The streets of New York - running the gauntlet of horrors.
1 2017-08-01T18:47:23+00:00 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522 3 2 1879. Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2006681441/. (Accessed August 01, 2017.) Political cartoon from the 19th Century humor magazine Puck. Caption in the corner reads, "Puck to commissioner of C & C, 'If you can't remove these people on the score of charity, do it for decency's sake'" plain 2017-08-01T18:51:31+00:00 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522This page is referenced by:
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2017-05-30T18:36:40+00:00
"Unsightly Beggars"
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With the closure of dime museums and the passing of "unsightly beggar" laws, many people who lost their ability to earn a living this way had to turn to institutions.
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2017-08-01T18:48:39+00:00
Although circuses and sideshows were popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, most people with non-normative bodies did not perform. Instead, they earned their living through a variety of everyday jobs, although they faced a great deal of stigma and discrimination in hiring. Many people with non-normative bodies lived in poverty —either not hired, or underpaid, or unable to work— and some turned to begging to survive.
Reformers in the Progressive Era (1890-1920) sought to eradicate beggars from city streets as part of their goal to clean up and improve society. They were especially concerned with “unsightly beggars,” a term which targeted people who displayed their disability or disease as a plea for help. Many cities passed laws outlawing "unsightly beggars" in an attempt to force people to “honest work.” These laws, known as "ugly laws," did not take into consideration the special needs of these communities.
With the closure of dime museums and the passing of "unsightly beggar" laws, many people who lost their ability to earn a living this way had to turn to institutions. Begging was not a glamorous life, nor was being a performer, but both allowed people to earn enough money to live on their own terms, a privilege which was not available in an institution.