“America’s First Boys’ Club is Eighty-Six Years Old”: Part II

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The second half of a photo-essay, written around 1940, about the Children’s Aid Society’s Newsboys’ House. (Read the first half here.)

THERE ARE NO ALGER BOOKS IN THE LIBRARY…..

….but the the celebrated rags-to-riches romanticist spent plenty of time in Newsboys’ House, seeking atmosphere. A gentleman of eccentric turn, Alger used to haunt the streets of Manhattan after dark, disguised in flowing cape and false whiskers, rounding up vagrant youths whom he would escort to Newsboys’ House. Of a social turn of mind like Dickens, he helped stamp out the vicious “padrone” system (suppressed by the Italian government in 1873) through his book, “Phil the Fiddler.” Today’s Transient youths are less interested in the fabulous histories of Tom the Bootblack, Dan the Newsboy and others of that illustrious ilk than they are in keeping body & soul together. The library, gymnasium and other facilities of Newsboys’ House make for a pleasant and congenial club like while waiting for a “break.” Newsboys’ House has a capacity for 100 boys, and is usually at least 95% full. The average stay is 12 days. Some boys only stay a night, others remain until they are 21, when they must find accommodations elsewhere. On an average 1,600 boys are accommodated each year, but at the bottom of the Depression the figure rose to 4,000. Usually not more than one of the hundred or so boys is actually a newsboy. Most of their are either jobless or work as factory hands and errand boys. They come from every State in the Union and even from foreign countries, but most of them are from the farms and mill-towns of the South and West, where the going is hard. Many are sent back home by The Children’s Aid Society if circumstances warrant such action.

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“America’s First Boys’ Club is Eighty-Six Years Old”: Part I

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The New York Historical Society has, in their Flickr photostream, images & report scans from the archives of the Children’s Aid Society. The following is the first half of a photo essay written sometime around 1940, which gives a fascinating glimpse into how much life at a newsboys lodging house changed—and how much remained the same—in the forty years after the 1899 strike.

AMERICA’S FIRST BOYS’ CLUB IS EIGHTY-SIX YEARS OLD

Newsboys’ House, Once the Inspiration of Horatio Alger Jr., is Still Operating in the Shadow of Manhattan’s Bowery. Dickens Would Have Loved It.

In 1853 the streets of New York City abounded with dirty little ragamuffins of astounding wretchedness. Many of them were homeless, and many with homes were no better off. The full flood tide of immigration was on, with nearly 1,000 of “the ragged regiments of Europe” arrived every day from the Old World. Potato famines, fruit blights and intolerable poverty motivated this historic mass migration. Crime and misery were the result. Thousands of immigrant youngsters were impressed into virtual slaver through the so-called “padrone” system, a form of peonage. (Slavery itself was still legal in the U.S.). There were no child labor laws, no compulsory education laws. Conditions were worse than the worst in London which impelled Charles Dickens to write crusading novels. Horatio Alger Jr. might write heroic fantasies of fictional newsboys and bootblacks who, through their own efforts, rose from poverty and obscurity to wealth and fame. But in actual fact, the streets were over-run with vagrant children who, forced to live on their own resources, resorted to begging, stealing and worse. Some made a meagre living peddling rags, matches and newspapers. Mostly they slept in gutters, cellars and on doorsteps.

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