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Changing of the Guard: The Rise of Ethnic Control and Values in
Boston's Relief1
Dorothy M. Brown
Georgetown University
TRAVERSO, SUSAN. Welfare Politics in Boston, 1910-1940.
Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2003. xiii + 163 pp. Introduction,
notes and index, $34.95 (cloth), ISBN 1-55849-378-6.
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In this well-researched policy study,
Susan Traverso analyzes the transformation of Boston's primarily
private, Protestant-run system of social provision to a primarily
public welfare system in which Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish
leaders found common ground in the "idealized male-headed, single-wage
family" (122). Attentive to gender issues, Traverso's core focus
Ñand her contributionÑis the exploration of the role of ethnicity
and religion in this transformation. While the political battles
over public welfare in Chicago and New York had more significant
national impact in the Progressive era, Boston's strong tradition
of Brahmin/Yankee Protestant dominance in politics and social
provision, the political rise of the Irish Catholics, and the
challenge of Catholics and Jews "to take care of their own" makes
a particularly compelling story. Traverso tells it well. |
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Suspicions and hostilities were
long-standing and especially deep in Boston. John McGreevy opens
his history of Catholicism and American Freedom (2003)
with the Eliot School Rebellion in Boston in 1859 when hundreds
of young Catholic school children, encouraged by a local Jesuit
priest and their parents, refused to recite the King James Bible
version of the ten commandments in the Eliot public school. One
student was beaten on the hands so severely with a rattan stick
that the incident gained national headlines. At the turn of the
century, Catholics still saw the Boston public schools as Protestant
enclaves but also viewed the leading private, non-sectarian charity
organizations, the Boston Provident Association and Associated
Charities, as dominated by Protestants with a dangerous proclivity
for proselytizing. Both organizations worked closely with the
public relief department, the Overseers of the Poor, who administered
a budget that represented less than half of one percent of the
city's operating budget. Only the most destitute were served and
provided, Traverso observes, with "only enough aid to prevent
starvation" (25). |
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The Boston Provident Association
and the Associated Charities embraced the then current scientific
charity approach and emphasized individual and family failings.
They monitored the moral and material progress of their clients,
whom they aided usually with in kind relief. By contrast, the
Catholic Charitable Bureau, founded in 1903, blamed economy and
environmental factors for the plight of their poor. Anxious to
protect their co-religionists, the bureau successfully secured
legislation to place Catholic children who were wards of the state
in Catholic homes. The Federated Jewish Charities, Traverso concludes,
had "a more positive approach to charity," than its Protestant
or Catholic counterparts, offering a higher level of support and
grounding its efforts "in a sense of justice, more than a sense
of piety" (22). |
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