img How the Other Half Lives  /  Chapter 1 GENESIS OF THE TENEMENT. | 4.00%
Download App
Reading History
How the Other Half Lives

How the Other Half Lives

Author: Jacob A. Riis
img img img

Chapter 1 GENESIS OF THE TENEMENT.

Word Count: 1935    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

er after in our city's history. There had been tenant-houses before, but they were not built for the purpose. Nothing would probably have shocked their original owners m

fares, render a near residence of much importance." Not for long, however. As business increased, and the city grew with rapid strides, the necessities of the poor became the opportunity of their wealthier neighbors, and the stamp was set upon the old houses, suddenly become valuable, which the best thought and effort of a later age has vainly struggled to efface. Their "large rooms were partitioned into several smaller ones, without regard to light or ventilation, the rate of rent being lower in proportion to space or height from the street; and they soon became filled from cellar to garret with a class of tenantry living from hand to mouth, loose in morals, improvident in habits, degraded, and squalid as beggary itself." It was thus the dark bedroom, prolific of untold depravities, came into the world. It was destined to survive the old houses. In their new r?′le, says the old report, eloquent in its indignant denunciation of "evils more destructive than wars," "they were not intende

ollowed suit, if the brick walls were strong enough. The question was not always asked, judging from complaints made by a contemporary witness, that the old buildings were "often carried up to a great height without regard to the strength of the foundation walls." It was rent the owner was after; nothing was said in the

om the early organizers of the Health Department this wail: "There are numerous examples of tenement-houses in which are lodged several hundred people that have a pro rata allotment of ground area scarcely equal to two square yards upon the city lot, court-yards and all included." The tenement-house population had swelled to half a million souls by that time, and on the East Side, in what is still the most densely populated district in all the world, China not excluded, it was packed at the rate of 290,000 to the square mile, a state of affairs wholly unexampled. The utmost cupidity of other lands and other days had never contrived to herd much more than half that number within the same space. The greatest crowding of Old London was at the rate of 175,816. Swine roamed the streets and gutters as their principal scavengers.[3] The death of a child in a tenement was registered at the Bureau of Vital Statistics as "plainly d

vidently considered himself especially entitled to be pitied for losing such valuable property. Another was the case of a hard-working family of man and wife, young people from the old country, who took poison together in a Crosby Street tenement because they were "tired." There was no other explanation, and none was needed when I stood in the room in which they had lived. It was in the attic with sloping ceiling and a single window so far out on the roof that it seemed not to belong to the place at all. With scarcely room enough to turn around in they had been compell

FOR TWELVE FAMILIE

L, light.

ears before that the old Baptist Church in Mulberry Street, just off Chatham Street, had been sold, and the rear half of the frame structure had been converted into tenements that with their swarming population became the scandal even of that reckless age. The wretched pile harbored no less than forty families, and the annual rate of deaths to the population was officially stated to be 75 in 1,000. These tenements were an extreme type of very many, for the big bar

scarcely fit to shelter brutes, are habitations of thousands of our fellow-beings in this wealthy, Christian city." "The city," says its historian, Mrs. Martha Lamb, commenting on the era of aqueduct building between 1835 and 1845, "was a general asylum for vagrants." Young vagabonds, the natural offspr

img

Contents

How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 1 GENESIS OF THE TENEMENT.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 2 THE AWAKENING.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 3 THE MIXED CROWD.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 4 THE DOWN TOWN BACK-ALLEYS.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 5 THE ITALIAN IN NEW YORK.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 6 THE BEND.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 7 A RAID ON THE STALE-BEER DIVES.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 8 THE CHEAP LODGING-HOUSES.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 9 CHINATOWN.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 10 JEWTOWN.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 11 THE SWEATERS OF JEWTOWN.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 12 THE BOHEMIANS-TENEMENT-HOUSE CIGARMAKING.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 13 THE COLOR LINE IN NEW YORK.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 14 THE COMMON HERD.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 15 THE PROBLEM OF THE CHILDREN.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 16 WAIFS OF THE CITY'S SLUMS.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 17 THE STREET ARAB.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 18 THE REIGN OF RUM.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 19 THE HARVEST OF TARES.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 20 THE WORKING GIRLS OF NEW YORK.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 21 PAUPERISM IN THE TENEMENTS.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 22 THE WRECKS AND THE WASTE.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 23 THE MAN WITH THE KNIFE.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 24 WHAT HAS BEEN DONE.
06/12/2017
How the Other Half Lives
Chapter 25 HOW THE CASE STANDS.
06/12/2017
img
  /  1
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY