Civilization and Its Discontents 507laws, the regulation of the labor of women and chil-
dren, and better schools. They employed private
resources to establish playgrounds in the slums, along
with libraries, classes in everything from child nutri-
tion and home management to literature and arts and
crafts, social clubs, and day-care centers. When they
observed that many poor families were so occupied
with the struggle to survive that they were neglecting
or even abandoning their children, they tried to place
the children in foster homes in the country.
In Boston Robert A. Woods organized clubs to
get the youngsters of the South End off the streets,
helped establish a restaurant where a meal could be
had for five cents, acted as an arbitrator in labor dis-
putes, and lobbied for laws tightening up the fran-
chises of public utility companies. In Chicago Jane
Addams developed an outstanding cultural program
that included classes in music and art and an excellent
“little theater” group. Hull House soon boasted a
gymnasium, a day nursery, and several social clubs.
Addams also worked tirelessly and effectively for
improved public services and for social legislation of all
kinds. She even got herself appointed garbage inspec-
tor in her ward and hounded local landlords and the
garbage contractor until something approaching
decent service was established.
A few critics considered the settlement houses
mere devices to socialize the unruly poor by teaching
them the “punctilios of upper-class propriety,” but
almost everyone appreciated their virtues. By the end
of the century the Catholics, laggard in entering the
arena of practical social reform, were joining the
movement, partly because they were losing many
communicants to socially minded Protestant churches.
The first Catholic-run settlement house was founded
in 1898 in an Italian district of New York. Two years
later Brownson House in Los Angeles, catering chiefly
to Mexican immigrants, threw open its doors.
With all their accomplishments, the settlement
houses seemed to be fighting a losing battle. “Private
beneficence,” Jane Addams wrote of Hull House, “is
totally inadequate to deal with the vast numbers of the
city’s disinherited.” Much as a tropical forest grows
faster than a handful of men armed with machetes can
cut it down, so the slums, fed by an annual influx of
hundreds of thousands, blighted new areas more
rapidly than settlement house workers could clean up
old ones. It became increasingly apparent that the
wealth and authority of the state must be brought to
bear in order to keep abreast of the problem.Civilization and Its Discontents
As the nineteenth century died, the majority of the
American people, especially those comfortably well-
off, the residents of small towns, the shopkeepers,
and some farmers and skilled workers, remained
confirmed optimists and uncritical admirers of their
civilization. However, blacks, immigrants, and oth-
ers who failed to share equitably in the good things
of life, along with a growing number of humanitar-
ian reformers, found little to cheer about and much
to lament in their increasingly industrialized society.
Giant monopolies flourished despite federal restric-
tions. The gap between rich and poor appeared to
be widening while the slum spread its poison and
the materially successful made a god of their suc-
cess. Human values seemed in grave danger of
being crushed by impersonal forces typified by the
great corporations.
In 1871 Walt Whitman, usually so full of extrav-
agant praise for everything American, had called hisTable 18.1 Reformers and the Urban PoorPerson Occupation Action Consequences
Jacob Riis,
Lewis HinePhotojournalists Increased public awareness of poor immi-
grants’ living conditionsStimulated reform movementsHorace Mann Educator Favored state laws that supported public
educationIncreased proportion of young
people in school
Dwight L.
MoodyLay evangelist Encouraged people to consult the Bible for
moral guidance and refrain from vicePromoted spread of YMCA (1850)
and Salvation Army (1880) in
immigrant districts
Washington
GladdenCongregationalist
ministerPersuaded people that they are obliged
as Christians to improve conditions in
the slumsAdvanced the “social gospel”Jane Addams,
Robert Woods,
and Lillian WaldSettlement house
organizersShowed immigrants and impoverished peo-
ple how to cope with urban conditionsConstructed playgrounds and
provided social clubs, day-care
centers, and schools