The Bowery Boys : street corner radicals and the politics of rebellion
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Bowery Boys : street corner radicals and the politics of rebellion
Praeger Publishers, 2005
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [153]-161) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In the decades before the Civil War, the miserable living conditions of New York City's lower east side nurtured the gangs of New York. This book tells the story of the Bowery Boys, one gang that emerged as part urban legend and part street fighters for the city's legions of young workers. Poverty and despair led to a gang culture that was easily politicized, especially under the leadership of Mike Walsh who led a distinct faction of the Bowery Boys that engaged in the violent, almost anarchic, politics of the city during the 1840s and 1850s. Amid the toppled ballot boxes and battles for supremacy on the streets, many New Yorkers feared Walsh's gang was at the frontline of a European-style revolution.
A radical and immensely popular voice in antebellum New York, Walsh spoke in the unvarnished language of class conflict. Admired by Walt Whitman and feared by Tammany Hall, Walsh was an original, wildly unstable character who directed his aptly named Spartan Band against the economic and political elite of New York City and New England. As a labor organizer, state legislator, and even U.S. Congressman, the leader of the Bowery Boys fought for shorter working hours, the right to strike, free land for settlers on the American frontier, against child labor, and to restore dignity to the city's growing number of industrial workers.
Table of Contents
The Bowery Boys: Shirtless and Unterrified The Bowery Boys: Radical in Everything On to Providence: B'hoys Workies, Loco Focos, and the Subterranean Masses Go West Young Proletary The Bowery Boy Goes to Washington Boss Rule and the Eclipse of the Bowery Boys Notes Bibliography Index
by "Nielsen BookData"