Hard Times in an American Workhouse, 1853–1920
eBook - ePub

Hard Times in an American Workhouse, 1853–1920

  1. 256 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Hard Times in an American Workhouse, 1853–1920

About this book

Hard Times in an American Workhouse, 1853–1920, is the first comprehensive examination of a workhouse in the United States, offering a critical history of the institution in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. Using the Old St. Louis Workhouse as a representative example, award-winning historian Gregg Andrews brings to life individual stories of men and women sentenced to this debtors' prison to break rocks in the quarry, sew clothing, scrub cell floors and walls, or toil in its brush factory. Most inmates, too poor to pay requisite fines, came through the city's police courts on charges of vagrancy, drunkenness, disturbing the peace, or violating some other ordinance. The penal system criminalized everything from poverty and unemployment to homelessness and the mere fact of being Black. Workhouses proved overcrowded and inhospitable facilities that housed hardcore felons and young street toughs along with prostitutes, petty thieves, peace disturbers, political dissenters, "levee rats," adulterers, and those who suffered from alcohol and drug addiction. Officials even funneled the elderly, the mentally disabled, and the physically infirm into the workhouse system.

The torture of prisoners in the hellish chambers of the St. Louis Workhouse proved far worse than Charles Dickens's portrayals of cruelty in the debtors' prisons of Victorian England. The ordinance that created the St. Louis complex in 1843 banned corporal punishment, but shackles, chains, and the whipping post remained central to the institution's attempts to impose discipline. Officers also banished more recalcitrant inmates to solitary confinement in the "bull pen," where they subsisted on little more than bread and water. Andrews traces efforts by critics to reform the workhouse, a political plum in the game of petty ward patronage played by corrupt and capricious judges, jailers, and guards. The best opportunity for lasting change came during the Progressive Era, but the limited contours of progressivism in St. Louis thwarted reformers' efforts. The defeat of a municipal bond issue in 1920 effectively ended plans to replace the urban industrial workhouse model with a more humane municipal farm system championed by Progressives.

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Information

Publisher
LSU Press
Year
2024
Topic
History
eBook ISBN
9780807183267

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. 1 Daily Life and Labor in the Workhouse
  7. 2 Guardians of Brutality
  8. 3 The Fiefdom of “Big John” Lohrum
  9. 4 Karr's Gang of Guards
  10. 5 The Little Pine Street Anarchist
  11. 6 Remit Scandals and a Single Tax Prisoner
  12. 7 Faint Heartbeats of Reform
  13. 8 A Halting Place Between Two Crimes
  14. 9 A Theosophist and Soldier of Fortune in Charge
  15. 10 Wobblies in the Workhouse
  16. 11 Petty Peanut Politics and the Death of Reform
  17. Conclusion: When the Workhouse Bell Tolls
  18. Notes
  19. Bibliography
  20. Index

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