|
![]() |
|
9:30 P.M. A common
case of "team work." Smaller boy (Joseph Bishop) goes into [one of the?] saloons and sells his last papers. Then
comes out and his brother gives him more. Joseph said, "Drunks are me best customers." "I sell more'n me brudder
does." "Dey buy me out so I kin go home." He sells every afternoon and night. Extra late Saturda[y. At] it
again at 6 A.M. Sunday, Hartford, Conn. Location: Hartford, Connecticut, March 1909, Lewis Hine. "When I was young, Uncle Joe
would take us down to the boardwalk and do things with us. We would go on the merry-go-round and win dolls at the arcade."
-Stephanie Pressman, niece of Joseph and Meyer Bishop The following are excerpts from an article in the
New London Day (Connecticut) "Hartford, March 18, 1909: The committee on education held a hearing in the senate chamber on a number of measures
relating to children. They were on the bulletin in the following order: House bill No. 254 repealing act relating to the attendance
of children, between 14 and 16 years at school; House bill No. 349 concerning the employment of children under 16 years in
mechanical and mercantile establishments; House bill No. 197 relating to the issuance of certificate upon certain educational
qualifications; House bill No. 196 concerning the attendance of school children under 16 years of age at school; Senate bill
No. 66, providing that girls under 16 years of age shall not sell papers on the streets, etc., and that boys under 15 years
shall not be employed at manufacturing or mechanical pursuits, or in theatres, or bowling alleys; Senate bill No. 65 for the
regulation of street trades for boys; House bill 196 concerning the attendance of school children under 16 years; House bill
No. 251 for the appointment of a commission by the superior court on the matter of location of schools." "Mr. Lord of Boston, the secretary for New England
of the National Child Labor Committee, speaking on bills No. 65 and 66, said that in the states which have eight hours a day,
the minimum age has been fixed at 16 years. Everyone appreciates the necessity of giving as much time as possible to the training
of youth. He wished it were possible that boys and girls should be prevented from working for wages before they had reached
the age of 16 years. In regard to street trades, he said it was a new question. He has a great many friends among the newsboys.
He objected to the employment of girls on the streets at any age." "They have precocity which has its disadvantages. They suffer in health and morals. Some of them go to work
at 5 or 6 o'clock in the morning and they work again in the evening. They appeal to the sympathies of passersby. Street trades
lead to begging in many instances. The boys often go into the saloons for customers. Mr. Lord introduced a number of photographs
showing groups of boys and children. He saw a messenger boy at 12 o'clock Monday night at a place in Hartford which, in his
opinion, was a house of ill repute. The boy told him stories of unspeakable and unprintable foulness. He showed the pictures
of messenger boys taken by Hartford photographers by flashlights." "In reply to Attorney Joseph L. Barbour, Lewis W. Hine, the photographer, said he took the pictures of the boys
introduced by Mr. Lord. One of the pictures showed a boy standing at the door of a saloon with his hand on the knob. The boy
stood still at his request while his photograph was taken. Mr. Hine also said that he paid some of the boys five cents for
their time."
The scheme practiced by the Bishop brothers was played
out on urban streets all the time back in the days of Hine's investigations. He took 40 photographs of newsboys and newsgirls
in Hartford in the first and second weeks of March, and then headed to New Haven and Bridgeport, right after he testified
before a session of the state legislature. He was in Connecticut to photograph newsies and messenger boys precisely because
of the child labor and school attendance laws being considered at that time. The 1910 census revealed that Joseph's unnamed brother in the picture was Meyer (some records spell it Myer). According
to the census and the Hartford city directories, Curry's Café was owned by John J. Curry, 34 at the time of the photograph,
and married with no children. He was born in Ireland and entered the US through Ellis Island in 1901. The café (called
a saloon in the directory) was located in downtown Hartford at 184 State Street, an area which was totally redeveloped in
the 1960s to accommodate Constitution Plaza, a large office and retail center.
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
![]() |
|
All rights reserved. This website, and all of its contents, except
where noted, is copyrighted by, and is the sole property of Joe Manning (aka Joseph H. Manning), of Florence, Massachusetts.
None of the contents of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including copying, recording, downloading, or by any other information storage and retrieval system, without written permission
from Joe Manning, or his rightful heirs. |