The Five Points
When, in a controversial speech about welfare reform in July 1994, Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan alluded to the 11 wild Irish slums of the 19th Century
Eastern Seaboard," he was referring to the Five Points. When, In 1835, Davy
Crockett said, "In my part of the country, when you meet an Irishman, you
find a first-rate gentleman; but these are worse than savages; they are too mean
to swab hell's kitchen," he was referring to the Five Points. When, in
1842, Charles Dickens referred to "hideous tenements which take their names
from robbery and murder; all that is loathsome, drooping and decayed is
here," he was referring to the Five Points. What is the Five Points?
The Five Points was a Part of the "Ould Sixth Ward" of 19th century
New York City. Today, the Civic Center covers what some say was the worst slum
in the deplorable history of slums. The area was the site of the, beautiful
Collect Pond of early New York history which deteriorated as polluting
businesses settled in the, area. The. Pond was drained, filled in and built over
without proper regard for its softness as a building site. Even today engineers
have to account for the water table of this site. The inevitable deterioration
of the housing led to an influx of the most deprived New Yorkers of the time,
African Americans and Irish. Coincident with the Great Famine the Irish
population in New York City rose from 961,719 in 1850 to 1,611,304 in 1860.
Many of the immigrants lived in abject poverty. In the late,19th century, one
report on tenement life counted one bath tub for 1321 families and one water tap
at best for a floor of apartments. Kerosene stoves and businesses that used
naphtha, benzene and other flammables made fire a daily hazard. Alcoholism was
so common that the word, "saloon" is said to be, a Five Points coinage
to name "groggeries" which occupied the back rooms of grocery stores.
Poverty and gangs go hand in hand, the Five Points being the breeding gang of
Irish gangs such as the Plug Uglies, the Forty Thieves, the Chichesters, the
Dead Rabbits and the Kerryonians. These gangs were so tough and reckless that
the police were reluctant to enter the Five Points. Davy Crockett himself said
lie would "rather risk myself in an Indian fight than venture among these
creatures after night."
The Five Points slum was so notorious that it attracted the attention of
candidate Abraham Lincoln who visited the area before his Cooper Union Address.
The Ladies Home Mission Society in 1852 bought and razed the Old Brewery which
had been a flop house for Irish and Black homeless since 1837 and the site of a
murder a night for fifteen years. It was replaced by the Five Points Mission.
The crusading journalist Jacob Riis succeeded in having a park built at Mulberry
Bend in the Five Points. Ali expanding New York City economy and socially
responsible planning helped to push the Five Points into the footnotes of
history. However, its mystique lives on, captured in the novels The
Alienist by Caleb Carr and Banished
Children of Eve by Peter Quinn. Read the books, visit the
Civic Center to sense the Five Points.
(Written by John Walsh and originally printed in September 1994)
© Irish Cultural Society of the Garden City Area