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Five Points Page 67

by Tyler Anbinder


  and voter fraud, 322, 323, 325, 327

  restaurants, 439–40

  Chinese, 406–8, 436, 438

  return migration, 135, 374, 422–23

  Rice, Pete, 182

  Rice, Sam, 222

  Ridaboek, Frederick, 160, 161, 276

  Riis, Elisabeth Gortz, 337–38, 340–42, 424

  Riis, Jacob, 2, 93, 255, 331, 337–42, 344, 350, 356–61, 377, 382–84, 423–32, 434, 441

  Riley, Edward, 161

  riots, 2, 4, 27–32, 166, 180, 201

  draft, 305, 314–18

  election, 27–29, 145, 203, 277, 295

  race, 7–13, 27–29, 32, 154–58, 187; see also Bowery Boy Riot

  Ripley, John, 180–81

  robbery, 207, 219–22, 233, 392

  by children, 220, 231

  police corruption and, 229

  prostitution and, 213, 220

  Robinson, Solon, 67, 129–30, 259, 369

  Rocco, St., festa of, 383–86, 438

  Roche, Walter, 146, 168, 284, 286, 287, 293, 328, 331

  Roche Guard, 284–88, 291, 293, 328, 440

  Rockefeller, John D., 255

  Rolloson, John, 11

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 431

  Rosenthal, Mayer, 120

  Ross, Joel, 69–71

  Rossa, Jeremiah O’Donovan, 329

  Roth, Henry, 72

  Russell, William H., 299

  Rutgers Fire Company, 404

  Rynders, Isaiah, 141–44, 166, 167, 181–82, 206, 289, 309

  Sabbia, Francesco, 373

  saloons, 91, 111, 177, 191, 193–97, 206, 232, 360

  boxing matches in, 202

  in Chinatown, 436–37

  lodging in, 79–80

  gambling in, 195–96

  licensing of, 278, 279, 282

  political influence of owners of, 145–46, 148–49, 159–60, 164–66, 169, 194, 271, 272

  prostitution in, 214, 218

  robbery in, 221

  for sporting men, 142, 182

  Sam Yip, 416

  Sanger, William, 215–17

  Sante, Luc, 3, 194, 315

  Sarsfield Light Guard, 185, 188

  Scalabrini, Bishop Giovanni, 381

  Scally, Bill, 151

  Scandinavians, 339

  Scanlon, Dave, 182

  scavenging, 88, 107, 133

  Schell, Augustus, 276

  Schermerhorn family, 15

  Schilling, Herman, 317

  school sinks, 85–86

  schools: operated by charitable institutions, 247, 248, 252, 254, 255

  parochial, government subsidies for, 331

  public, 154–56, 252

  Scott, Robert K., 301

  Scribner’s publishing house, 428–29

  seamstresses, 111, 112, 122–26, 134–35, 260

  at Five Points Mission, 246–47

  in House of Industry, 251

  prostitution as alternative for, 216, 217

  seasonal labor, 114–16

  second-hand stores, 119–20, 128

  fencing of stolen goods in, 221–22

  Secor, Thomas, 202

  Sedgwick, Theodore, 214

  servants, see domestic servants

  settlement houses, 267

  Seward, William H., 240

  sewers, 347, 349, 353

  Seymour, Horatio, 309, 324

  Shakespeare, William, 144

  Shaler, William, 155–56

  Shanks, William F., 425, 426

  Shea, Cornelius and Ellen, 95

  Shea, Mary and Jeremiah, 96

  Shea, Tim and Honora, 137, 138

  Shea, Timothy and Johanna, 138

  Sheehan, James M., 264

  Sherman, Mary and Maggie, 224–25

  Shields, William H., 332, 333

  Shields family, 78

  shipbuilding, 114

  Shirt-Sewers’ Association, 124–25

  shoemaking, 111, 113, 118

  Sing Sing prison, 227, 389, 391–94

  Sitting Bull, 189

  slaughterhouses, 14, 15

  slavery, 35–36, 303–7, 309, 311, 363

  opposition to, see abolitionists

  Sligo, County (Ireland), 49, 51–59, 60, 98, 102, 135, 184, 185, 187–88, 232, 301

  Sligo Young Men’s Association, 187–88

  slumming, 26, 33–34

  Small Parks Act (1887), 427, 429, 431

  Smith, Bartholomew, 253

  Smith, Henry, 313

  Society of Italian Fruit Peddlers, 376

  Society of the Madonna della Pietá, 384

  Society of Monte Carmelo, 384

  Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, 413

  Society of San Michele Arcangelo, 384

  Solomon, Harris, 221–22

  Sons of Temperance, 186

  Soulder, Joseph, 282

  soup kitchens, 134, 254

  Spann, Edward K., 312

  Spartans, 156–57

  Spears, Siege, 182

  Spencer, Charles, 314

  Spinola, Gen. Francis B., 309

  sporting men, 1, 182–84, 200, 206, 346

  in politics, 142–44, 283, 298, 301

  spousal abuse, 222–23, 390

  Stable Gang, 332

  Stacom, Johnny, 308

  stale-beer dives, 359–61, 429, 433

  Stanford, Leland, 398

  Steers, James, 293

  Stelzle, Charles, 194–95

  Stewart, A. T., 426

  Stewart, James R., 61

  Stookey, Aaron, 226–27

  street cleaning, 82–84

  street entertainers, 177–78

  street names, changing, 105

  street sweepers, 130, 237

  streetwalkers, see prostitution

  strikes, 117–18, 377, 378

  during Civil War, 312

  Strong, George D., 21, 27, 130

  Strong, George Templeton, 120, 279

  Strong, William L., 436

  Sullivan, Barbara, 77, 93, 137

  Sullivan, Denis P., 313–14, 317

  Sullivan, Mary, 78, 123

  Sullivan, Sandy, 94–96, 354

  Sullivan, Tim, 132, 335–36

  Sullivan, Yankee, 156, 157, 159, 160, 162, 166, 169, 182, 194, 201–6, 333

  Sumner, Charles, 307

  Sunday schools, 252–54

  Supreme Court, U.S., 421–22

  sweatshops, 440–41

  Sweeny, Peter Barr, 170, 328

  synagogues, 242–43

  tailoring, 111, 113, 114, 117–18, 134

  Tammany Hall, 2–4, 146, 150, 187, 206, 278, 334, 438

  Brennan and, 296, 309–10, 318–20, 328, 331, 332

  Clancy and, 171, 293–94, 296, 309

  Kerrigan and, 275, 291, 299

  opposition within Democratic party to, 155–57, 298, 335

  private welfare system of, 267–68

  Rynders and, 144, 166, 167

  Sullivan and, 132, 335–36

  and Tweed’s downfall, 329–31

  voter fraud perpetrated by, 4, 322–24, 327

  Walsh and, 271–73

  tanneries, 14, 15

  Taoism, 417

  tap dancing, 1, 172–76

  Tappan, Arthur, 8, 9

  Tappan, Lewis, 7–10, 27

  Tappen, Big Jerry, 182

  “Tattered Maggie,” 239

  temperance movement, 92, 193, 248, 250, 259, 279

  tenements, 1, 4, 72–105, 336, 346–52

  amusements as refuge from, 197

  brick, 74, 80, 88, 94–95, 347

  Chinese in, 404, 405

  conditions in, 67–71

  dark passageways of, 80–82, 349

  described by Dickens, 33

  drunkenness in, 232

  and end of mass immigration, 435–36

  extremes of heat and cold in, 87–89

  filthiness of, 82–83

  fires in, 89–91, 183, 230

  lodgers in, 77–78
r />   on Lower East Side, 343–44

  model, 435

  needle trades in, 123

  noisiness of, 87

  notorious, 352–57

  origin of, 18

  outhouses of, 73–75, 85–86

  overcrowding in, 75–76, 92–93, 95–97, 349–50, 434, 441

  razing of, 21, 22, 104–5, 431–34

  rear, 74–75

  regulation of, 347–49, 434

  rents charged in, 102–4, 308

  Riis’s crusade for reform of, 2, 426–33

  stench of, 86–87

  wooden, 72–74, 347, 354

  Thais, 439

  theaters, 176, 188–91, 197, 200, 346

  theft, see robbery

  Thomas, Charles, 226

  Thompson, Boss, 182

  Three Family Society, 416

  Tierney, Bridget, 90

  Tobin, Mary Jane, 231

  Tombs prison, 231, 272, 273

  tongs, 412, 415, 437

  Trainor, William, 104

  Treasury Department, U.S., 421

  Trench, William Steuart, 62–64, 135

  Trevelyan, Charles, 56

  Tucker, James, 184

  Tuosist (Ireland), 53, 54, 55–56, 64, 77, 96, 98, 137, 138, 449n

  Turner, Margaret, 222

  Tuttle, Sarah, 217

  Tweed, “Boss” William M., 4, 170, 271, 278, 296, 323, 324, 332

  during Civil War, 309

  death of, 334

  defeated by Clancy for county clerk, 293–94

  downfall of, 272, 328–31

  fraternal lodge of, 186

  private welfare system of, 267–68

  volunteer fire company, 146, 185

  and voter fraud, 323, 324

  Twomey, Mary and Cornelius, 123

  Two Years Before the Mast (Dana), 288

  Tyng, Stephen H., 251

  typhus, 59

  Underground Railroad, 187

  unemployment, 133–35

  Chinese blamed for in California, 398

  during Civil War, 307

  seasonal, 114–16, 120–22, 125, 374

  Union Theological Seminary, 109

  Unionist Club, 156, 206

  unions, 117–18, 373, 377–78

  Chinese, 416

  United Chinese Associations of New York, 440

  Upper East Side, 432n

  urban renewal, 433–34

  Van Buren, Martin, 26, 27

  Van Meter, W. C., 109, 110, 258, 261

  Vatty, Lewis, Sr. and Jr., 222

  Victoria, Queen of England, 65

  Vietnamese, 439, 440

  village associations, Chinese, 415–16

  violence, 233

  against Chinese, 398, 399

  during elections, 141, 143, 153–54, 156, 162, 201, 277, 295

  mob, see riots

  against policemen, 229

  during robberies, 222

  against women, 222–24

  Virginia Minstrels, 189

  Voice from the Newsboys, A (Morrow), 110

  Volks Garden, 177

  volunteer fire companies, 176, 183–85, 200

  Bowery B’hoys in, 178

  fighters in, 202

  politics and, 146, 164–65, 168–71, 185, 270, 274, 283, 286–87, 295, 310

  stage portrayals of, 189

  voter fraud, 4, 321–27

  Vultee’s old corner saloon, 182

  Wah Ling, 399

  Walker, William, 276

  Wallace, Mike, 290

  Walling, George, 408, 409

  Walsh, Blanche, 272, 273

  Walsh, Mike, 156–58, 179, 194

  Walsh, Thomas P. “Fatty,” 146, 269–73, 278, 280, 328, 335–36, 353

  Walsh, William, 270–72, 307, 310, 328, 332–34, 353

  Ware, James E., 347, 348

  Washburne, Elihu B., 236

  Weeks, Samuel, 103, 398–99

  Welland, Elizabeth, 259

  Welsh, 232

  wheys (cooperative loan systems), 401–2

  Whig party, 20, 27–31, 141, 143, 148, 151, 156, 163–65, 167, 206, 275, 278

  White, John, 116

  White, Mary, 219–20

  Whitman, Walt, 155, 157, 173, 176, 183

  Williams, Pete, 198–99; see also Almack’s dance hall, 172–73

  Williams, Robert, 12

  Williamson, George “Legs,” 10

  Willis, Maria, 11

  Willis, Nathaniel P., 34, 69, 198–99, 214

  Wilson, Frances, 222

  Wilson, Jane, 128

  Wo Kee, 397–98, 403, 405, 406

  Wong Ching Foo, 402, 407, 408, 412, 415, 421

  Wong family association, 416

  Wong He Cong, 403

  Wood, Catharine, 206

  Wood, Fernando, 228, 277–81, 291, 298, 303, 309

  Wood, Silas, 435

  Worden, Paddy, 177

  Yale University, 110

  Young Men’s Central Republican Union, 235

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Tyler Anbinder is a professor of history at George Washington University. His first book, Nativism and Slavery, was also a New York Times Notable Book and the winner of the Avery Craven Prize of the Organization of American Historians. He lives in Arlington, Virginia.

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  * Defining the borders of a neighborhood is not easy. In 1873, Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper asserted that “Five Points is bounded by Canal Street, the Bowery, Chatham, Pearl and Centre Streets, forming a truncated triangle about one mile square.” Others conceived of the district as slightly larger or smaller. I came to my own conclusions about how Five Pointers would have demarcated their territory both by reading their own accounts of the enclave and by walking the neighborhood’s streets to determine how the layout of the thoroughfares and buildings would have shaped their perception of their turf. In the end, my own sense of Five Points’ boundaries matched that of Frank Leslie’s, and those boundaries are the ones I have used throughout this book. See Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper (August 16, 1873): 363.

  * The British Parliament conducted hearings all across Ireland in 1836 in order to determine the extent of poverty there for use in amending the British “Poor Laws.” The testimony recorded in these hearings provides the most complete record of life for the rural Irish laborer and small farmer in the years before the Great Famine began in 1845.

  * For reasons that will be discussed at the end of this chapter, city lawmakers in 1854 decided to change the names of Five Points’ four most notorious streets. Orange became Baxter, Anthony become Worth, Cross became Park, and Little Water became Mission Place. Because most of the tenement descriptions in this chapter date from just after 1854, I will for the sake of consistency use the new street names throughout this chapter.

  * The most important issues in the campaign were whether or not the United States should annex Texas, and how the country should conduct its negotiations with Great Britain regarding the disputed Oregon Territory, which both nations claimed. The Democrats’ slogan “Fifty-four-forty-or-fight” referred to their promise to insist upon all of Oregon, up to the 54° 40’ latitudinal line (at what is now central British Columbia) that marked its northern boundary. The Whigs were less bellicose in their demands.

  * A round in the mid-nineteenth century did not last three minutes, as it does today, but instead ended when either combatant fell to the ground. In the bare-knuckle fights of this period, rounds rarely lasted more than a minute.

  * It is impossible to verify Riis’s claims concerning the fate of those displaced by the razing of the Bend. One also wonders what happened to other Five Pointers once they left the neighborhood, for th
e vast majority did not live there for even a decade. Most Irish Five Pointers had names that were too common to allow them to be traced in city directories or census indexes once they left the district. Italian and Chinese names were too often mangled by the census takers and too often left out of city directories to allow them to be tracked down. I was able to identify with certainty in the 1860 city directory only about one in ten Five Pointers who had opened accounts at the Emigrant Savings Bank in the early 1850s. About half still lived in Five Points. Most of the remainder had relocated to immigrant neighborhoods on either the Lower or Upper East Side, but there were a few scattered in nearly every part of the city.

 

 

 


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