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DATE | 2005-08-20 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Digital NY History
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________________________________________________________________________ August 14, 2005 The Past, in Pixels By DEBBIE NATHAN
MOST of New York's organ grinders are not Italian but German, according to Appleton's Dictionary of Greater New York (1892). The city's Irish hate the color green, reports Family Monographs, a 1905 Barnard College study of turn-of-the-last-century life in Hell's Kitchen. And a 1916 study of boys who hawk newspapers or work in factories finds that at age 16, they stand an average 5 feet 3 inches and weigh 112 pounds.
For lovers of Old New York, these items and countless others can be found on an online archive that includes a remarkable trove of books about the city's past, from a 1903 account of the opening of the Williamsburg Bridge to a 1918 history of Brooks Brothers. The titles alone captivate: "Nooks and Corners of Old New York" (1899). "Behind the Scenes in Candy Factories" (1928). "Memoirs of a Murder Man," by a police officer in the homicide bureau (1930).
This new digitized archive, called Making of America, is maintained by the University of Michigan. Available at www.hti.umich.edu/m/moagrp/, it offers free access to thousands of volumes of Americana, including works about New York City written in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The New York collection, 315 volumes and counting, is being digitized with donations from Lawrence J. Portnoy, a Manhattan lawyer and a Michigan alumnus.
The University of Michigan will print and mail entire books for $45 and up. Or you can download pages at no charge and be your own New York antiquarian.
The following excerpts are peopled by a wide variety of characters, from cantors who are shortchanged by synagogues to boys who play ball on the piers and shop girls who claim that gumdrops and éclairs help them stave off hunger. As the collection proceeds toward its goal of 500 books, expected to be reached in a year and a half, the cast will grow still richer.
The Nether Side of New York;
Or, the Vice, Crime and Poverty
Of the Great Metropolis
By Edward Crapsey. 1872.
When thieving by prostitutes first became a distinct branch of criminal art, it was done only by mechanism specially prepared for the purpose. A whole house, or at least a floor of a house was hired, and one room was prepared with a secret door called a "panel," which could not be seen by even the closest scrutiny of the walls, and which, opening into another room, gave easy access to the "badger," as the male confederate of the prostitute is called. When the woman had lured a stranger to this room she always created a sense of safety in his mind by an ostentatious locking of all doors.
She was always troubled with a modest reserve, and would proceed no further until the lights had been extinguished, and the victim rarely objected to a proceeding so manifestly proper. When the proper time arrived, of which he could easily judge, the "badger" stole into the room through the secret door, which opened without making the slightest noise, and having rifled the clothes of the stranger, which had been placed upon a chair, of all they contained, crept back to his hiding-place and closed the panel behind him, without having betrayed his presence by the faintest sound. ...
If the victim found his pockets empty before leaving the room, he might make as much outcry as he chose, as it would avail nothing; he had seen all the doors locked, he was sure no one but the woman and himself had been in the room, and she, while indignantly denying that he had been robbed there, was extremely anxious that her innocence should be thoroughly established by a strict search of the room, where, as she well knew, none of the valuables would be found.
Recollections of a New York
Chief of Police
By George W. Walling. 1890.
In order that the reader may understand just what confinement in Ludlow Street Jail means, let us suppose the case of a man who has been arrested for attempting to defraud, or something similar, and after having been brought before the court is remanded without bail to the jail. As he enters the iron gate at the main entrance the deputy sheriff who has brought him hands him over to the warden's care, who makes a record of his coming, and speedily finds out whether the prisoner wants to become a "boarder," or to remain a common felon.
For there are two distinct castes in Ludlow Street Jail, of which the public general hears of but one - and that the higher one. These two castes may be named the "paying" boarders, and the "non-paying boarders." The former class are the aristocrats of the jail. They pay the warden fifteen dollars a week for the privilege of sitting at his table and eating the luxuries of the market. This sum includes also a respectable room, not cell, and fair attendance. Except for the restraint of confinement the paying boarders' life in Ludlow Street Jail is not such an unhappy one as most persons think.
There are sometimes prisoners who are even more aristocratic than the paying boarder ... they get a nicely furnished room with all the luxuries, have their meals served in their rooms and live in royal style. For this privilege, however, they have to pay from $50 to $100 a week. Of course the warden is glad to see such prisoners, and you may be sure he tries to keep them as long as possible.
Tweed belonged to the paying class of boarders.
Guarding a Great City
A memoir by William McAdoo, a former New York police commissioner. 1906.
The jostle and struggle between the driver and pedestrian in the streets had been for many, many years a fixed condition, quietly accepted by the multitudes. The driver, on his part, believed that the street belonged exclusively to him, and, whip in hand, he sat on his throne as one beyond the law. ...
To place men at the more congested crossings was as far as the Police Department had gone in endeavoring to protect the population. Here, amid a sea of fearful turmoil, profanity and shouting, the stalwart member of the Broadway Squad would bravely venture now and again to pilot a party of fear-stricken citizens of both sexes across the dangerous trail, and while the time of passing was shorter, the passage itself was much more perilous than when the long-haired and valorous scouts of the early sixties led parties of peaceful emigrants across the savage-infested plains to build up the now prosperous and thickly populated States of the West.
Across this dangerous passage the blue-coated convoy occasionally had his attention arrested by the cries of the citizen who had ventured to follow in his wake, and whose rescue could not be made until the larger party had passed to the other side of the street.
West Side Studies:
Boyhood and Lawlessness
A study by Pauline Goldmark for the Russell Sage Foundation. 1914.
Down on the waterfront the broad, smooth quays offer a tempting place for base- ball. ... But it has one serious drawback, that a foul ball on one side invariably goes into the river, and the players must have either several balls or a willing swimmer if the game is to continue long. One game, for instance, between 14-year-old teams, played near the water, cost five balls, varying in price from 50 cents to $1.00 each. ...
In the first inning a new dollar ball was fouled over the fence into the scrap-iron yard and the watchman refused to let the boys hunt for it. The game was stopped while a deputation of boys from both sides walked to a nearby street to buy a new fifty-cent ball. The first boy up when the game was resumed batted this ball into the Hudson River, where a youthful swimmer got it, and climbing ashore down the river, made away with it. A third ball was secured, and before the game was half over this ball was batted into the river, where it lodged underneath a barge full of paving stones which was made fast to the dock, and could not be recovered.
Then a fourth ball was produced ... it was once batted deep into center field, where it bounced into the slip and stopped the game while it was being fished out. Finally it followed the first ball into the scrap-iron yard, and neither taunts nor pleas could move the obdurate watchman to let the boys in to find it. The game was finished with a fifth ball.
West Side Studies: The Neglected Girl
A study by Ruth S. True for the Russell Sage Foundation. 1914.
We occupied two floors of the house. ... Though our equipment was meager, we had a cook stove and a piano. These two pieces of furniture we came to regard as the necessary minimum of equipment for a girls' club under all circumstances.
The occupations of the clubs - cooking, sewing, basket-weaving, brass work - were carried on as pastime rather than work ... for the shifting attention of the girls refused to consider any occupation as pleasurable for long at a time. The one thing of which they never seemed to tire was dancing, and in spite of the ugly forms which this recreation took, it had always the beauty of spontaneity. Their fondness for popular songs was almost as spontaneous. "The Garden of Love," "The Hypnotizing Man," "When Broadway Was a Pasture," "The Girl That Married Dad," and others of the same lurid and sentimental strain were sung over and over to an unvarying appreciation. ...
The source from which most of our difficulties proceeded was the spirit of disorder abroad in the neighborhood. ... The "Gopher Gang" (this name is commonly applied to all the loafers and thugs from 30th to 60th Street) figured largely in the neighborhood gossip. ...
An adventure which befell us on the second evening after our "opening" might have had very serious results. ... Early in the evening a gang of small boys gathered at the window outside to upbraid their sisters for not letting them come into the club. ... An hour later when the girls were engaged in their club occupations, there came crashing through the window a weapon seven feet in length, which proved to be a gun with a bayonet attachment. It struck the chair in which the teacher was sitting with such force as to chip the oaken back. ...
Echoes of the Gophers occurred in the talk of the girls. At one of the first club meetings, a tall, attractive girl arose and proposed as a name for the club, the "Gopherettes." As a motto, she suggested, "Hit one, hit all." This was Fanny Mayhew, who turned out on nearer acquaintance to be a wonderfully cheerful girl. ... She told a club leader that she had once belonged to a club of girls called the "Gopherettes." They had paid dues and even rented a basement room for a short time. Later the club had moved to the dock, and she had not been allowed by her mother to go to its meetings.
The Jewish Communal Register
Of New York City, 1917-1918
By the Jewish Community of New York City.
It must be borne in mind that the cantor combines both the artist and the religious functionary and that the ill-treatment to which he is often subjected not only debases his art, but also degrades his communal dignity.
The trial performance, in its last analysis, is nothing else but a kind of petty graft indulged in by many of the congregations at the expense of the cantor. A congregation has a vacancy to fill. Naturally, it will not engage a cantor without hearing him first. The cantor does not receive any remuneration for the trial service. The congregation has lost nothing and consequently is in no hurry to consummate the bargain. The following Saturday another cantor is heard, on trial, and the process is repeated for many weeks. Taken in its entirety, the profession is thus losing thousands of dollars annually.
Four Years in the Underbrush:
Adventures of a Working Woman
In New York
By anonymous (an upper-class woman who set out to investigate the life of laboring women). 1921.
For years I had heard persons, men and women, declaim against the incomprehensible devotion of "shop-girls" to chocolate éclairs and gumdrops ... instead of a bowl of oatmeal and milk, or of "good, nourishing soup."
The first time I tried lunching on a bowl of oatmeal and milk I began to experience a most uncomfortable sensation under my apron before three o'clock. By five that sensation had become a sharp griping pain. The day following I tried soup. In the middle of the afternoon when Nora learned how I was suffering, she went scurrying around among the girls in various departments and returned with three gumdrops, which she made me eat.
After that when I had 10 cents or less to spend for lunch I invested in a chocolate éclair and gumdrops. Without a doubt such a diet does produce pale faces and a predisposition to tuberculosis. Experience taught me that it staves off the griping agony produced by hunger and standing on one's feet longer than any other food to be had in New York City for the same money. When a girl's wage is seven dollars a week, or less, 10 cents a day is all she can spend for lunch.
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