Here I
am again in the Chicago History Museum (see my post of Dec 27, 2012 for Part I.)
After I
checked out the Sanborn maps, I took a walk around the Research Center. It is
really important to become familiar with the lay of the land, to see what the
site you are visiting offers. Although much of the material is kept in closed
stacks outside of the main Center room, there are open bookcases along the
walls.
As I was looking at some books on a shelf, my eyes were drawn to one title in particular:
As I was looking at some books on a shelf, my eyes were drawn to one title in particular:
The Slum and the Ghetto: neighborhood
deterioration and middle-class reform, Chicago, 1880 – 1930 was
written by Thomas Lee Philpott, an Associate Professor of History at the University of Texas. Just by chance, I
had found a reference that would give me new and chilling insight into the NearWest Side where my
Irish ancestors lived in the late nineteenth century. I wrote about this area
in my post of December 6, 2012 when I showed how Clara Laughlin described that area and time period of Chicago
in her novel, Just Folks. Now I would
have a view of my ancestors’ neighborhood from a historian’s perspective.
In order to understand how so
many people in Chicago and other large American cities were living in crowded,
unsanitary, dark substandard housing in the late nineteenth century, known as
tenements, (see photo below that shows the wooden tenement buildings built so close together)
we need to look at several factors. It took a convergence of all of these factors to produce a perfect storm
of squalid living conditions that led to disease and death for a large number of people who lived in the tenements of Chicago.
we need to look at several factors. It took a convergence of all of these factors to produce a perfect storm
of squalid living conditions that led to disease and death for a large number of people who lived in the tenements of Chicago.
First,
in the latter part of the nineteenth century industrial progress and capacity
had grown exponentially and stockyards, meat packing plants and factories of
all kinds sprang up in many cities, especially Chicago.1
These businesses required thousands of workers to do unskilled labor at very low wages. And where did this labor come from? A great number of Europeans were looking for new opportunities. The photo below shows hundreds of new arrivals from Europe waiting for processing at Ellis Island:
A second factor in the mix that produced tenement slums in Chicago was that during this time economic and political conditions in Europe were driving many poor and low-skilled people to look to America for a better life. But no one in the municipal government of Chicago was actually planning for this influx. So it was left to market forces, in this case land developers and landlords, (see section: Tenement Inspections as Public Health Practice, paragraph 4) to fill the areas in and around the new industrial areas with as many housing units as they could fit and to build them for the cheapest price. This was the formula that resulted in tenement slums: a need on the part of poor people in Europe to escape their living conditions that left them no hope for economic improvement in their countries of origin and a need on the part of industry in Chicago for huge numbers of workers to do low-skilled work at low wages:
The Great Union Stock Yards of
Chicago, 1870, Photo by Rascher, Charles, Chicago: Published by Walsh
& Co., c1878, Wikimedia, public domain due to copyright expiration.
|
These businesses required thousands of workers to do unskilled labor at very low wages. And where did this labor come from? A great number of Europeans were looking for new opportunities. The photo below shows hundreds of new arrivals from Europe waiting for processing at Ellis Island:
Underwood
& Underwood, photographer, c1906. cph 3a23424 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a23424, [Emigrants in "pens" at Ellis Island, New
York, probably on or near Christmas --note the decorations,] Library of
Congress.
|
A second factor in the mix that produced tenement slums in Chicago was that during this time economic and political conditions in Europe were driving many poor and low-skilled people to look to America for a better life. But no one in the municipal government of Chicago was actually planning for this influx. So it was left to market forces, in this case land developers and landlords, (see section: Tenement Inspections as Public Health Practice, paragraph 4) to fill the areas in and around the new industrial areas with as many housing units as they could fit and to build them for the cheapest price. This was the formula that resulted in tenement slums: a need on the part of poor people in Europe to escape their living conditions that left them no hope for economic improvement in their countries of origin and a need on the part of industry in Chicago for huge numbers of workers to do low-skilled work at low wages:
A third factor in this already bad situation in the Near West Side happened in 1871. It was the Great Chicago Fire in which “One-third of the city’s 300,000 residents lost their homes.” 2
Gibson & Co. (Cincinnati, Ohio), c1871, The Great fire at Chicago Oct. 9th 1871. View from the west side, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/92506070/, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA |
By the
late 1880s, the slum housing of Chicago had become so bad that government
officials had to take notice. Social reformers, such as Jane Adams
who founded Hull House
in the Near West Side, began documenting conditions in the tenements while offering language programs, day-care centers, playgrounds, nutritional advice and hope to those who had been relegated to the bottom of the social ladder by low wages in dead-end jobs with no way out. Philpott describes their plight:
Jane Addams, Wikimedia, public domain due to copyright expiration. |
who founded Hull House
Hull House Women's
Club building on Polk Street, 1905, Wikimedia, public domain due to copyright
expiration.
|
in the Near West Side, began documenting conditions in the tenements while offering language programs, day-care centers, playgrounds, nutritional advice and hope to those who had been relegated to the bottom of the social ladder by low wages in dead-end jobs with no way out. Philpott describes their plight:
“The
great majority of the laborers had no marketable skills. The work they did was
hard, stultifyingly dull, and often dangerous. They swept and shoveled streets,
dug ditches, sweated over garments, peddled from pushcarts, tended machines.
Employment was irregular because of market fluctuations and weather conditions.
Laborers went long stretches without work….”3
In 1901,Robert Hunter published a report for the City Homes Association called Tenement
Conditions in Chicago. Hunter studied blocks around Hull House and
documented the overcrowding, lack of sanitation, no access to clean water,
absence of light in many of the tenement rooms, among other grievous
conditions. According to his statistical research, Hunter
stated that between 35%and 47% of Chicagoans lived in substandard housing.4
As
mentioned above, in the late nineteenth century, European immigrants came by
the thousands to find jobs in Chicago as well as in other American cities. They
found low-paying jobs that only allowed them to afford substandard housing in
tenements. The immigrants came from not only one country but from many, and
they arrived in stages, as Philpott describes:
“The
area around Hull House was a ‘labyrinth’ of nationalities and creeds. Catholics
predominated on three sides of the settlement, and the Jewish ‘ghetto’ was to
the south. Protestants were scattered through the district….Most Jews were
either Russians or Poles….The Catholics…came from more than a dozen different
counties….The most numerous foreigners at the beginning were Irishmen,
Bohemians, and Germans. They gradually gave way to Italians, Russians, Poles
and Greeks. But at any given time in the 1890s people of twenty-six or more
nationalities could be found living within three blocks of Hull House.”5
My own
family history bears out what Professor Philpott observed. First my Irish
ancestors showed up on the Near West Side around the 1860s. They lived on
Halsted at Hastings. Then the Bohemian contingent arrived in the early 1900s
and settled on Blue Island Street.
As we saw
above, the immigrants lacked money to demand better housing and they lacked any
social cohesion because of the maze of different languages and cultures that
were found in the tenements. Instead of cooperation, there was competition and
the attitude of “We don’t trust or like you because you’re different from us.”
In addition, many of the immigrants who had arrived earlier in the century
disliked the more recent arrivals, seeing them as interlopers who just added to
the poor, overcrowded living conditions. Photo below shows the crowded conditions of a typical market street in Chicago in the late nineteenth/early twentieth century:
“A
community crisscrossed by so many lines of cleavage seemed to lack all
coherence. Nothing the settlement workers encountered in the tenement districts
distressed them more than the disorganization and disorder they saw all around
them. To Jane Adams it looked as if the entire ‘social organism,’ from the
family level up, had ‘broken down’ on the Near West Side.” 6
Thus we
have seen how the perfect storm of tenement housing developed from six factors:
1.
The explosion of industrial activity in Chicago
in the mid-nineteenth century which resulted in the need for large numbers of
low-skilled workers to fill the factories and slaughter houses
2.
The influx of poor, low-skilled immigrants from
Europe
3.
The lack of a municipal plan to house these new
immigrants which left a vacuum: the need for some kind of shelter for the newly
arrived workers
4.
The type of shelter devised by businessmen
(responding to market forces) who came in and built as many housing units as
the land would hold at the cheapest cost
5.
The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 which forced
many of the homeless to seek housing in the Near West Side which added to the
overcrowding
6.
The powerlessness of the poor of the Near West
Side in the face of economic and political forces of the times
It would
take until 1901 for the reports of reformers and the overwhelming visual
evidence of huge areas of the city mired in slums to open up the eyes of both
the public and the politicians of Chicago as documented on the history.comwebsite:
“In 1901 city officials passed
the Tenement House Law, which effectively outlawed the construction of new
tenements on 25-foot lots and mandated improved sanitary conditions, fire
escapes and access to light. Under the new law--which in contrast to past
legislation would actually be enforced--pre-existing tenement structures were
updated, and more than 200,000 new apartments were built over the next 15 years,
supervised by city authorities. By the late 1920s, many tenements in Chicago
had been demolished and replaced with large, privately subsidized apartment
projects.”7
As I have learned more about the
conditions my ancestors endured in the Chicago tenements, I realize once again
the debt that I owe these brave people. It was through their sacrifices as they
worked to gain a foothold in this country that I have benefited. Thank you to
those who came before.
Notes:
1. Thomas Lee Philpott, The Slum and the Ghetto: Neighborhood
Deterioration and Middle-class Reform, Chicago, 1880-1930, The Urban Life
in America Series (New York: Oxford University Press, 1978) p. 7.
2. Fire of 1871,
Encyclopedia, online http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1740.html, downloaded 6 Jan 2013.
3. Philpott p. 64.
4. City Homes Association, Encyclopedia,
online http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/289.html, downloaded 6 Jan 2013.
5. Philpott, p. 67.
6. Ibid., p. 69.
7. Tenements,
History.com, online < http://www.history.com/topics/tenements>, downloaded 5 Jan 2013.
Categories: US citizenship
Categories: US citizenship
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