What eight million women want eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about What eight million women want.

What eight million women want eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about What eight million women want.

Court adjourns at three in the morning, and this girl, with the others—­if others have been claimed by the probation officer—­goes out into the empty street, under the light of the tall tower, whose clock has begun all over again its monotonous race toward midnight.  No policeman accompanies the group.  The girls are under no manner of duress.  They have promised to go home with Miss Miner, and they go.  The night’s adventure, entered into with dread, with callous indifference, or with thoughtless mirth, ends in a quiet bedroom and a pillow wet with tears.

[Illustration:  IN THE NIGHT COURT, NEW YORK.]

Waverley House, as Miss Miner’s home is known, has sheltered, during the past year, over three hundred girls.  Out of that number one hundred and nineteen have returned to their homes, or are earning a living at useful work.

One hundred and nineteen saved out of five thousand prodigals!  In point of numbers this is a melancholy showing, but in comparison with other efforts at rescue work it is decidedly encouraging.

Nothing quite like Waverley House has appeared in other American cities, but it is a type of detention home for girls which is developing logically out of the probation system.  Delinquent girls under sixteen are now considered, in all enlightened communities, subjects for the Juvenile Court.  They are hardly ever associated with older delinquents.  But a girl over sixteen is likely to be committed to prison, and may be locked in cells with criminal and abandoned women of the lowest order.  Waverley House is the first practical protest against this stupid and evil-encouraging policy.

The house, which stands a few blocks distant from the Night Court, was established and is maintained by the Probation Association of New York, consisting of the probation officers in many of the city courts, and of men and women interested in philanthropy and social reform.  The District Attorney of New York County, Charles S. Whitman, is president of the Association, Maude E. Miner is its secretary, Mrs. Russell Sage, Miss Anne Morgan, Miss Mary Dreier, president of the New York Women’s Trade Union League, Mrs. Richard Aldrich, formerly president of the Women’s Municipal League, Andrew Carnegie, Edward T. Devine, head of New York’s organized charities, Homer Folks, and Fulton Cutting are among the supporters of Waverley House.  Miss Stella Miner is the capable and sympathetic superintendent of the house.

The place is in no sense a reformatory.  It is an experiment station, a laboratory where the gravest and most baffling of all the diseases which beset society is being studied.  Girls arrested for moral delinquency and paroled to probation officers are taken to Waverley House, where they remain, under closest study and searching inquiry, until the best means of disposing of them is devised.  Some are sent to their homes, some to hospitals, some to institutions, some placed on long probation.

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What eight million women want from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.