Committee of Fourteen records

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Collection Data

Description
Records of a citizens' association dedicated to the abolition of commercialized vice (especially prostitution) in New York City, 1905-1932.
Names
Committee of Fourteen (New York, N.Y.) (Creator)
Dates / Origin
Date Created: 1905 - 1932
Library locations
Manuscripts and Archives Division
Shelf locator: MssCol 609
Topics
Baldwin, William H. (William Henry), 1851-1923
Hooke, Walter G
Menken, Mortimer, Mrs
Pedersen, James
Peters, John P. (John Punnett), 1852-1921
Putnam, George Haven, 1844-1930
Simkhovitch, Mary K. (Mary Kingsbury), 1867-1951
Slade, Francis Louis
Straus, Percy Selden, 1876-1944
Veiller, Lawrence, 1872-1959
Whitin, Frederick H
Worthington, George E.
Committee of Fourteen (New York, N.Y.)
New York (N.Y.). Police Department
New York (N.Y.). Tenement House Department
New York (State). Dept. of Excise
Bars (Drinking establishments) -- New York (N.Y.)
Citizens associations associations -- New York (N.Y.)
Crime
Crime prevention
Criminal justice, Administration of
Criminal law
Hotels -- New York (N.Y.)
Law enforcement
Liquor laws
Prostitution -- New York (N.Y.)
Social problems
Taverns (Inns) -- New York (N.Y.)
Vice control -- New York (N.Y.)
New York (N.Y.) -- History -- 1898-1951
New York (N.Y.) -- Social conditions
New York (N.Y.) -- Social life and customs
Genres
Scrapbooks
Minutes (Records)
Records (Documents)
Documents
Correspondence
Notes
Biographical/historical: The Committee of Fourteen was founded in 1905 as a citizens' association dedicated to the abolition of "Raines Law hotels" which the final report of the Committee of Fifteen (1902) had pinpointed as responsible for the rapid spread of prostitution in New York City (see Committee of Fifteen Records finding aid). The Raines Law of 1896 gave hotels the right to sell liquor on Sundays while saloons could not. This led saloonkeepers to annex rooms and apply for hotel liquor licenses. The extra rooms were then used for prostitution. The Committee attacked the situation by attempting to have the law amended and by making on-site investigations of the "hotels". It presented evidence of violations to the New York State Department of Excise, to the brewers who supplied the saloons, to the surety companies who bonded the saloons, to the real estate owners, the New York City Tenement House Department, and the police. By 1911 most of the Raines Law hotels had closed up and the Committee's focus turned to the suppression of commercialized vice in New York City, with an emphasis on prostitution. Its investigators visited restaurants, dance halls, massage parlors, tenement houses, and other types of establishments where immoral conditions might prevail. The Committee worked closely with the police and the courts to see that all laws were enforced and that the criminal justice system operated in a manner that would discourage lawbreakers. It conducted research, collected statistics on prostitution, venereal disease, rehabilitation of female offenders, and related public health issues. By its last years, it had entered the area of crime prevention as well. The Committee was dissolved in 1932 when it could no longer raise sufficient funds to support its activities. Members of the Committee and its staff included William H. Baldwin, Walter G. Hooke, Mrs. Mortimer Menken, James Pedersen, John P. Peters, Mary K. Simkhovitch, George Haven Putnam, Francis Louis Slade, Percy S. Straus, Lawrence Veiller, Frederick H. Whitin, and George E. Worthington.
Content: The papers of the Committee contain correspondence, minutes, reports, memoranda, card files and reports on vice investigations, secretary's and treasurer's files, financial records, copies of legislation, legal decisions, and records of court cases involving prostitution and other forms of vice, printed material, scrapbooks, and clippings. It should be noted that there is considerable overlap among the various sections of the correspondence. The General Correspondence, 1905-1932 contains primarily the incoming and outgoing letters of the Committee's secretaries, Walter G. Hooke, Frederick H. Whitin, and George E. Worthington. The correspondents include other Committee members, representatives of social welfare organizations, the New York State Department of Excise, New York City Police and Tenement House Departments, brewing companies, members of the state legislature, and the general public. The letters are presently divided into alphabetical and chronological series containing the same type of material. It should be noted that the alphabetical section contains subjects such as "Brewers" and "Police" as well as corporate and personal names. The Protest List Correspondence, 1905-1922, contains letters regarding establishments licensed to sell liquor which were placed on the Committee's "protest list" for disorderly conditions or violations of the liquor tax and licensing laws. The Committee would protest the issuing of a liquor license or a reinsurance bond until the problem was resolved. Correspondents include members of the public, saloon and hotel owners, the Department of Excise, surety companies, brewers, and the police. Many of the letters are standard "probation agreements" from owners stating that they will conduct their establishments with propriety if the Committee will withdraw its protest. Also included are lists of establishments complying or not complying with the law. The Tenement House Correspondence, 1905; 1911-1932, relates to actions taken against infringements of the Tenement House Law, usually solicitation or prostitution on the premises. There is correspondence with property owners, the Real Estate Board of New York, the Tenement Department, and the police. Also included are lists of suspected places, names and addresses of tenement house owners, and complaints sent to the Committee by members of the public. The Military Training Camps Correspondence, 1917-1919, contains letters and reports of investigations of liquor sales and prostitution in the vicinity of military training camps In New York, New Jersey, and parts of Pennsylvania and New England. These were treated as part of the Committee's participation in the U.S. War Department's Commission on Training Camp Activities during World War I. The investigators' reports, 1905-1932, present extensive and detailed information collected by the Committee's undercover investigators who patrolled the streets and posed as customers in a variety of establishments, including saloons, speakeasies, restaurants, hotels, dance halls, massage parlors, theatres and burlesque houses, employment agencies, and department stores. The reports contain a wealth of commentary on the activities taking place, including types of dancing, language, sexual behavior, gambling, and drinking as well as descriptions of the clientele as to sex, race, ethnicity, and physical characteristics. The reports also contain interviews and descriptions of interactions with prostitutes, dance hall hostesses, pimps, cab drivers, hotel bellboys, and other "go-betweens". Information gleaned from the reports is also present on card files. The collection contains the Executive/General Secretary's topical files and drafts of minutes and annual reports, 1912-1932, the Committee's official minutes and reports, 1905-1932, bulletin books, 1912-1932, containing special memoranda, reports, and statistics, the Treasurer's correspondence, 1908-1932, and financial records, 1918-1931. Present also are the varied materials used by the Committee in its efforts to reform laws dealing with liquor sales and prostitution and to change the manner in which the criminal justice system handled offenders in these areas. The materials include copies of pertinent legislation, legal decisions, minutes of court cases, reports on the criminal justice system, and correspondence with officers of the court. Extensive card files document cases brought before the Women's Court, 1914-32, the disposition of the cases, and the sentences of the women. Finally, the records include printed material, circa 1910-1929, on prostitution, sex education, venereal disease, and public health, and two scrapbooks and loose clippings. 1905-1932, on vice and its reform in New York City.
Acquisition: Gift of James Stewart Cushman, George Edmond Worthington, William H. Baldwin (for the Committee), 1933
Physical Description
Extent: 103 boxes, 2 oversize folders 91.69 linear feet
Type of Resource
Text
Identifiers
NYPL catalog ID (B-number): b11652264
MSS Unit ID: 609
RLIN/OCLC: NYPW92-A267
Universal Unique Identifier (UUID): 82c0c9f0-0b5c-0136-ff8b-2d75a9f3c330
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