1. POVERTY, POLITICS, AND THE MECHANICS OF NEW YORK CITY, 1803.
- Author
-
Mohl, Raymond A.
- Subjects
- *
POOR people , *POVERTY , *PRACTICAL politics , *URBAN poor , *TAX assessment laws , *PUBLIC welfare , *GOVERNMENT policy , *ECONOMIC history ,NEW York (N.Y.) politics & government - Abstract
The plight of New York City's poor has been an ever-present problem. Their rapid increase accompanied New York's accelerated growth during the post-Revolutionary years. This condition, in turn, imposed new responsibilities for public welfare upon the municipal government. Public provisions for the relief of poverty in New York began with a provincial poor law of 1665-one year after the British assumed control of the colony. This measure and succeeding legislation of the colonial period, based upon the principles of the Elizabethan poor laws, made local communities responsible for their own poor and stipulated that taxation would be the source of relief funds. The economic and social dislocations produced by the American Revolution imposed obvious strains upon New York's local welfare system. Each year thousands of others came to depend on public outdoor relief and the city's charitable societies. As the number of publicly supported paupers rose, so did municipal expenditures for poor relief, which soon became the most costly item in the city's annual budget.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF