Jacob A. Riis 1849–1914. The Battle with the Slum. 1902.
Subject Index
Sweating, see that title. |
Tenants, see Population. |
Twenty-five-foot lot, doom of, 142, 148, 149 |
Uptown and downtown, 109–111 |
Water supply, lack of, 181 |
[See also Slums.] |
Thieves, see Robberies. |
Thieves’ Alley demolition, 285, 286 |
Tombs—Demolition, proposed preservation of gates, 5 |
School for boys awaiting trial, 378, 379 |
Tweed, thief in, 4 |
Tompkins Square—Beresheim, Jacob, see that title. |
Evening classes failure, 226 |
Tracy, Dr. R. S., mortality records, 116 |
Tramp vote, Tammany’s use o, 48 |
Trilby of Cat Alley, 331–333 |
Trinity Church, opposition as tenement-house landlord, 30 |
Truant school, fight for, 241, 242, 349, 350 |
Truck farming on site of Stryker’s Lane, 366 |
Trucks, street obstructions, disappearance, 45–46, 269–270 |
Tuberculosis in the slums, 194–196, 300 |
Tweed, thief, 4–5, 285 |
Twenty-five-foot lot, doom of, 142, 148, 149 |
United Garment Workers of America, compact, 1892, 198 |
United States government slum inquiry, 61, 97, 175 |
University Extension Society, work of, 381 |
University settlement—Social development and school movement, 397–410 |
Work with East Side gang, 248 |
Vagrancy—Crime, see that title. |
Encouragement by free lunches, lodging, etc., 170, 172 |
Farm colony for young vagrants proposed, 127, 172, 350 |
Vitruvius, quotation as to height of dwellings, 11 |
Walsh, Mrs., funeral in Cat Alley, 329–330 |
Waring, Colonel—Death, 268 |
Market scheme, 271 |
Mulberry Street Park dedication, 268 |
Streetcleaning, 45–46, 126, 268–272, 414, 415 |
Trucks, disappearance, 45–46, 269–270 |
Water supply in tenements, lack of, 181 |
Weeks, L. S., murder in Brooklyn, 156 |
Wheat lesson, Hester Street school, 363 |
White, A. T., Riverside tenements, 135, 140 |
Whitechapel, London, Green Dragon yard, 25–27 |
Whyó gang headquarters, 272, 308 |
Widows in Cat Alley, 325–326 |
Willard, D., reform work among children, 378–379 |
Wisconsin farmer—battle with Five Points, 13–14 |
Woman doctor in the slums, Dr. J. E. Robbins, 205–206 |
Woman’s Hotel for working women, need of, 166–168 |