to local services for the homeless.