The Leaven in a Great City
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Lillian William Betts. The Leaven in a Great City
The Leaven in a Great City
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I
AT THE BOTTOM
CHAPTER II
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL CENTERS
CHAPTER III
THE HOMES UNDER ONE ROOF
CHAPTER IV
SLOW-DAWNING CONSCIOUSNESS
CHAPTER V
WORKING-GIRLS' CLUBS
CHAPTER VI
A SOCIAL EXPERIMENT
CHAPTER VII
WITHIN THE WALLS OF HOME
CHAPTER VIII
FINANCIAL RELATIONS IN FAMILIES
CHAPTER IX
HOME STANDARDS
CHAPTER X
WHERE LIES THE RESPONSIBILITY?
Отрывок из книги
Lillian William Betts
Published by Good Press, 2021
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The tenants were notified that rent must be paid weekly; that the rooms would be white-washed and painted; that the agents would be at liberty to visit the rooms daily; that no child would be permitted to carry liquor on the premises; every bundle or basket carried by a child would be examined, and any liquor found would be emptied into the sink in the yard. Water would be put in the halls on each floor; destruction of property would mean eviction. All who were unwilling to accept these conditions were asked to move at once. The rent remained the same, four dollars per month for two rooms. Families desiring four rooms could have them for eight dollars per month, the company cutting a door through the party walls, giving direct ventilation through the floor, with windows opening on both alleys. The absolute impossibility of getting two equally good rooms in the neighborhood for the same rent kept the majority of the families. A few tacitly accepted the change, largely because acquiescence was their habit of mind, while some expected to set at naught any rules or regulations that they found obnoxious. No tenant moved voluntarily.
The new ownership took possession with the same human beings who had occupied the houses for years. The first step was to insist on cleanliness. The alleys were swept and washed every morning, as were the halls and stairways. Garbage cans were provided and their use insisted on. Every can or bundle carried by a child was examined, and all liquors found in them were emptied into the sink in the yard. Quarrels and fights grew less frequent, especially among the women. The children attended school, for their appearance during school hours led to investigations that the majority of the tenants preferred to avoid. The aim was to establish such relations between the representatives of the company and the tenants as would give opportunities to reduce the ignorance and indifference that were quite as responsible, if not more responsible, for the misery in the homes than lack of money. The tenants held aloof. They were tenants because they could not get as much comfort for the money elsewhere; but there could be no friendship where the payment of rent was insisted upon, where drunkenness involved the risk of, and abuse of property positive, eviction.
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