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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 2011)
8 street roots Feb. 18, 2011 100 years after 1,000 homeless men The journals o f a Chicago social worker from the early 1900s provides a haunting reminder o f how quickly a life can take a turn fo r the worse BY BEN COOK STREET NEWS SERVICE , I n Î911 William Taft Was president of the United States and Carter Harrison Jr. was the first Chicago- bornm ayorofC hicago.Theinfam ous Stockyards wefe'WfuD swing and fàcfôry':T ' work abounded, but many Chicagoans wanderers;, ____ , and finally" ' ^^**s^* homeless, vagrant and slipped through the cracks of opportunity runaway boys. While many of and became homeless. It was up to religious these categories may sound horribly organizations and the Chicago Bureau of antiquated, the creation of these categories Charities to administer humanitarian aid. for her study was nonetheless a hugely At that time it was common to consider progressive step in 1900. the homeless population “tramps* and The following is a selection excerpts from “bums,* or other easy-to-file away Solenberger’s work, “One Thousand stéréotypés. Homeless Men.” One individual, Alice Solenberger, took a Solenberger defines a homeless man as different approach. Mrs. Solenberger was in “any man who has left one family group and charge of the Central District of the Chicago not yet identified himself with another. It Bureau of Charities, located in the South might include hundreds of men living in Loop. She interviewed men who were clubs, hotels, and boarding houses, and its referred to her office to determine their use would not necessarily imply a forlorn or individual need, and starting in the year penniless condition. But for the purpose of 1900 she decided it would b e useful to start this study the term will be used to designate collecting her case data on homeless men, those men of the homeless class who live in as accurate demographic information was at cheap lodging houses in the congested part best scarce and commonly non-existent' of the city.’* Chicago was especially Over the following 10 years she compiled noteworthy for its lodging houses. 1000 interviews in all, but unfortunately Solenberger continues, “All large cities died in December, 1910 before she could and some small ones in these days have complete the forward section of her Work. cheap lodging houses in which men many Regardless, in 1911 “One Thousand secure a night’s lodging at a cost of from 10 Homeless Men: A Study of Original to 25 cents. With the exception for Greater Records,” was published and soon became New York, the city of Chicago has a greater essential reading for those in the emerging number of such houses and a larger floating field of social work. transient population than any other city in The study is at once filled With both the United States.” comprehensive statistics used to determine Largely due to serving as a central rail homeless trends and individual narratives hub for the nation, “Among tramps and that allow homeless^ men to become more vagrants also, Chicago is a favorite rallying than statistics-but human beings. Both place.” She also noted that “As in most aspects were at the time revelatory, other large cities, politicians are likely at especially by allowing homeless men to rise election times to add to the comfort and above stereotypes. As Francis H McLean security of a floating population whose votes mentions in the forward, “It portrays clearly may usually be counted upon in return for where society has failed, where the small favors.” individual has failed. Of this homeless population, Solenberger created the subcategories of “self- supporting, temporarily dependent, revious to this work it was common to chronically dependent, and parasitic.” categorize homeless men into two Regarding the physical condition of the categories: those who will work, and those homeless men, Solenberger counted 195 who won’t. Mrs. Solenberger created new men who “were addicted to excessive use of categories that included: The crippled and drink and known to be drug users.” 81 men maimed; those injured by industrial were found to be “mentally unfit for work.” accidents; the insane; the feeble-minded; 220 men were confirmed tramps or the epileptic; the elderly; the seasonal and wanderers. 117 men were homeless, casual laborer; chronic beggars; confirmed vagrant, or runaway boys. 254 men were P either temporarily or permanently crippled or maimed due to everything from birth defects to runaway horses, to jumping from windows during hotel fires. She gives an example of the effects of one man’s accident “A man on his way to newly-found and much-needed work one day gave an expressman a lift in handling a heavy trunk. By some awkwardness it slipped and crushed his right thumb. A trifling accident perhaps, but the sore thumb, although given the best of surgical care from the beginning, not merely lost the man the permanent job to which he was going when the accident occurred, but keep him from any other work for several weeks. In another very similar case, an injured thumb was not given proper care and the man ultimately lost his left arm.” She chronicles several other heartbreaking cases where men suffered horrible accidents and were reduced from bright, capable working men into the chronically dependent. olenbuerger was troubled by the conditions that the chronically dependent endured. She believed that a man’s self-respect was very much tied to his economic dependence, and that long-term housing at a lodging house was “morally poisonous.” In modem homeless efforts, the “housing first” model has become the most popular- theoretically, if a person has stabfe housing, they have a better chance for success in other areas of their life. Solenberger’s work supports this notion. When men are homeless and are massed in great numbers in city lodging houses where there are practically no restraining and refining influences; where, in sharing a common living room they must of necessity associate with men who have long since become chronic tramps, confirmed beggars, or clever impostors...it is not surprising that many deteriorate rapidly and that such self- respect and decency as they may in the S SEE 1,000 MEN, page 9