VALDA you say
"Crispin Street not Whitechapel?"
National Archives state that for 1891 Crispin Street is in Whitechapel, as are Gun Street and Artillery Street (and list the refuge), see
http://www.rootschat.com/links/092h/VALDA you say
"Not sure of the evidence for this statement
'It was once apparently very fashionable for the good and godly to donate money to this establishment. '"
maybe this will help
"Providence Row Night Refuge and Home for Deserving Men, Women and Children as it was formally known, was a Roman Catholic institution established as a charity in 1860 and relocated to Crispin Street eight years later. The building survives to the present day. It was not exactly a "typical" common lodging house, if there was such a thing. Readers will note the inclusion of "deserving" in the Refuge's name. It had very good social connections. In 1888 its patrons included the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl of Denbigh and the Count De Torre Diaz. Among named donors and subscribers were such as the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Cambridge, the Marquis of Ripon, Lords Coleridge and Napier, the Lord Mayor of London, and Richard D'Oyly Carte, founder of the company that put on the Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. "
taken from
http://www.rootschat.com/links/092i/ Back to the original request for help, for such a nebulus request, sourced from a verbal hand-me-down,
"possibly the founder of a London Girls' Shelter in Whitechapel (listed on the 1901 Census)"
then a street 200 yards from Whitechapel High Street is "Whitechapel",
especially if you are not in London or not from London.
Note that it is "a" not "The" London Girls' Shelter, to show how difficult it is to pluck a home out of the air, see
http://www.rootschat.com/links/092j/