A PERPLEXING PROBLEM.
OVERCROWDING IN NEW YORK. The New York correspondent of “The Times,” in a-Marconi wireless telegram, says:—“The exhibition of the terrible congestion in the flats of this city, opened by Governor Hughes of the Natural History Museum, is enough to make socialists of those who have a spark of sympathy left for common humanity. I visited this exhibition,with Mr North, director of the census, and we could hardly believe possible the conditions there illustrated by wax models of families who sleep by night and work by day. In many cases the actual contents of the rooms had been transplanted from the tenements. There was a windowless room, which looked more like a Chinaman’s opium den, labelled “30,000 rooms like this still left and occupied in various parts of New York.” There were models of tenement blocks containing 2,781 porsons and only 264 water closets, and not one bath. Of 1,588 rooms, 441 were dark, and had .no ventilation to the outer air, and 635 getting their sole light and air from a dark and narrow air shaft. This is not one of the worst features of the city. Sweating shops by day and night were here illustrated as bad in uncleanliness and wretchedness as those in the Hast of London. “And this,” exclaimed one gentleman present, ‘“.is one feature of the life in that America to which the poor and oppressed and persecuted of all nations have been looking as-a haven of liberty and rest and unlimited possibilities.” “The reverse side of this realistic picture of the evils of massing people in Now York in a limited area may be noted in the invaluable and heroic work being done, not In- one, but by 50 different organisations dealing with the problems involved. It would take columns to describe the misery depicted at this exhibition, and to give -an adequate idea of what has been accomplished and is in progress, by legislataion and other means, for the eradication of these evils. The thought has often occurred to me, Clan the -good work ever keep pace with the demoralisation of such congestion, which is spreading?. About 200,000 new immigrants settled in Now York last year. Mr North told me that at the present rate of growth there might bo -a population of 7,000,000 in 1020. Many blocks in Manhattan have a density of over 1,000 persons to the acre. Over 50 blocks each have a population of 3,000 to 4,000. Yet there are more than 100,000 acres in New York which average less than four inhabitants to the acre. Tenement house building laws, play-ground* for children., aided distribution- —one Jewish society having since 1901 removed 35,000 persons to farming colonies and small cities — and improved transit facilities have given a measure of relief. Perplexing problems these; but in the general awakening to tho conditions which are facing people here, “'they ■are being earnestly, and, I hope, effectively grapplgd with,”
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Gisborne Times, Volume XXVI, Issue 2204, 30 May 1908, Page 3
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489A PERPLEXING PROBLEM. Gisborne Times, Volume XXVI, Issue 2204, 30 May 1908, Page 3
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