Social
reformer and photojournalist Jacob Riis took many pictures of New York
City in the 1890s to show how “the other half” lives. Those pictures are
now part of The City Museum, and
a selection is online at Vintage Everyday.
These pictures show the streets of the city, the back alleys,
tenements, poorhouses, schools, sweatshops, and makeshift livings spaces
for the struggling poor of the era.
As you see how much has
changed in the past century, you also realize that cities still have
sweatshop workers, homeless people, crowded slums, and marginalized
folks getting by the best they can.
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