Chapter 14

[75]X 274.

[76]X 275.

[77]X 276.

[78]For additional illustrations seeAppendix XII—“Additional Data—Saloons.”

[79]X 108.

[80]X 295.

[81]X 296.

[82]X 297.

[83]A “line up” is the ruin of a girl who flirts with men and accepts their advances and immoral suggestions. Finally she yields to an invitation to visit a furnished room and the word quickly passes among the “gang.” One by one the boys and men, perhaps only two or three, perhaps more, visit this room.

[84]By X 298 at X 299.

[85]X 298, X 299.

[86]For further illustrations, seeAppendix XIII—“Additional Data—Miscellaneous Places.”

[87]For detailed statistical statements respecting street-conditions, seeAppendix VII, p.281.

[88]X 318.

[89]X 319.

[90]X 320.

[91]X 321.

[92]X 322.

[93]X 328.

[94]X 330.

[95]X 320, X 320-a.

[96]Given by Club X 341.

[97]X 342.

[98]X 343.

[99]X 352.

[100]X 353.

[101]X 357.

[102]X 358.

[103]By the X 362 Club.

[104]X 368.

[105]X 369.

[106]X 370.

[107]X 374.

[108]X 373.

[109]X 376.

[110]Forstatisticaldetails as to parks catering to prostitution, seeAppendix II, “Summary of Resorts Catering to Vice.”

[111]A “creep house” is a place where women take men to rob them.

[112]X 382.

[113]X 108-a.

[114]X 46.

[115]X 34.

[116]X 86, X 87.

[117]X 383.

[118]X 384.

[119]X 402.

[120]X 403.

[121]X 407.

[122]X 467.

[123]X 408.

[124]X 258, 409.

[125]X 73.

[126]X 414.

[127]X 416.

[128]X 421.

[129]X 311.

[130]X 68.

[131]X 426.

[132]For further details, seeAppendix XIV, “Additional Data—Shipping Women.”

[133]X 385.

[134]X 386.

[135]X 385-a.

[136]X 68, X 386-a, X 386, X 387, X 388, X 389.

[137]X 386, X 387.

[138]X 88, X 163, X 393, X 74.

[139]X 386.

[140]X 385.

[141]X 340.

[142]X 396.

[143]X 393.

[144]X 399.

[145]X 400.

[146]X 427.

[147]X 382-a.

[148]X 87.

[149]X 34.

[150]X 501.

[151]X 260.

[152]X 183.

[153]X 463.

[154]X 44.

[155]X 502.

[156]X 518.

[157]Kept by Madame X 519.

[158]X 116.

[159]X 520.

[160]X 50.

[161]X 108.

[162]X 540.

[163]X 51.

[164]X 46.

[165]X 17.

[166]X 59.

[167]Named X 522.

[168]X 507.

[169]X 493.

[170]By X 508.

[171]X 418, X 509.

[172]X 419.

[173]This expression means that the girls should be broken into the business in some private place, until they were fitted for the public houses.

[174]For statistical details, seeAppendix III, “Inmates of Vice Resorts.”

[175]See Chapter VIII.

[176]See Report on “Relation between Occupation and Criminality of Women,” page 29, being Vol. XV of Report on Conditions of Women and Child Wage-Earners in the United States.

It is further to be remembered, in accounting for the disproportionate number of servants among those arrested, that, as Miss Jane Addams has pointed out, many of these girls have had such brief periods of domestic employment that they cannot fairly be reckoned in the servant class. They describe themselves as such merely in default of any other convenient term; they may have served for a few days here or there, but, strictly speaking, they have no calling at all.

[177]This statement is substantiated by the findings of a private investigation made in New York City during 1912.

[178]X 33 and X 9.

[179]X 541.

[180]X 545.

[181]See “The Social Evil in Chicago, Report of the Chicago Vice Commission,” page 101.

[182]See “The Social Evil in Syracuse, N. Y., Report of the Morals Survey Committee,” page 95.

[183]X 428.

[184]X 428-a.

[185]X 423.

[186]X 548.

[187]X 111, X 549, X 550.

[188]To X 110.

[189]X 47-a, X 408.

[190]X 12.

[191]X 554.

[192]X 552.

[193]X 462.

[194]X 387.

[195]X 463.

[196]X 465, 466.

[197]X 467, 468.

[198]X 469.

[199]X 109.

[200]X 562.

[201]X 563.

[202]X 564.

[203]X 565.

[204]The other two houses, making the 30 resorts later referred to under “Receipts,” are operated by women.

[205]X 34.

[206]X 419.

[207]X 16.

[208]X 583.

[209]X 585.

[210]X 568.

[211]X 575.

[212]X 423.

[213]X 110.

[214]X 109.

[215]X 403.

[216]The houses and individuals involved in all the above transactions are identified in our records.

[217]The parties involved were X 72, X 586, X 69, X 415.

[218]The persons and places are X 407, X 67, X 59, X 72-a.

[219]X 73.

[220]X 72.

[221]Persons and places: X 417, X 403, X 69.

[222]X 751.

[223]The girl gets one-half, the house one-half.

[224]The effort is made to meet these expenses by the charge made for board—a charge paid by the inmates out of their “half.”

[225]From this point to the end of the table, shops occupy the first floors of the buildings named.

[226]For itemized account of certain expenses, seeAppendix VI, p.280.

[227]For itemized account of certain expenses, seeAppendix V, p.279.

[228]For itemized statement of certain expenses, similarly obtained, seeAppendix IV, p.278.

[229]For Rules and Regulations made pursuant to charter provisions, seeAppendix VIII, p.283.

[230]This table was compiled for the Aldermanic Committee appointed to investigate the police department, which fact explains why the period does not coincide with that of our own investigations. The table is a matter of public record.

[231]In 40 of these cases, the complaint was dismissed as having “No basis.” In 194 cases, the cause of complaint was removed, and in 8 cases no action was necessary. In 6 cases, a violation was held. Police made arrests in 153 of these cases.

[232]X 387, X 387-a, X 424-a, X 596.

[233]X 462.

[234]Among them X 598, X 599, X 600, X 601, X 602.

[235]X 603-604.

[236]The persons and places involved are: X 34, X 108, X 608, X 609, X 610, X 611, X 600, X 598, X 613.

[237]Persons and places involved: X 108, X 44, X 502, X 659, X 415, X 416, X 414, X 542, X 11, X 663, X 664, X 407, X 73, X 67.

[238]X 662.

[239]X 108.

[240]X 34.

[241]X 500.

[242]X 572.

[243]X 665, 666.

[244]X 670.

[245]X 671.

[246]X 672, X 673, X 674.

[247]X 26.

[248]X 9.

[249]X 685.

[250]X 691.

[251]X 116.

[252]X 519.

[253]The commander of the inspection district, X 653.

[254]X 691.

[255]X 108.

[256]Our investigators made frequent reports showing that street walkers and others repeatedly prosecuted their business under the eyes of police officers without interference.

[257]X 109.

[258]X 610.

[259]X 68.

[260]X 9.

[261]X 706.

[262]X 707.

[263]X 230.

[264]X 708.

[265]X 729.

[266]X 556, X 557.

[267]X 626.

[268]X 426.

[269]X 741.

[270]Owner X 34.

[271]X 311.

[272]X 658.

[273]X 34, 47, 413-a, 44, 705, 418, 387-a and 746.

[274]X 502, X 570, X 459.

[275]X 33, X 11, X 403.

[276]X 16.

[277]X 419.

[278]X 34.

[279]At X 108.

[280]X 587.

[281]X 778.

[282]X 33.

[283]X 419.

[284]X 93.

[285]X 781.

[286]X 34.

[287]X 610.

[288]X 598.

[289]These are indexed in our records as follows:

X 791 W. 26th Street, owners X 17 and X 34.X 78 W. 27th Street, owners X 68 and X 69.X 419 W. 28th Street, owners X 418, X 509, and X 34.X 792 W. 29th Street, owners X 15.X 16 W. 31st Street, owners X 34, and a woman.X 254 W. 34th Street, owners X 793.X 33 Sixth Avenue, owners X 34.X 11 Sixth Avenue, owners X 542, X 705, and X 34’s nephew and brother.X 659 W. 40th Street, owners X 103 and X 44.X 93 W. 40th Street, owners X 34.X 582 W. 40th Street, owners X 408.

X 791 W. 26th Street, owners X 17 and X 34.

X 78 W. 27th Street, owners X 68 and X 69.

X 419 W. 28th Street, owners X 418, X 509, and X 34.

X 792 W. 29th Street, owners X 15.

X 16 W. 31st Street, owners X 34, and a woman.

X 254 W. 34th Street, owners X 793.

X 33 Sixth Avenue, owners X 34.

X 11 Sixth Avenue, owners X 542, X 705, and X 34’s nephew and brother.

X 659 W. 40th Street, owners X 103 and X 44.

X 93 W. 40th Street, owners X 34.

X 582 W. 40th Street, owners X 408.

[290]X 17.

[291]X 59.

[292]X 16.

[293]X 415-a.

[294]X 804.

[295]X 12.

[296]X 67.

[297]X 415-a, X 34, X 633 were concerned in this alleged deal.

[298]X 608.

[299]X 587.

[300]X 108.

[301]X 832.

[302]X 833.

[303]The above data are derived from the report made by the Committee of Fourteen for 1912.

[304]For purposes of comparison studies were also made of 610 girls in 7 other New York city and state institutions and of 1106 street walkers. Seepp. 197etc.

[305]SeePage 229.

[306]SeePage No. 243.

[307]These tests were made by Dr. Archibald McNeil, of the Research Laboratory, Department of Health, New York City.

[308]All smears were prepared and examined in duplicate and were stained by Grams method, pure cultures of staphylococci and colon bacilli being used as controls. In one case the smear was positive and the complement fixation test for gonorrhœa was negative, but as a rule antibodies against the gonococcus do not appear in the blood during the acute stage of the disease, so it may frequently happen that we may have positive smears and negative complement fixation tests in recent cases. At a later period, however, the complement fixation test is almost invariably positive.

The complement fixation tests were all performed in duplicate as a check on any possible errors in technique. The anti-sheep hæmolytic system with inactive sera was used with the alcoholic extract guinea pig heart for an antigen in the syphilis tests and an antigen prepared from ten varieties of gonococci was used in the tests for gonorrhœa.

All of the tests were made in sets of twelve, each set being fully controlled.

The blood specimens were unaccompanied by histories and the laboratory results were not in any way influenced by clinical findings.

[309]These percentages were taken from the combined results of the tests made at both incubator and ice box temperature.

[310]That is to say, the only girls who figure in the present study were girls who were before commitment engaged in prostitution in New York City.

[311]New York Tribune Almanac, 1912.

[312]New York City, 290 = 59.20%.

[313]Note: 7 cards, no information.

[314]Preliminary Bulletin issued by U. S. Census Bureau (Census of 1910) Dec. 29, 1911.

[315]Seepage 271.

[316]See Rules and Regulations of the Police Department, 1908, page 115.

[317]Ibid., page 115.

[318]Ibid., page 120.

[319]Ibid., page 130.

Transcriber’s Notes:

Punctuation has been corrected without note.

Other than the corrections noted by hover information, inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the original.


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