My great object in the present
work is to prove to society. . .that the cheapest and
most efficacious way of dealing with the “Dangerous Classes”
of large cities, is not to punish them, but to prevent their growth;
to throw the influences of education and discipline and religion
about the abandoned and destitute youth of our large towns; to so
change their material circumstances, and draw them under the influence
of the moral and fortunate classes, that they shall grow up as useful
producers and members of society, able and inclined to aid it in
its progress.
In the view of this book, the class of a large city most dangerous
to its property, its morals and its political life, are the ignorant,
destitute, untrained, and abandoned youth: the outcast street-children
grown up to be voters, to be the implements of demagogues, the “feeders”
of the criminals, and the sources of domestic outbreaks and violations
of law. . . .
The founders of the Children’s Aid Society early saw that
the best of all Asylums for the outcast child, is the farmer’s
home.
The United States have the enormous advantage over all other countries,
in the treatment of difficult questions of pauperism and reform,
that they possess a practically unlimited area of arable land. The
demand for labor on this land is beyond any present supply. Moreover,
the cultivators of the soil are in America our most solid and intelligent
class. From the nature of their circumstances, their laborers, or
“help,” must be members of their families, and share
in their social tone. It is, accordingly, of the utmost importance
to them to train up children who shall aid in their work, and be
associates of their own children. A servant who is nothing but a
servant, would be, with them, disagreeable and inconvenient. They
like to educate their own “help.” With their overflowing
supply of food also, each new mouth in the household brings no drain
on their means. Children are a blessing, and the mere feeding of
a young boy or girl is not considered at all.
With this fortunate state of things, it was but a natural inference
that the important movement now inaugurating for the benefit of
the unfortunate children of New York should at once strike upon
a plan of
EMIGRATION
Simple and most effective as this ingenious scheme now seems—
which has accomplished more in relieving New York of youthful crime
and misery than all other charities together—at the outset
it seemed as difficult and perplexing as does the similar cure proposed
now in Great Britain for a more terrible condition of the children
of the poor.
Among other objections, it was feared that the farmers would not
ant the children for help; that, if they took them, the latter would
be liable to ill-treatment, or, if well treated, would corrupt the
virtuous children around them, and thus New York would be scattering
seeds of vice and corruption all over the land. Accidents might
occur to the unhappy little ones thus sent, bringing odium on the
benevolent persons who were dispatching them to the country. How
were places to be found? How were the demand and supply for children’s
labor to be connected? How were the right employers to be selected?
And, when the children were placed, how were their interests to
be watched over, and acts of oppression or hard dealing prevented
or punished? Were they to be indentured, or not? If this was the
right scheme, why had it not been tried long ago in our cities or
in England?
These and innumerable similar difficulties and objections were
offered to this projected plan of relieving the city of its youthful
pauperism and suffering. They all fell to the found before the confident
efforts to carry out a well-laid scheme; and practical experience
has justified none of them. . . .
PROVIDING COUNTRY HOMES.
THE OPPOSITION TO THIS REMEDY—ITS EFFECTS
This most sound and practical of charities always met with an intense
opposition here from a certain class, for bigoted reasons. The poor
were early taught, even from the altar, that the whole scheme of
emigration was one of “proselytizing,” and that every
child thus taken forth was made a “Protestant.” Stories
were spread, too, that these unfortunate children were re-named
in the West, and that thus even brothers and sisters might meet
and perhaps marry! Others scattered the pleasant information that
the little ones “were sold as slaves,” and that the
agents enriched themselves from the transaction.
These were the obstacles and objections among the poor themselves.
So powerful were these, that it would often happen that a poor woman,
seeing her child becoming ruined on the streets, and soon plainly
to come forth as a criminal, would prefer this to a good home in
the West; and we would have the discouragement of beholding the
lad a thief behind prison-bars, when a journey to the country would
have saved him. Most distressing of all was, when a drunken mother
or father followed a half-starved boy, already scarred and sore
with their brutality, and snatched him from one of our parties of
little emigrants, all joyful with their new prospects, only to beat
him and leave him on the streets. . . .
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