Elizabeth Oakes-Smith wrote a very popular novel in the 1850's called The Newsboy, which I have not yet read, about slum conditions in New York City. It turns out that she was an advocate of the Young Men's Christian Association, attending their meetings and working with them to brainstorm ways to improve the lives of boys living in poverty in NYC. Oakes-Smith believed that their deplorable economic state forced these children into a life of crime. The Unitarian men who founded the YMCA awarded her with honorary membership on the board. Their early meetings were held in the upper part of a barn in the city. (I know, the idea of a barn in NYC is hard to imagine.) Think of the movie Gangs of New York with Leonardo DiCaprio.
This is a very interesting coincidence. This is even more of a reason to see if the new Patchogue Village YMCA wi

The Newsboy is considered a rare, out of print book. It is available through one publishing house that reprints rare books of historical value. You can buy it here.
--YMCA Headquarters in 1869
(Located at the Southwest corner Fourth Avenue and East 23rd Street New York, N.Y. 10011)
"The Young Men's Christian Association was organized in 1852 to help develop the social, spiritual, social and physical well-being of young men. A merchant philanthropist, William E. Dodge, Jr.; financier J. P. Morgan; and a young immigrant, Robert Ross McBurney, were among the founders. The YMCA headquarters, located on the corner of Fourth Avenue and East 23rd Street, was a four-story, French Second Empire-style building (with an inhabited mansard) designed by Renwick & Sands and opened in 1869. Included in the building were reception rooms, reading rooms, parlors and dressing rooms. There was a two-story, 1640-seat lecture room, as well as smaller lecture rooms, a 12,000 volume, triple-height library, gymnasium, bowling alleys, baths, a concert hall, artist studios, and a gallery. Louis Comfort Tiffany was an early tenant, renting his first studio in the building." -
The above picture of the YMCA NYC Headquarters, and information in quotes is copied from here.
To read more of my research on the life of Elizabeth Oakes-Smith and Seba Smith, click on the label that lists her name at the top of this post. If you know how I can go about getting some kind of plaque, and perhaps a tree planted on the site of the old Oakes-Smith estate, please send me a comment or email me. My email address is located through a link on the sidebar of this blog called "Contributors." Thanks for visiting and happy weekend.
1 comment:
Keep up the good research!
Post a Comment