The Dangerous Classes of New York, and Twenty Years' Work Among Them

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CONTENTS OF CHAPTERS.

CHAPTER II. THE PROLETAIRES OF NEW YORK.

CHAPTER III. THE CAUSES OF CRIME.

CHAPTER IV. THE CAUSES OF CRIME. WEAKNESS OF THE MARRIAGE-TIE.

CHAPTER V. THE CAUSES OF CRIME. OVERCROWDING.

CHAPTER VI. THE CAUSES OF CRIME. INTEMPERANCE.

CHAPTER VII. ORGANIZATION OF A REMEDY.

CHAPTER VIII. A NEW ORGANIZATION.

CHAPTER IX. HOMELESS BOYS. THE NEWSBOYS' LODGING-HOUSE.

CHAPTER X. STREET GIRLS. THEIR SUFFERINGS AND CRIMES.

CHAPTER XI. LEGAL TREATMENT OF PROSTITUTES. SHOULD LICENSES BE ALLOWED?

CHAPTER XII. THE BEST PREVENTIVE OF VICE AMONG CHILDREN. INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS.

CHAPTER XIII. THE GERMAN RAG-PICKERS.

CHAPTER XIV. SCENES AMONG THE POOR. EFFECTS OF DRUNKENNESS. (FROM OUR JOURNAL.)

CHAPTER XV. THE PROTESTANT POOR AND STREET-ROVERS.

CHAPTER XVI. NEW METHODS OF TEACHING.

CHAPTER XVII. THE LITTLE ITALIAN ORGAN-GRINDERS.

CHAPTER XVIII. THE "LAMBS" OF COTTAGE PLACE.

CHAPTER XIX. THE BEST REMEDY FOR JUVENILE PAUPERISM.

CHAPTER XX. PROVIDING COUNTRY HOMES. THE OPPOSITION TO THIS REMEDY ITS EFFECTS.

CHAPTER XXI. RESULTS AND FACTS OF EMIGRATION TO THE WEST. OUR FIRST EMIGRANT PARTY. (FROM OUR JOURNAL.)

CHAPTER XXII. A PRACTICAL PHILANTHROPIST AMONG THE YOUNG "ROUGHS."

CHAPTER XXIII. RAISING MONEY FOR A CHARITY.

CHAPTER XXIV. REFORM AMONG THE ROWDIES FREE READING ROOMS.

CHAPTER XXV. HOMELESS GIRLS.

CHAPTER XXVI. THE NINETEENTH STREET GANG OF RUFFIANS. A MORAL "DISINFECTANT."

CHAPTER XXVII. THE MINISTRY OF FLOWERS. THE LITTLE VAGABONDS OF CORLEAR'S HOOK.

CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CHILD-VAGRANT.

CHAPTER XXIX. FACTORY CHILDREN.

CHAPTER XXX. THE ORGANIZATION OF CHARITIES.

CHAPTER XXXI. STATE AID FOR CHARITIES.

CHAPTER XXXII. HOW BEST TO GIVE ALMS? "TAKE, NOT GIVE."

CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW SHALL CRIMINAL CHILDREN BE TREATED? REFORMATORIES.

CHAPTER XXXIV. WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH FOUNDLINGS?

CHAPTER XXXV. RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION FOR STREET-CHILDREN.

CHAPTER XXXVI. DECREASE OF JUVENILE CRIME IN NEW YORK. THE COST OF PUNISHMENT AND PREVENTION.

CHAPTER XXXVII. THE CAUSES OF THE SUCCESS OF THE WORK.

Title: The Dangerous Classes of New York And Twenty Years' Work Among Them

Author: Charles Loring Brace

Language: English

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THE

DANGEROUS CLASSES OF NEW YORK,

AND

TWENTY YEARS' WORK AMONG THEM.

BY

CHARLES LORING BRACE,

AUTHOR OF

"HUNGARY IN 1851," "HOME LIFE IN GERMANY,"

"THE RACES OF THE OLD WORLD," ETC., ETC.

"Ameliorer l'homme par le terre et le terre par l'homme."—Demetz.

NEW YORK.

WYNKOOP & HALLENBECK, PUBLISHERS,

113 FULTON STREET.

——-

1872.

[Illustration: LODGING-HOUSES FOR HOMELESS BOYS—AS THEY WERE. NO. 1.]

————————————————————————

ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1872, by

CHARLES LORING BRACE,

in the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.

————————————————————————

WYNKOOP & HALLENBECK,

FINE BOOK PRINTERS.

DEDICATION.

——-

To the many co-laborers, men and women, who have not held their comfort or even their lives dear unto themselves, but have striven, through many years, to teach the ignorant, to raise up the depressed, to cheer the despairing, to impart a higher life and a Christian hope to the outcast and neglected youth of this city, and thus save society from their excesses, this simple record of common labors, and this sketch of the terrible evils sought to be cured, is respectfully dedicated.

INTRODUCTION.

——-

The great pioneer in the United States, in the labors of penal Reform and the prevention of crime,—EDWARD LIVINGSTON,—said as long ago as 1833, in his famous "Introductory Report to the Code of Reform and Prison Discipline": "As prevention in the diseases of the body is less painful, less expensive, and more efficacious than the most skillful cure, so in the moral maladies of society, to arrest the vicious before the profligacy assumes the shape of crime; to take away from the poor the cause or pretence of relieving themselves by fraud or theft; to reform them by education and make their own industry contribute to their support, although difficult and expensive, will be found more effectual in the suppression of offences and more economical than the best organized system of punishment."—(p. 322.)

My great object in the present work is to prove to society the practical truth of Mr. Livingston's theoretical statement: that the cheapest and most efficacious way of dealing with the "Dangerous Classes" of large cities, is not to punish them, but to prevent their growth; to so throw the influences of education and discipline and religion about the abandoned and destitute youth of our large towns, to change their material circumstances, and draw them under the influence of the moral and fortunate classes, that they shall grow up as useful producers and members of society, able and inclined to aid it in its progress.

In the view of this book, the class of a large city most dangerous to its property, its morals and its political life, are the ignorant, destitute, untrained, and abandoned youth: the outcast street-children grown up to be voters, to be the implements of demagogues, the "feeders" of the criminals, and the sources of domestic outbreaks and violations of law.

The various chapters of this work contain a detailed account of the constituents of this class in New York, and of the twenty years' labors of the writer, and many men and women, to purify and elevate it; what the principles were of the work, what its fruits, what its success.

So much interest at home and abroad has been manifested in these extended charities, and so many inquiries are received continually about them, that it seemed at length time to give a simple record of them, and of the evils they have sought to cure.

If the narrative shall lead the citizens of other large towns to inaugurate comprehensive and organized movements for the improvement of their "Dangerous Classes," my object will be fully attained.

I have the hope, too, that these little stories of the lot of the poor in cities, and the incidents related of their trials and temptations, may bring the two ends of society nearer together in human sympathy.

The discussion of the Causes of Juvenile Crime contained in this work must aid others who would found similar reformatory and preventive movements, to base them on principles and motives which should reach similar profound and threatening evils.

CHARLES LORING BRACE.

19 EAST 4TH STREET, NEW YORK.

June 1, 1872.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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