Ch. 1 Pg. 5
General Coxey On The March
Racism, so often a symptom of class tensions, rose to disturbing levels. Some African-American leaders such as Booker T. Washington counseled patience. Other leaders, such as W.E.B. Du Bois an Ida Wells, advocated a more militant approach in opposing racism. Race riots broke out in several southern cities. Between 1892 and 1898 more than a thousand African Americans were lynched. These events accelerated the exodus of southern African Americans to the urban Northeast.
The cities suffered the worst. In New York City three-fourths of all its inhabitants lived in tenements. In Mulberry Bend, the heart of the Italian district, one-third of all babies born in 1888 died before their first birthdays. Traditional agencies such as the Children's Aid Society and the Salvation Army were overwhelmed, incapable of meeting the demands placed on their services.
Waiting for the Orphan Train
The culture of the cities was also changing dramatically and that complicated relief efforts. The majority of inhabitants in America's largest cities were now immigrants and their children.