Due at the beginning of class today: Nineteen synopses, one for each chapter of Crane's Maggie, Girl of the Streets. See the Wednesday blog from before the break for details.
In class: we are in the library, where as written before the break, you will be writing an alternative ending to Crane's novel. Within this alternate ending, you will demonstrate your understanding of character development, setting and plot. You may bring notes with you, if you so choose.
For Tuesday: please have read the chapter Working Girl for Jacob Riis' How the Other Half Lives. We will be working with this in class tomorrow. class handout with a copy below.
Expect a quick content quiz tomorrow; so please read!
XX. The Working Girls of New York
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OF the harvest of tares, sown in iniquity and reaped in wrath,
the police returns tell the story. The pen that wrote the “Song of the Shirt”
is needed to tell of the sad and toil-worn lives of New York’s working-women.
The cry echoes by night and by day through its tenements:
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Six
months have not passed since at a great public meeting in this city, the
Working Women’s Society reported: “It is a known fact that men’s wages cannot
fall below a limit upon which they can exist, but woman’s wages have no
limit, since the paths of shame are always open to her. It is simply
impossible for any woman to live without assistance on the low salary a
saleswoman earns, without depriving herself of real necessities… It is
inevitable that they must in many instances resort to evil.” It was only a
few brief weeks before that verdict was uttered, that the community was
shocked by the story of a gentle and refined woman who, left in direst
poverty to earn her own living alone among strangers, threw herself from her
attic window, preferring death to dishonor. “I would have done any honest
work, even to scrubbing,” she wrote, drenched and starving, after a vain
search for work in a driving storm. She had tramped the streets for weeks on
her weary errand, and the only living wages that were offered her were the
wages of sin. The ink was not dry upon her letter before a woman in an East
Side tenement wrote down her reason for self-murder: “Weakness,
sleeplessness, and yet obliged to work. My strength fails me. Sing at my
coffin: ‘Where does the soul find a home and rest?”’ Her story may be found
as one of two typical “cases of despair” in one little church community, in
the City Mission Society’s Monthly for last February. It is a story
that has many parallels in the experience of every missionary, every police
reporter and every family doctor whose practice is among the poor.
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It is
estimated that at least one hundred and fifty thousand women and girls earn
their own living in New York; but there is reason to believe that this
estimate falls far short of the truth when sufficient account is taken of the
large number who are not wholly dependent upon their own labor, while
contributing by it to the family’s earnings. These alone constitute a large
class of the women wage-earners, and it is characteristic of the situation
that the very fact that some need not starve on their wages condemns the rest
to that fate. The pay they are willing to accept all have to take. What the
“everlasting law of supply and demand,” that serves as such a convenient gag for
public indignation, has to do with it, one learns from observation all along
the road of inquiry into these real woman’s wrongs. To take the case of the
sales-women for illustration: The investigation of the Working Women’s
Society disclosed the fact that wages averaging from $2 to $4.50 a week were
reduced by excessive fines, “the employers placing a value upon time lost
that is not given to services rendered.” A little girl, who received two
dollars a week, made cash-sales amounting to $167 in a single day, while the
receipts of a fifteen-dollar male clerk in the same department footed up only
$125; yet for some trivial mistake the girl was fined sixty cents out of her
two dollars. The practice prevailed in some stores of dividing the fines
between the superintendent and the time-keeper at the end of the year. In one
instance they amounted to $3,000, and “the superintendent was heard to charge
the time-keeper with not being strict enough in his duties.” One of the
causes for fine in a certain large store was sitting down. The law requiring
seats for saleswomen, generally ignored, was obeyed faithfully in this
establishment. The seats were there, but the girls were fined when found
using them.
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Cash-girls
receiving $1.75 a week for work that at certain seasons lengthened their day
to sixteen hours were sometimes required to pay for their aprons. A common
cause for discharge from stores in which, on account of the oppressive heat
and lack of ventilation, “girls fainted day after day and came out looking
like corpses,” was too long service. No other fault was found with the
discharged saleswomen than that they had been long enough in the employ of
the firm to justly expect an increase of salary. The reason was even given
with brutal frankness, in some instances.
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These
facts give a slight idea of the hardships and the poor pay of a business that
notoriously absorbs child-labor. The girls are sent to the store before they
have fairly entered their teens, because the money they can earn there is
needed for the support of the family. If the boys will not work, if the
street tempts them from home, among the girls at least there must be no
drones. To keep their places they are told to lie about their age and to say
that they are over fourteen. The precaution is usually superfluous. The
Women’s Investigating Committee found the majority of the children employed
in the stores to be under age, but heard only in a single instance of the
truant officers calling. In that case they came once a year and sent the
youngest children home; but in a month’s time they were all back in their
places, and were not again disturbed. When it comes to the factories, where
hard bodily labor is added to long hours, stifling rooms, and starvation
wages, matters are even worse. The Legislature has passed laws to prevent the
employment of children, as it has forbidden saloon-keepers to sell them beer,
and it has provided means of enforcing its mandate, so efficient, that the
very number of factories in New York is guessed at as in the
neighborhood of twelve thousand. Up till this summer, a single inspector was
charged with the duty of keeping the run of them all, and of seeing to it
that the law was respected by the owners.
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Sixty
cents is put as the average day’s earnings of the 150,000, but into this
computation enters the stylish “cashier’s” two dollars a day, as well as the
thirty cents of the poor little girl who pulls threads in an East Side
factory, and, if anything, the average is probably too high. Such as it is,
however, it represents board, rent, clothing, and “pleasure” to this army of
workers. Here is the case of a woman employed in the manufacturing department
of a Broadway house. It stands for a hundred like her own. She averages three
dollars a week. Pays $1.50 for her room; for breakfast she has a cup of
coffee; lunch she cannot afford. One meal a day is her allowance. This woman
is young, she is pretty. She has “the world before her.” Is it anything less
than a miracle if she is guilty of nothing worse than the “early and
improvident marriage,” against which moralists exclaim as one of the prolific
causes of the distress of the poor? Almost any door might seem to offer
welcome escape from such slavery as this. “I feel so much healthier since I
got three square meals a day,” said a lodger in one of the Girls’ Homes. Two
young sewing-girls came in seeking domestic service, so that they might get
enough to eat. They had been only half-fed for some time, and starvation had
driven them to the one door at which the pride of the American-born girl will
not permit her to knock, though poverty be the price of her independence.
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SEWING AND STARVING IN AN ELIZABETH STREET ATTIC. |
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The
tenement and the competition of public institutions and farmers’ wives and
daughters, have done the tyrant shirt to death, but they have not bettered
the lot of the needle-women. The sweater of the East Side has appropriated
the flannel shirt. He turns them out to-day at forty-five cents a dozen,
paying his Jewish workers from twenty to thirty-five cents. One of these
testified before the State Board of Arbitration, during the shirtmakers’
strike, that she worked eleven hours in the shop and four at home, and had
never in the best of times made over six dollars a week. Another stated that
she worked from 4 o’clock in the morning to 11 at night. These girls had to
find their own thread and pay for their own machines out of their wages. The
white shirt has gone to the public and private institutions that shelter
large numbers of young girls, and to the country. There are not half as many
shirtmakers in New York to-day as only a few years ago, and some of the
largest firms have closed their city shops. The same is true of the
manufacturers of underwear. One large Broadway firm has nearly all its work
done by farmers’ girls in Maine, who think themselves well off if they can
earn two or three dollars a week to pay for a Sunday silk, or the wedding
outfit, little dreaming of the part they are playing in starving their city
sisters. Literally, they sew “with double thread, a shroud as well as a
shirt.” Their pin-money sets the rate of wages for thousands of poor
sewing-girls in New York. The average earnings of the worker on underwear
to-day do not exceed the three dollars which her competitor among the Eastern
hills is willing to accept as the price of her play. The shirtmaker’s pay is
better only because the very finest custom work is all there is left for her
to do.
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Calico
wrappers at a dollar and a half a dozen—the very expert sewers able to make
from eight to ten, the common run five or six—neckties at from 25 to 75 cents
a dozen, with a dozen as a good day’s work, are specimens of women’s wages.
And yet people persist in wondering at the poor quality of work done in the
tenements! Italian cheap labor has come of late also to possess this poor
field, with the sweater in its train. There is scarce a branch of woman’s
work outside of the home in which wages, long since at low-water mark, have
not fallen to the point of actual starvation. A case was brought to my notice
recently by a woman doctor, whose heart as well as her life-work is with the
poor, of a widow with two little children she found at work in an East Side
attic, making paper-bags. Her father, she told the doctor, had made good
wages at it; but she received only five cents for six hundred of the little
three-cornered bags, and her fingers had to be very swift and handle the
paste-brush very deftly to bring her earnings up to twenty-five and thirty
cents a day. She paid four dollars a month for her room. The rest went to buy
food for herself and the children. The physician’s purse, rather than her
skill, had healing for their complaint.
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I have
aimed to set down a few dry facts merely. They carry their own comment. Back
of the shop with its weary, grinding toil—the home in the tenement, of which
it was said in a report of the State Labor Bureau: “Decency and womanly
reserve cannot be maintained there—what wonder so many fall away from
virtue?” Of the outlook, what? Last Christmas Eve my business took me to an
obscure street among the West Side tenements. An old woman had just fallen on
the doorstep, stricken with paralysis. The doctor said she would never again
move her right hand or foot. The whole side was dead. By her bedside, in
their cheerless room, sat the patient’s aged sister, a hopeless cripple, in
dumb despair. Forty years ago the sisters had come, five in number then, with
their mother, from the North of Ireland to make their home and earn a living
among strangers. They were lace embroiderers and found work easily at good
wages. All the rest had died as the years went by. The two remained and,
firmly resolved to lead an honest life, worked on though wages fell and fell
as age and toil stiffened their once nimble fingers and dimmed their sight.
Then one of them dropped out, her hands palsied and her courage gone. Still
the other toiled on, resting neither by night nor by day, that the sister might
not want. Now that she too had been stricken, as she was going to the store
for the work that was to keep them through the holidays, the battle was over
at last. There was before them starvation, or the poor-house. And the proud
spirits of the sisters, helpless now, quailed at the outlook.
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These
were old, with life behind them. For them nothing was left but to sit in the
shadow and wait. But of the thousands, who are travelling the road they trod
to the end, with the hot blood of youth in their veins, with the love of life
and of the beautiful world to which not even sixty cents a day can shut their
eyes—who is to blame if their feet find the paths of shame that are “always
open to them?” The very paths that have effaced the saving “limit,” and to which
it is declared to be “inevitable that they must in many instances resort.”
Let the moralist answer. Let the wise economist apply his rule of supply and
demand, and let the answer be heard in this city of a thousand charities
where justice goes begging.
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To the
everlasting credit of New York’s working-girl let it be said that, rough
though her road be, all but hopeless her battle with life, only in the rarest
instances does she go astray. As a class she is brave, virtuous, and true.
New York’s army of profligate women is not, as in some foreign cities,
recruited from her ranks. She is as plucky as she is proud. That “American
girls never whimper” became a proverb long ago, and she accepts her lot
uncomplainingly, doing the best she can and holding her cherished
independence cheap at the cost of a meal, or of half her daily ration, if
need be. The home in the tenement and the traditions of her childhood have
neither trained her to luxury nor predisposed her in favor of domestic labor
in preference to the shop. So, to the world she presents a cheerful,
uncomplaining front that sometimes deceives it. Her courage will not be
without its reward. Slowly, as the conviction is thrust upon society that
woman’s work must enter more and more into its planning, a better day is
dawning. The organization of working girls’ clubs, unions, and societies with
a community of interests, despite the obstacles to such a movement, bears
testimony to it, as to the devotion of the unselfish women who have made
their poorer sisters cause their own, and will yet wring from an unfair were
the justice too long denied her.
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