Pioneering Social Reformer Jacob Riis Revealed “How The Other Half Lives” in America

How innovations in photography helped this 19th century journalist improve life for many of his fellow immigrants

Jimmy Stamp

Jimmy Stamp

jacob riis photo essay

In 1870, when Jacob August Riis immigrated to America from Denmark on the steamship Iowa , he rode in steerage with nothing but the clothes on his back, 40 borrowed dollars in his pocket, and a locket containing a single hair from the girl he loved. It must have been hard for the 21-year-old Riis to imagine that in just a few short years, he would be pallin’ around with a future president, become a pioneer in photojournalism, and help reform housing policy in New York City.

Jacob Riis, who died 100 years ago this month, struggled through his first few years in the United States. Unable to find a steady job, he worked as a farmhand, ironworker, brick-layer, carpenter, and salesman, and experienced the worst aspects of American urbanism--crime, sickness, squalor--in the low-rent tenements and lodging houses that would eventually inspire the young Danish immigrant to dedicate himself to improving living conditions for the city’s lower-class.

Through a little bit of luck and a lot of hard work, he got a job as a journalist and a platform for exposing the plight of the lower class community. Eventually, Riis became a police reporter for The New York Tribune, covering some of the city's most crime-ridden districts, a job that would would lead to fame and a friendship with police commissioner Theodore Roosevelt, who called Riis "the best American I ever knew." Riis knew what it was to suffer, to starve, and to be homeless, and, though his prose was sometimes sensationalist and even occasionally prejudiced, he had what Roosevelt called "the great gift of making others see what he saw and feel what he felt."

But Riis wanted to literally show the the world what he saw. So, to help his readers truly understand the dehumanizing dangers of the immigrant neighborhoods he knew all too well, Riis taught himself photography and began taking a camera with him on his nightly rounds. The recent invention of flash photography made it possible to document the dark, over-crowded tenements, grim saloons and dangerous slums. Riis’s pioneering use of flash photography brought to light even the darkest parts of the city. Used in articles, books, and lectures, his striking compositions became powerful tools for social reform.

Riis’s 1890 treatise of social criticism How the Other Half Lives was written in the belief “that every man’s experience ought to be worth something to the community from which he drew it, no matter what that experience may be, so long as it was gleaned along the line of some decent, honest work.” Full of unapologetically harsh accounts of life in the worst slums of New York, fascinating and terrible statistics on tenement living, and reproductions of his revelatory photographs, How the Other Half Lives was a shock to many New Yorkers - and an immediate success. Not only did it sell well, but it inspired Roosevelt to close the worst of the lodging houses and spurred city officials to reform and enforce the city’s housing policies. To once again quote the future President of the United States: “The countless evils which lurk in the dark corners of our civic institutions, which stalk abroad in the slums, and have their permanent abode in the crowded tenement houses, have met in Mr. Riis the most formidable opponent every encountered by them in New York City.”

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Jimmy Stamp

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Jimmy Stamp is a writer/researcher and recovering architect who writes for Smithsonian.com as a contributing writer for design.

Jacob Riis: The Photographer Who Showed “How the Other Half Lives” in 1890s NYC

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

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In 1870, 21-year-old Jacob Riis immigrated from his home in Denmark to bustling New York City. With only $40, a gold locket housing the hair of the girl he had left behind, and dreams of working as a carpenter, he sought a better life in the United States of America. Unfortunately, when he arrived in the city, he immediately faced a myriad of obstacles.

Like the hundreds of thousands of other immigrants who fled to New York in pursuit of a better life, Riis was forced to take up residence in one of the city's notoriously cramped and disease-ridden tenements. Living in squalor and unable to find steady employment, Riis worked numerous jobs, ranging from a farmhand to an ironworker, before finally landing a role as a journalist-in-training at the  New York News Association .

As he excelled at his work, he soon made a name for himself at various other newspapers, including the New-York Tribune where he was hired as a police reporter. Faced with documenting the life he knew all too well, he used his writing as a means to expose the plight, poverty, and hardships of immigrants. Eventually, he longed to paint a more detailed picture of his firsthand experiences, which he felt he could not properly capture through prose. So, he made a life-changing decision: he would teach himself photography.

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Portrait of Jacob A. Riis

Riis soon began to photograph the slums, saloons, tenements, and streets that New York City's poor reluctantly called home. Often shot at night with the newly-available flash function—a photographic tool that enabled Riis to capture legible photos of dimly lit living conditions—the photographs presented a grim peek into life in poverty to an oblivious public.

In 1890, Riis compiled his photographs into a book,  How the Other Half Lives: Studies Among the Tenements of New York .  Featuring never-before-seen photos supplemented by blunt and unsettling descriptions, the treatise opened New Yorkers' eyes to the harsh realities of their city's slums. Since its publication, the book has been consistently credited as a key catalyst for social reform, with Riis' belief “that every man’s experience ought to be worth something to the community from which he drew it, no matter what that experience may be, so long as it was gleaned along the line of some decent, honest work” at its core.

Making Social Change

Late 19th Century New York - Jacob Riis

“Police Station Lodger, A Plank for a Bed”

Perhaps ahead of his time, Jacob Riis turned to public speaking as a way to get his message out when magazine editors weren't interested in his writing, only his photos. Thus, he set about arranging his own speaking engagements—mainly at churches—where he would show his slides and talk about the issues he'd seen. Though this didn't earn him a lot of money, it allowed him to meet change makers who could do something about these issues. Notably, it was through one of his lectures that he met the editor of the magazine that would eventually publish How the Other Half Lives .

Once  How the Other Half Lives gained recognition, Riis had many admirers, including Theodore Roosevelt. Though not yet president, Roosevelt was highly influential. In fact, when he was appointed to the presidency of the Board of Commissioners of the New York City Police Department, he turned to Riis for help in seeing how the police performed at night. While out together, they found that nine out of ten officers didn't turn up for duty. After Riis wrote about what they saw in the newspaper, the police force was notably on duty for the rest of Roosevelt's tenure.

Riis was also instrumental in exposing issues with public drinking water. In a series of articles, he published now-lost photographs he had taken of the watershed, writing , “I took my camera and went up in the watershed photographing my evidence wherever I found it. Populous towns sewered directly into our drinking water. I went to the doctors and asked how many days a vigorous cholera bacillus may live and multiply in running water. About seven, said they. My case was made.” His article caused New York City to purchase the land around the New Croton Reservoir and ensured more vigilance against a cholera outbreak.

His writings also caused investigations into unsafe tenement conditions. This resulted in the 1887 Small Park Act, a law that allowed the city to purchase small parks in crowded neighborhoods.

Jacob Riis' Legacy

Jacob Riis Social Reform

“Twelve-Year-Old Boy Pulling Threads in a Sweat Shop”

Riis' work became an important part of his legacy for photographers that followed. As a pioneer of investigative photojournalism , Riis would show others that through photography they can make a change. American photographer and sociologist Lewis Hine is a good example of someone who followed in Riis' footsteps.

In the early 20th century, Hine's photographs of children working in factories were instrumental in getting child labor laws passed. Riis' influence can also be felt in the work of Dorothea Lange , whose images taken for the Farm Security Administration gave a face to the Great Depression.

Jacob Riis' interest in the plight of marginalized citizens culminated in what can also be seen as a forerunner of street photography. Acclaimed New York street photographers like Camilo José Vergara , Vivian Cherry , and Richard Sandler all used their cameras to document the grittier side of urban life. In their own way, each photographer carries on Jacob Riis' legacy.

Photographer Jacob Riis pioneered social reform through his photographs of everyday life in New York City's slums.

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Hester Street

Riis often photographed the decrepit conditions of the tenements.

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Dens of Death, New York

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

An Old Rear Tenement in Roosevelt Street

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Bottle Alley, Mulberry Road

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Bottle Alley, Mulberry Bend

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Bunks in a Seven-Cent Lodging House, Pell Street

Additionally, his photographs include many upsetting shots of immigrants and poor people simply struggling to get by.

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Room in a Tenement

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Blind Beggar

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Five Cents Lodging, Bayard Street

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Bohemian Cigarmakers at Work in their Tenement

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Fighting Tuberculosis on the Roof

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

The Short Tail Gang Under a Pier

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Family Making Artificial Flowers

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

In Sleeping Quarters – Rivington Street Dump

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Home of an Italian Ragpicker

…Including impoverished children.

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Minding Baby, Cherry Hill

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Didn't Live Nowhere

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Drilling the Gang on Mulberry Street

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Children's Playground in Poverty Cap, New York

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

In the Sun Office, 3 AM

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Girl and a Baby on a Doorstep

Riis published his photographs in a book,  How the Other Half Lives: Studies Among the Tenements of New York .

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Pupils in the Essex Market Schools in a Poor Quarter of New York

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

The Baby's Playground

This treatise brought attention to the issue and helped pioneer social reform in New York City.

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Street Arabs in their Sleeping Quarters

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Girl from the West 52 Street Industrial School

Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis Photographs

Boys from the Italian Quarter

All images via Museum Syndicate . 

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Object lesson: photographs by jacob august riis.

jacob riis photo essay

Jacob August Riis, (American, born Denmark, 1849–1914), Untitled , c. 1898, print 1941, Gelatin silver print, Gift of Milton Esterow, 99.362

When the reporter and newspaper editor Jacob Riis purchased a camera in 1888, his chief concern was to obtain pictures that would reveal a world that much of New York City tried hard to ignore: the tenement houses, streets, and back alleys that were populated by the poor and largely immigrant communities flocking to the city. Riis knew that such a revelation could only be fully achieved through the synthesis of word and image, which makes the analysis of a picture like this one—which was not published in his How the Other Half Lives (1890)—an incomplete exercise. Nevertheless, Riis’s careful choice of subject and camera placement as well as his ability to connect directly with the people he photographed often resulted, as it does here, in an image that is richly suggestive, if not precisely narrative. The two young boys occupy the back of a cart that seems to have been recently relieved of its contents, perhaps hay or feed for workhorses in the city. Maybe the cart is their charge, and they were responsible for emptying it, or perhaps they climbed into the cart to momentarily escape the cold and wind. Dirt on their cheeks, boot soles worn down to the nails, and bundled in worker’s coats and caps, they appear aged well beyond their years—men in boys’ bodies. The broken plank in the cart bed reveals the cobblestone street below. The street and the children’s faces are equidistant from the camera lens and are equally defined in the photograph, creating a visual relationship between the street and those exhausted from living on it.

jacob riis photo essay

Jacob August Riis (American, born Denmark, 1849–1914), Bunks in a Seven-Cent Lodging House, Pell Street , c. 1888, Gelatin silver print, printed 1941, Image: 9 11/16 x 7 13/16 in. (24.6 x 19.8 cm); sheet: 9 7/8 x 8 1/16 in. (25.1 x 20.5 cm), Gift of Milton Esterow, 99.377

A photograph may say much about its subject but little about the labor required to create that final image. For Jacob Riis, the labor was intense—and sometimes even perilous. In the service of bringing visible, public form to the conditions of the poor, Riis sought out the most meager accommodations in dangerous neighborhoods and recorded them in harsh, contrasting light with early magnesium flashes. The technology for flash photography was then so crude that photographers occasionally scorched their hands or set their subjects on fire. Even if these problems were successfully avoided, the vast amounts of smoke produced by the pistol-fired magnesium cartridge often forced the photographer out of any enclosed area or, at the very least, obscured the subject so much that making a second negative was impossible. As a result, many of Riis’s existing prints, such as this one, are made from the sole surviving negatives made in each location.    

This picture was reproduced as a line drawing in Riis’s How the Other Half Lives (1890). The accompanying text describes the differences between the prices of various lodging house accommodations. The seven-cent bunk was the least expensive licensed sleeping arrangement, although Riis cites unlicensed spaces that were even cheaper (three cents to squat in a hallway, for example). The canvas bunks pictured here were installed in a Pell Street lodging house known as Happy Jack’s Canvas Palace. Without any figure to indicate the scale of these bunks, only the width of the floorboards provides a key to the length of the cloth strips that were suspended from wooden frames that bow even without anyone to support. By focusing solely on the bunks and excluding the opposite wall, Riis depicts this claustrophobic chamber as an almost exitless space. Only the faint trace of light at the very back of the room offers any promise of something beyond the bleak present.

— Russell Lord , Freeman Family Curator of Photographs

jacob riis photo essay

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Recovering the Complex Legacy of the Photographer Jacob Riis

By Verlyn Klinkenborg

  • Feb. 12, 2008

If you have seen any of Jacob Riis’s photographs, you have probably never forgotten them. Riis was the Danish-born police reporter who in the late 1880s brought magnesium-flash photography into some of the darkest and most troubled spots in New York City — the tenements near Mulberry Bend, where Columbus Park now stands. New immigrants were crushed together there in some of the worst squalor and highest population densities ever recorded on this planet.

By Riis’s time, social and political reform efforts had been going on for half a century, but to little effect. What made the difference was his photographs, which Riis used in popular lectures and in his best-selling book, “How the Other Half Lives,” published in 1890, five years before the Mulberry Bend tenements were finally torn down.

His photographs showed a hidden city, a morgue of the living. He allowed New Yorkers to witness, as if firsthand, the overcrowding he caught in the cellars and flophouses, the tenement rooms where sleeping bodies were stacked on top of each other, the dingy corners that had been turned into sweatshops.

His pictures are a harsh, unofficial census, a record of impossible conditions in immigrant New York. On each face he photographed, there is a look of personal extinction except, that is, on the faces of children, who somehow manage to look only hardened.

The starkness of Riis’s photographs never fades. The memory of how Riis actually used his photographs, especially in his lectures, has faded. We expect the harshness of the camera’s eye, its unblinking testimony. But according to two students of Riis’s work, Bonnie Yochelson and Daniel Czitrom, Riis’s lectures — which were a critical part of his reforming mission — owed as much to vaudeville as they did to journalism.

Along with his lantern slides, Riis told dialect jokes and ethnic humor. He told stories and scheduled pauses for sacred singing. Near the end of the talk, he showed slides of the burial trench at Potter’s Field and Jesus Christ.

Strange as his lectures would have seemed to us, this mixture of spirituality and rough humor may actually have increased the effectiveness of his images for audiences of the time. Riis made the invisible visible, but he also made the audience feel its responsibility to act, to take a part in the reform movement that would eventually sweep away the tenements.

What would it have been like to see the photograph called “I Scrubs” — Riis’s portrait of 9-year-old Katie, who kept house for her brothers and sisters — and know that she was living somewhere in the city, her life shrunken to little more than a sense of economic duty?

There is nothing that we in the 21st century can do for Katie except to wonder whether she was ever allowed to outgrow her premature elderliness. But to Riis’s audience, Katie was the living present, the very burden of their concern. What was she like? How did she sound? What could it mean to be 9 years old and so ancient already? These are questions it would have seemed natural to ask the photographer who had asked Katie to pose for him.

To us, of course, Riis’s showmanship would have seemed like intolerable distractions from the purity of the suffering his images convey. The last thing these photographs need, from the modern point of view, is an interlocutor, especially one who wants to tell moralizing anecdotes or characterize his subjects by race.

From the distance of 120 years, the mute testimony of Riis’s photographs seems eloquent enough. We stare at them and know that though times may have changed in Mulberry Bend, the camera does not have far to look to find suffering that is every bit as dire.

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Heartbreaking Jacob Riis Photographs From How The Other Half Lives And Beyond

These heartbreaking jacob riis photographs from how the other half lives and elsewhere changed america forever..

Jacob Riis Photographs Girl Holding Baby

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The Irish Land War, In 24 Heartbreaking Photographs

Of the many photos said to have " changed the world ," there are those that simply haven't (stunning though they may be), those that sort of have, and then those that truly have.

The photos that sort of changed the world likely did so in as much as they made us all feel something. The photos that truly changed the world in a practical, measurable way did so because they made enough of us do something.

And few photos truly changed the world like those of Jacob Riis.

The New York City to which the poor young Jacob Riis immigrated from Denmark in 1870 was a city booming beyond belief. In the three decades leading up to his arrival, the city's population , driven relentlessly upward by intense immigration, had more than tripled. Over the next three decades, it would nearly quadruple.

Unsurprisingly, the city couldn't seamlessly take in so many new residents all at once. Equally unsurprisingly, those that were left on the fringes to fight for whatever scraps of a living they could were the city's poor immigrants.

Confined to crowded, disease-ridden neighborhoods filled with ramshackle tenements that might house 12 adults in a room that was 13 feet across, New York's immigrant poor lived a life of struggle — but a struggle confined to the slums and thus hidden from the wider public eye.

Jacob Riis changed all that. Working as a police reporter for the New-York Tribune and unsatisfied with the extent to which he could capture the city's slums with words, Riis eventually found that photography was the tool he needed.

Starting in the 1880s, Riis ventured into the New York that few were paying attention to and documented its harsh realities for all to see. By 1890, he was able to publish his historic photo collection whose title perfectly captured just how revelatory his work would prove to be: How the Other Half Lives .

A startling look at a world hard to fathom for those not doomed to it, How the Other Half Lives featured photos of New York's immigrant poor and the tenements, sweatshops, streets, docks, dumps, and factories that they called home in stark detail.

And as arresting as these images were, their true legacy doesn't lie in their aesthetic power or their documentary value, but instead in their ability to actually effect change.

"I have read your book, and I have come to help," then-New York Police Commissioners board member Theodore Roosevelt famously told Riis in 1894. And Roosevelt was true to his word.

Though not the only official to take up the cause that Jacob Riis had brought to light, Roosevelt was especially active in addressing the treatment of the poor. As a city official and later as state governor and vice president of the nation, Roosevelt had some of New York's worst tenements torn down and created a commission to ensure that ones that unlivable would not be built again.

With this new government department in place as well as Jacob Riis and his band of citizen reformers pitching in, new construction went up, streets were cleaned, windows were carved into existing buildings, parks and playgrounds were created, substandard homeless shelters were shuttered, and on and on and on.

While New York's tenement problem certainly didn't end there and while we can't attribute all of the reforms above to Jacob Riis and How the Other Half Lives , few works of photography have had such a clear-cut impact on the world. It's little surprise that Roosevelt once said that he was tempted to call Riis "the best American I ever knew."

For more Jacob Riis photographs from the era of How the Other Half Lives , see this visual survey of the Five Points gangs . Then, see what life was like inside the slums inhabited by New York's immigrants around the turn of the 20th century .

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Revealing new york's other half, october 14, 2015 - march 20, 2016.

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Jacob Riis (1849-1914) was a pioneering newspaper reporter and social reformer in New York at the turn of the 20th century. His then-novel idea of using photographs of the city’s slums to illustrate the plight of impoverished residents established Riis as forerunner of modern photojournalism. Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York’s Other Half features photographs by Riis and his contemporaries, as well as his handwritten journals and personal correspondence.

This is the first major retrospective of Riis’s photographic work in the U.S. since the City Museum’s seminal 1947 exhibition, The Battle with the Slum , and for the first time unites his photographs and his archive, which belongs to the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library.

The exhibition is curated by Bonnie Yochelson, former Curator of Prints and Photographs at the City Museum, and is co-presented by the Library of Congress. It will travel to Washington, D.C., and to Denmark following its presentation at the City Museum.

Yale University Press, the City Museum, and the Library of Congress also co-published a book on the occasion of the exhibition.

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Jacob Riis

What were Jacob Riis’s accomplishments?

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Jacob Riis

Why was Jacob Riis important?

Jacob Riis was an American newspaper reporter, social reformer, and photographer. With his book  How the Other Half Lives  (1890), he shocked the conscience of his readers with factual descriptions of  slum  conditions in  New York City .

How did Jacob Riis influence others?

His book, How the Other Half Lives (1890), stimulated the first significant New York legislation to curb poor conditions in tenement housing. It was also an important predecessor to muckraking journalism , which took shape in the United States after 1900.

In addition to his writing, Riis’s photographs helped illuminate the ragged underside of city life. By the late 1880s, Riis had begun photographing the interiors and exteriors of New York slums with a  flash lamp . Those photos are early examples of flashbulb  photography . Riis used the images to dramatize his lectures and books.

Jacob Riis (born May 3, 1849, Ribe , Denmark—died May 26, 1914, Barre, Massachusetts , U.S.) was an American newspaper reporter, social reformer, and photographer who, with his book How the Other Half Lives (1890), shocked the conscience of his readers with factual descriptions of slum conditions in New York City .

Riis, whose father was a schoolteacher, was one of 15 children. He learned carpentry in Denmark before immigrating to the United States at the age of 21. He subsequently held various jobs, gaining a firsthand acquaintance with the ragged underside of city life. In 1873 he became a police reporter, assigned to New York City’s Lower East Side, where he found that in some tenements the infant death rate was one in 10.

jacob riis photo essay

By the late 1880s Riis had begun photographing the interiors and exteriors of New York slums with a flash lamp . Those photos are early examples of flashbulb photography . Riis used the images to dramatize his lectures and books, and the engravings of those photographs that were used in How the Other Half Lives helped to make the book popular. But it was Riis’s revelations and writing style that ensured a wide readership: his story, he wrote in the book’s introduction, “is dark enough, drawn from the plain public records, to send a chill to any heart.” Theodore Roosevelt , who would become U.S. president in 1901, responded personally to Riis: “I have read your book, and I have come to help.” The book’s success made Riis famous, and How the Other Half Lives stimulated the first significant New York legislation to curb tenement house evils. It also became an important predecessor to the muckraking journalism that took shape in the United States after 1900.

Among Riis’s other books were The Children of the Poor (1892), Out of Mulberry Street (1896), The Battle with the Slum (1901), and his autobiography, The Making of an American (1901).

jacob riis photo essay

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Photos Reveal Shocking Conditions of Tenement Slums in Late 1800s

By: Madison Horne

Updated: August 24, 2023 | Original: October 26, 2018

Jacob Riis Tenement Photographs

New immigrants to  New York City in the late 1800s faced grim, cramped living conditions in  tenement housing that once dominated the Lower East Side. During the 19th century, immigration steadily increased, causing New York City's population to double every decade from 1800 to 1880. To accommodate the city's rapid growth, every inch of the city's poor areas was used to provide quick and cheap housing options.

Houses that were once for single families were divided to pack in as many people as possible. Walls were erected to create extra rooms, floors were added, and housing spread into backyard areas. To keep up with the population increase, construction was done hastily and corners were cut. Tenement buildings were constructed with cheap materials, had little or no indoor plumbing and lacked proper ventilation. These cramped and often unsafe quarters left many vulnerable to rapidly spreading illnesses and disasters like fires.

By 1900, more than 80,000 tenements had been built and housed 2.3 million people, two-thirds of the total city population.

Jacob Riis , who immigrated to the United States in 1870, worked as a police reporter who focused largely on uncovering the conditions of these tenement slums. However, his leadership and legacy in social reform truly began when he started to use photography to reveal the dire conditions in the most densely populated city in America . His work appeared in books, newspapers and magazines and shed light on the atrocities of the city, leaving little to be ignored.

In 1890, Riis compiled his work into his own book titled, How the Other Half Lives. As he wrote , "every man’s experience ought to be worth something to the community from which he drew it, no matter what that experience may be.” The eye-opening images in the book caught the attention of then-Police Commissioner, Theodore Roosevelt . Riis' work would inspire Roosevelt and others to work to improve living conditions of poor immigrant neighborhoods.

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Jacob Riis Photo

Danish-American Photographer

Jacob Riis

Summary of Jacob Riis

Riis was one of America's first photojournalists. As a newspaper reporter, photographer, and social reformer, he rattled the conscience of Americans with his descriptions - pictorial and written - of New York's slum conditions. As an early pioneer of flashlamp photography, he was able to capture the squalid lives of immigrant families living on the very edges of society. His lectures and, subsequent books, including the famous How the Other Half Lives (1890), was so influential that they brought about new legislation to improve tenement housing conditions and general standards of sanitation across America. Riis's work is hailed now as the precursor to so-called "muckraking journalism" that became a fixture in American newspaper publications after 1900. His most glowing endorsement came from (the future US President) Theodore Roosevelt who referred to him as "the best American I ever knew [sic]" with "the great gift of making others see what he saw and feel what he felt".

Accomplishments

  • With books such as, How the Other Half Lives (1890) and The Children of the Slums (1892), Riis created great public interest, and garnered widespread acclaim, that fueled several urban social reform programs. As a result, history sees him as both a forerunner for American Documentary Photography and Social Documentary Photography. When coupled with his statewide tours, where his lectures were accompanied by lanternslide displays of his photographs, Riis created a visual and written record that created a popular audience for the art form that was to become known as Photojournalism .
  • After reading about the invention of magnesium flash powder, Riis was amongst the first to recognize the possibility of night photography. He began visiting the slums at night, where, accompanied by two assistants and a policeman, he sometimes startled the residents with the abrupt flash of his camera. Some have criticized Riis's methods as intrusive but his drive to capture the most honest, "unsuspecting", moments with his camera was driven by a mission to bring about reform in tenement housing and thus, for him, justifying his methods.
  • Although Riis was a pioneer of (the ostensibly neutral) Documentary Photography , he allowed for an element of symbolism to enter his work through the motif of the seemingly mundane object of the clothesline. Initially viewed by him as a nuisance (that distracted from the picture he was trying to capture) he came to recognize it as symbolic of people who were struggling to live honest lives. Riis wrote: "The true line to be drawn between pauperism and honest poverty is the clothes−line. With it begins the effort to be clean that is the first and the best evidence of a desire to be honest".
  • As Riis matured as a photographer, he learned to build a rapport with his subjects. This led to a series of portrait photographs, usually of slum children forced into manual labor. His images, of which he wrote, "the young are naturally neither vicious nor hardened, simply weak and undeveloped, except by the bad influences of the street, makes this duty all the more urgent as well as hopeful", were included in the book, The Children of the Poor (1892). The book proved so influential it moved the church and, even individual families, to take abandoned children into their direct care.
  • In his latter images, Riis turned his attentions away from the human figure onto rows of tenement housing. For Riis, these houses, many constructed by unscrupulous builders, contributed to the early death of their occupants. Through his 1892 book, The Battle with the Slum , Riis highlighted the issue of poor sewage and water sanitation, that contributed to diseases such as typhoid. His maxim was: "It is squalid houses that makes squalid people".

The Life of Jacob Riis

jacob riis photo essay

Acknowledging the power of the photograph to swing public opinion, Riis wrote: "My writings did not make much of an impression - these things rarely do, put into mere words - but my negatives, still dripping from the dark-room, came to reinforce them".

Important Art by Jacob Riis

Bandits' Roost, 59 1/2 Mulberry Street (1888)

Bandits' Roost, 59 1/2 Mulberry Street

Eighteen of Riis's photographs first appeared in a photo essay called "How the Other Half Lives" in Scribner Magazine 's 1889 Christmas edition, one of which was Bandits' Roost . The iconic image shows a gang of Italian toughs, all sporting bowler caps, in a notoriously dangerous alley called The Bend, a neighborhood between Mulberry, Baxter, Bayard, and Park Streets in New York City. Riis said of The Bend, "Abuse is the normal condition...murder its everyday crop". Two men on the right seem to guard the entrance, as the shillala (club) that one man holds heightens the sense of menace. Behind them, another man casually perches on a staircase railing (perhaps he is in command of the gang) while three other figures cluster on the staircase on the other side, all of them turned toward Riis's camera. Meanwhile, a woman and a child lean out of windows in the building on the right, while in background, clothing hangs on lines strung along the alley. A sense of crowded poverty and desperate circumstances becomes the backdrop for Riis's emphasis on the criminal element (as echoed in his title). The lines of the buildings seem to almost converge in the background, a dead end that dissolves in light. The image displayed what living conditions were like in city tenement slums. In Riis's mind, however, photographs were secondary to his written texts and his spoken lectures on the topic of social welfare. Nevertheless, this image exemplified the way in which sites like Mulberry Bend were effectively training grounds for criminal behavior. He wrote: "Like the Chinese, the Italian is a born gambler. His soul is in the game from the moment the cards are on the table, and very frequently his knife is in it too before the game is ended. No Sunday has passed in New York since 'the Bend' became a suburb of Naples without one or more of these murderous affrays coming to the notice of the police". Through his images and words, Riis helped prompt the city to demolish Mulberry Bend and replace it with a park. (This iconic image was recreated almost identically in a scene from Martin Scorsese's film, Gangs of New York (2002), in which gang leader Amsterdam sells a corpse to medical students.)

Gelatin silver print - Museum of the City of New York

Lodgers in Bayard Street Tenement, 5 Cents a Spot (1888-89)

Lodgers in Bayard Street Tenement, 5 Cents a Spot

This photograph shows a tiny, overcrowded, dilapidated, dirty tenement lodging room packed with people and their belongings. Like many of his early photographs, it was taken when Riis accompanied the police on their nightly rounds and raids, where Riis was serving, in his own words, as "a kind of war correspondent". Using flash-bulb photography, Riis woke the drowsy residents suddenly with the bright light and gunshot-like boom of the flash powder. The sanitary police then moved in and raided the illegal lodging house (as city laws of the time required that the minimum cost for a bed, or "spot" be seven cents, but this abode was charging just five cents for floor spots). As Riis put it, "In a room not thirteen feet either way slept twelve men and women, two or three in bunks set in a sort of alcove, the rest on the floor. A kerosene lamp burned dimly in the fearful atmosphere, probably to guide other and later arrivals to their beds, for it was only just past midnight. A baby's fretful wail came from an adjoining hall-room, where, in the semi-darkness, three recumbent figures could be made out. The apartment was one of three in two adjoining buildings we had found, within half an hour, similarly crowded". Contemporary criticism has tended to denounce Riis's methods for "victimizing" his subjects, entering lodgings without permission, and startling them with his flash photography. However, his primary intent was to capture honest, candid moments and to advocate for reform in tenement housing. For Riis, the ends justified the means. As he stated, "the half that was on top cared little for the struggles, and less for the fate of those who were underneath". Startling images like this spurred city officials - including then-police commissioner Theodore Roosevelt - to pass laws that made squalid tenement housing safer and more sanitary.

Baxter St. Court (1889)

Baxter St. Court

This photograph shows a small courtyard in a densely populated tenement housing project. Buckets, and a small wooden wagon cart lay on the ground, and two women and seven children sat at the edges of the courtyard looking at Riis's camera. The dingy, cramped scene underscores one of Riis' main messages: places like this are unsuitable for children to grow up in, without even a patch of grass to play upon. He once wrote: "that dismal alley with its bare brick walls, between which no sun ever rose or set, was the world of those children. It filled their young lives. Probably not one of them had been out of sight of it". He added that "Has a yard of turf been laid and a vine been coaxed to grow within their reach, they are banished and barred out from it as from a heaven that is not for such as they. I came upon a couple of youngsters in a Mulberry Street yard a while ago that were chalking on the fence their first lesson in 'writin'. And this is what they wrote: 'Keeb of te Grass.' They had it by heart, for there was not, I verily believe, a green sod within a quarter of a mile". His efforts culminated in the city creating more parks near slums. The clothesline in this and other images by Riis are of great symbolic importance. As he himself had lived in immigrant slums, tenement housing, and even the streets, upon his arrival in New York, Riis was intimate with the nuances of the living conditions for the poor and needy. When he later found himself in a better financial position and set out on his mission to document tenement housing and slums in New York through photography, he recalled an early encounter when he was attempting to photograph a tenement house and was initially annoyed at the way the clotheslines obstructed the view in the image. Soon, however, he recognized them as "evidence that someone was trying to keep clean" and wrote that "The true line to be drawn between pauperism and honest poverty is the clothes−line. With it begins the effort to be clean that is the first and the best evidence of a desire to be honest".

Gelatin silver print - International Center of Photography

The Potter's Field - The Common Trench (1889)

The Potter's Field - The Common Trench

This image shows six workers in the process of burying dead tenement residents and homeless individuals in a trench in Potter's Field, a mass grave for the poor and the immigrants who had been forgotten by society. As he wrote, "even there they do not escape their fate. In the common trench of the Poor Burying Ground they lie packed three stories deep, shoulder to shoulder, crowded in death as they were in life, to 'save space;' for even on that desert island the ground is not for the exclusive possession of those who cannot afford to pay for it". In his writing and lectures, Riis not only appealed directly to his audience's sense of human dignity, but also introduced facts, figures, and images that were undeniably deplorable, such as the fact that the infant mortality rate in tenements was one in ten, and the fact that a full one-tenth of New York City's population would be buried (and forgotten) in the mass unmarked graves of Potter's Field. In 2018, anthropologists began unearthing the remains at Potter's Field. Manhattan council member Mark Levine stated that "Every one of those bones belongs to a human being, to a New Yorker. People who in many cases were marginalized and forgotten in life. They've been again marginalized and forgotten in their final resting place, and this disinterment is the ultimate indignity". Generations later, many still hope to find the remains of their lost grandparents and great-grandparents at the site. One of those descendants was Carol DiMedio who set out to trace the final resting place of her Italian immigrant grandfather. She learned from her mother, Annette Gallo, that when she was a ten-year-old girl, she received a letter from her brother (Carol's uncle) who, like her, had been placed in an orphanage (their mother having died giving birth) in which he wrote only "Last Wednesday morning something bad happened to papa". Carol and her mother made it their life-long quest to learn of their grandfather's fate. Yet, upon learning that he had been buried in "The Common Trench", Carol couldn't bear to bring her mother the awful truth: "I lied to her when I told her I found out where he was buried. I told her he is buried in the most beautiful place with trees and green grass surrounded by blue water with seagulls flying above. She cried when I told her. She needed that peace".

Chinatown Opium Joint (1890)

Chinatown Opium Joint

For this photograph, Riis entered a Chinatown opium den and captured two Asian individuals, one standing, only half visible, looking at the camera on the right-hand side, and the other laying down on a bed, looking off to the right, presumably in an opium-induced stupor. Images like this contributed to his philanthropic project but, coupled with his writings, it also points to racial prejudices and stereotypes that by modern standards appear very much outdated. Riis's most influential book, How the Other Half Lives , was in fact separated into chapters that focused on specified ethnic groups such as "The Italian in New York", "Chinatown", "Jewtown", and "The Bohemians". As curator Bonnie Yochelson notes, "That was a pre-established literary genre, which he was borrowing. It had a lot of entertainment value. 'Come see the colorful Italians and the mystifying Chinese'". For Riis, "the Jew" had a "low intellectual status" when compared to "the Italian" who "makes less trouble", the "contentious Irishman" or, the "order−loving German". Of the Chinese (for him a catch-all term at the time for anyone of "Oriental" or East Asian appearance) he wrote that "I state it in advance as my opinion, based on the steady observation of years, that all attempts to make an effective Christian of John Chinaman will remain abortive in this generation; of the next I have, if anything, less hope. Ages of senseless idolatry, a mere grub−worship, have left him without the essential qualities for appreciating the gentle teachings of a faith whose motive and unselfish spirit are alike beyond his grasp". The historian Daniel Czitrom stated that "One of the things that makes Riis so fascinating are these contradictions in his work. I see Riis more as a transitional figure. He's somebody that did bring with him those stereotypes and sort of racialized thinking of the day, but he's also somebody that began insisting on the importance of environment. Or, as he put it at one point, it's the squalid houses that make for squalid people". Czitrom concluded that, "I've always been struck by the tension between the empathy and sympathy that's powerfully depicted in many of those images, and the kind of stereotypes, racial language, that he uses in the text. There's a tension between the text and the photographs. Today, no one really reads Riis anymore, and yet the photographs remain incredibly moving".

Silver gelatin print - Museum of the City of New York

"I Scrubs" - Little Katie from the West 52nd Street Industrial School (1891-92)

"I Scrubs" - Little Katie from the West 52nd Street Industrial School

After publishing How the Other Half Lives , Riis changed his approach, spending more time building a rapport with his subjects and learning of their life stories. He began taking portrait photographs, often of children who lived and worked in New York's slums. Pictured here is eight-year-old Katie, who took on the motherly duties of caring for her four siblings who worked in a hammock factory (their mother had passed away and their father had taken off with another woman). Katie also attended one of the twenty-one industrial schools established by the Children's Aid Society between 1854 and 1874. The Society was established in order to offer academic and technical training, medical care, and recreational programming to children who, due to their level of poverty, could not attend regular state schools. The image and an accompanying text were included in Riis 1892 book The Children of the Poor . Riis wrote about his encounter with Katie, "This picture shows what a sober, patient, sturdy little thing she was, with that dull life wearing on her day by day [...] She got right up when asked and stood for her picture without a question and without a smile. 'What kind of work do you do?' I asked, thinking to interest her while I made ready. 'I scrubs,' she replied, promptly, and her look guaranteed that what she scrubbed came out clean". The Children of the Poor was produced by Riis with the aim of highlighting the plight of poor and immigrant children, and recommendations on how their situation could be ameliorated. With the support of the Health Department, Riis filled the book with statistical information on public health, child labor, infant mortality rates, access to education, and crime. At the same time, the photographs and stories were more finely detailed and the book moved many to action, including churches and families who fostered children that had been abandoned at foundling hospitals. Wrote Riis: "Nothing is now better understood than that the rescue of the children is the key to the problem of city poverty, as presented for our solution today; that character may be formed where to reform it would be a hopeless task. The concurrent testimony of all who have to undertake it at a later stage: that the young are naturally neither vicious nor hardened, simply weak and undeveloped, except by the bad influences of the street, makes this duty all the more urgent as well as hopeful".

Dens of Death (c. 1880-92)

Dens of Death

There is no human presence in this image. The housing looks utterly unfit for human inhabitance (or even to pass through). We see a series of shanty homes running along Baxter Street, all of which look like they could collapse in on themselves at any moment. This photograph appeared in Riis's 1892 book The Battle with the Slum , which he proposed as a sequel to How the Other Half Lives (1890). The former expanded upon the same topics as the latter but with most of Riis's photographs focused solely on the dilapidated buildings themselves. Riis wrote of these inadequate excuses for housing: "They had been built only a little while when complaint came to the Board of Health of smells in the houses. A sanitary inspector was sent to find the cause. He followed the smell down in the cellar and, digging there, discovered that the waste pipe was a blind. It had simply been run three feet into the ground and was not connected with the sewer. The houses were built to sell. That they killed the tenants was no concern of builder's. His name, by the way, was Buddensiek. A dozen years after, when it happened that a row of tenements he was building fell down ahead of time, before they were finished and sold, and killed the workmen, he was arrested and sent to Sing Sing [prison] for ten years, for manslaughter". Riis also drew attention the wave of typhoid that was caused by contaminated water and which swept through these residences at an alarming rate. It was no doubt a subject close to Riis's heart since he had lost several siblings to poor sanitation in his own childhood in Ribe, Denmark.

materials - Museum of the City of New York

Biography of Jacob Riis

Childhood and education.

Born in the small and poor town of Ribe on Denmark's south-west Jutland, Jacob A. Riis was the third of fourteen children born to schoolmaster and journalist Niels Edward Riis and homemaker Carolina Riis (née Bendsine Lundholm). Several of Jacob's siblings died in early childhood from disease due to unclean drinking water and tuberculosis (in fact Jacob was one of only four Riis siblings to pass the age of twenty), yet despite these tragedies, Jacob recalled a happy childhood. Niels Riis encouraged his son to learn English by reading Charles Dickens and James Fenimore Cooper. Niels had hoped that Jacob might become a writer, but the boy aspired to be a carpenter and on leaving school took up an apprentice with a local carpentry company.

Still aged just sixteen, Riis fell in love with Elisabeth Gjørtz, the twelve-year-old daughter of the owner of the carpentry company. Elizabeth's father showed his disapproval by sending Riis to Copenhagen where he completed his apprenticeship. In 1868, Riis returned to Ribe but found a shortage of work and thus decided (like roughly one third of Denmark's population in the mid-nineteenth century) to emigrate to the United States. Upon his arrival in New York, on June 5, 1870, the twenty-one-year-old Riis's worldly possessions amounted to $40 (gifted by friends), letters of introduction to the Danish Consul, and a locket containing a strand of Gjørtz's hair (which had been given to him by the girl's mother).

On his first day in New York, an anxious Riis spent half of his money on a revolver for the purposes of self-defense. By day five, he was penniless and took on work as a carpenter at Brady's Bend Iron Works on the Allegheny River. He was employed there for only a few days before switching to work as a miner (as it paid more). However, Riis found the conditions in the mine so miserable he soon returned to Brady's.

On July 19, 1870, Riis learned that France had declared war on Germany and decided he wanted to return to Europe and join the French army. However, the French Consulate informed him that they had no plans to send a volunteer army from the US. Despondent. A downhearted Riis pawned his revolver and walked until he collapsed from exhaustion at Fordham College, where a Catholic priest took him in and gave him a bed and a meal. He then carried on his trek to Mount Vernon where he worked odd jobs on farms. He read in the New York Sun that soldiers were in fact being recruited for the war, and returned to New York City to enlist, but his application was refused.

Riis spent several months living destitute, scavenging food, and sleeping out-of-doors or in the rancid-smelling police lodging-house where his cherished locket was stolen from him while he slept. His only companion for a time was a stray dog. For a six-week period he worked at a brickyard in New Jersey, before returning to New York to try, again unsuccessfully, to enlist. Completely disillusioned with New York, he made his way to Philadelphia by working odd jobs to purchase passage on ferries, and sometimes even stowing away on freight trains.

Once he arrived in Philadelphia, Riis reached out to the Danish consul Ferdinand Myhlertz and his wife, who took Riis in and cared for him for two weeks. Riis then found work as a carpenter (among other jobs) in Scandinavian communities in Southern Pennsylvania. Having achieved a modest level of financial stability, he found enough time to try his hand at writing. He tried, unsuccessfully, to get a job at a newspaper in Buffalo, and was also rejected by several magazines. In the following months, he moved between New York, Chicago, and Pittsburgh, often being exploited and cheated by employers and associates. While bedridden with a fever in Pittsburgh, he received the heartbreaking news from home that his beloved Elisabeth was engaged to a cavalry officer.

Early Career

Back in New York once more, Riis successfully applied for the post of city editor for a Long Island newspaper. However, he soon discovered that the editor-in-chief was a dishonest and difficult man and left the position after only two weeks. His luck changed, however, when he gained employment as a trainee at the New York News Association. He wrote passionately about the immigrant communities he had lived amongst, and did his job so well, Riis was soon promoted to the role of editor of a political periodical.

That publication went bankrupt around the same time that Riis received word from home that his older brothers, his aunt, and Elisabeth Gjørtz's fiancé, had all died. He wrote to Elisabeth asking for her hand in marriage, and then, using his $75 of savings and promissory notes, purchased the defunct newspaper. He quickly found success - using the publication to defame his former employers, most of whom now held political positions - and was able to pay off his debts.

Riis received a response from Elisabeth who asked him to come to Denmark so they could discuss his proposal; "We will strive together for all that is noble and good", she wrote. Around the same time, the politicians whose reputations had suffered through Riis's pen, purchased his company at five times the price he had paid for it. He arrived in Denmark, finally in a position of financial security, and married his beloved Elisabeth. The couple moved back to New York a few months after the wedding, and Riis began working as editor of The Brooklyn News .

Riis first used the "magic lantern" projector (that projected images onto sheets or screens) to advertise his newspaper. Riis took his "magic lantern" advertisements around the states of New York and Pennsylvania but returned to New York City following an altercation with a group of policemen, and a group of railroad workers on strike. Riis's neighbor, who was city editor of the New York Tribune , then recommended him for a position there. In 1873 he took up the position of police reporter, stationed in a press office across from the police headquarters on Mulberry Street - a criminal slum area known locally as "Death's Thoroughfare".

Mature Period

Riis followed the lead of German émigré Felix Alder who established the Society for Ethical Culture in New York in 1876. The Ethical Movement sought to assert a moral factor in modern life without the need for guidance from a supreme being (i.e. God). Alder was active in social reform movements that oversaw the building of tenement housing and the abolition of child labor.

Inspired by the progressive social reform movements that had initially emerged in the mid-1800s (including Felix Adler's Society for Ethical Culture), Riis strengthened his resolve to use his position to not only report on crime and its links to poverty, but also to try to affect social change. He decided the best way to achieve this was through a combination of the written word and images. Having no talent for drawing, he taught himself the new art of photography. At the time, photographic processes made it difficult to capture images under poor lighting conditions. But in 1887, Riis learned about a new method of "flash" photography, developed in Germany by Adolf Miethe and Johannes Gaedicke. They had used a mixture of magnesium, potassium chlorate, and antimony sulfide, to create a flash of light at the moment of exposure.

Riis soon introduced this method to fellow photographers Dr. John Nagle (who was also chief of the Bureau of Vital Statistics in the City Health Department), Henry Piffard, and Richard Hoe Lawrence. The four men essentially pioneered the use of flash photography in the US by documenting the "dark" conditions in New York's slums. They first published their findings anonymously in the New York Sun on February 12, 1888 in an article accompanied by twelve sketches based on the men's photographs.

Riis and his friends gradually modified the flash system, but it was an exhausting process, and Riis soon found himself working alone. In January 1888 he purchased a 4x5 box camera, plate holders, a tripod, and other equipment for developing and printing his images. He spent the next three years photographing New York's tenements and slums at night, capturing the hardships faced by criminals, immigrants, and the poor and destitute. He began to amass an archive of his own works, along with photographs by other "muckraking" photographers (that is, photographers who sought to expose unjust conditions with the goal of bringing about social reform).

Riis submitted his photographs, accompanied by essays, to various magazines, but was met with constant rejection. When Harper's New Monthly Magazine said they liked his photos but not his writing, Riis decided instead to get his message across through public speaking and projecting images through his "magic lantern". Churches appeared to be the ideal venue, but many declined to host him for fear of offending their congregations' sensibilities. Eventually, Riis received sponsorship from Adolph Schauffler of the City Mission Society, Health Department clerk W. L. Craig, and clergyman and writer Josiah Strong, to speak at the Broadway Tabernacle Church. The lectures - illustrated by Riis's images - were a great success and encouraged others to take up his cause. These included the social reformer, Charles Henry Parkhurst, editor at Scribner's Magazine . Scribner's published an eighteen-page article, featuring nineteen illustrations based on Riis's photographs, in its 1889 Christmas edition.

In his writings and lectures, Riis not only outlined in detail the history of the troubling social situation - the development of the tenement housing system in order to "house" the massive influx of foreign immigrants at the time, the negative effects this approach had, and the efforts of the Sanitation Department to investigate and address these issues - but also presented hard facts and figures. Riis also penned distressing stories of individuals and families who struggled to survive within this system, such as the "case of a hard−working family of man and wife, young people from the old country, who took poison together in a Crosby Street tenement because they were tired".

Late Period

jacob riis photo essay

In 1890, Riis published his most popular and influential book, How the Other Half Lives , which expanded upon the article published in Scribner's Magazine , and which opened by informing the reader that the story presented therein "is dark enough, drawn from the plain public records, to send a chill to any heart". The book included the illustrations he had used in the article, as well as seventeen photographic reproductions using the halftone reprographic method, making it one of the first books ever to do so. The book was generally well-received and complimented similarly themed works including the Salvation Army treatise, In Darkest England, and the Way Out (1890) by William Booth, and Ward McAllister's book of New York memoirs, Society as I Have Found It (1890).

He also became actively involved at this time in an organization that would become known in the future as the Riis Settlement House. As Denmark's Riis Museum describes: "Strongly influenced by the work of the settlement house pioneers in New York, Riis collaborated with the King's Daughters, an organization of Episcopalian church women, to establish the King's Daughters Settlement House in 1890. Originally housed on 48 Henry Street in the Lower East Side, the settlement house offered sewing classes, mothers clubs, health care, summer camp and a penny provident bank".

Meanwhile, How the Other Half Lives helped to prompt changes in New York legislation that led to improved conditions for immigrants and the poor. As curator and art historian Lisa Hostetler notes, not only was Riis "a pioneer in the use of photography as an agent of social reform, he was also among the first to use flash powder to photograph interior views [...] At a time when the poor were usually portrayed in sentimental genre scenes, Riis often shocked his audience by revealing the horrifying details of real life in poverty-stricken environments. His sympathetic portrayal of his subjects emphasized their humanity and bravery amid deplorable conditions and encouraged a more sensitive attitude towards the poor in this country".

How the Other Half Lives also served as a model for the next generation of muckraking journalists in the early 1900s. Writer and Police Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt, who would become US President a decade later, read Riis's book and wrote to him saying: "I have come to help". The two became friends, and Riis led Roosevelt around the streets of New York to show him first-hand the abysmal living conditions he was trying to reform. Roosevelt duly closed the most deprived of the city's police lodging facilities. They also found that during nighttime, nine out of ten patrolmen were not present for their work, leading to reform in policework itself. Roosevelt later referred to (the Dane) Riis as "the best American I ever knew [and] the most useful citizen of New York".

Next, Riis turned his attention toward the condition of New York's drinking water, publishing "Some Things We Drink" (along with six photographs) in the New York Evening Sun on August 21, 1891. He explained "I took my camera and went up in the watershed photographing my evidence wherever I found it. Populous towns sewered directly into our drinking water. I went to the doctors and asked how many days a vigorous cholera bacillus may live and multiply in running water. About seven, said they. My case was made". This, and further articles he wrote on the topic, prompted the city to purchase the area around the New Croton Reservoir and to take steps to avoid a devastating cholera outbreak. His work also prompted the passing of the Small Park Act in 1887, a law that permitted the city to purchase small parks in crowded neighborhoods.

In the late 1890s, Riis used his writing and photographs to call attention to, and enact change regarding, unsafe tenements, classism, and a range of other social and public health and safety causes. His children (daughter Clara, and sons John, Edward, and Roger) all followed their father's lead, working as activists in the name of their father's causes. Riis was now famous enough to publish an autobiography, The Making of an American , in 1901. Also in that year, as the Riis Museum describes, "the King's Daughters Settlement House was renamed the Jacob A. Riis Neighborhood Settlement House (Riis Settlement) in honor of its founder and broadened the scope of activities to include athletics, citizenship classes, and drama".

Sadly in 1905, Riis's wife passed away. The New York Public Library (which houses the Riis archive) records that "Letters Riis received in 1905 relate for the most part to the illness and subsequent death of his first wife, Elisabeth Nielson. Elisabeth had become well known to the American public after the publication of The Making of an American in which she played an important role. The letters and notes of sympathy include many from people who did not know Riis personally, as well as those from prominent persons, including several cablegrams from Theodore Roosevelt".

Riis' second wife, Mary Phillips, supported his philanthropic pursuits, even after his passing, often lecturing at Columbia University.

Riis remarried Mary Phillips two years later. The couple moved to a farm in Barre, Massachusetts shortly after their wedding, and remained there until Riis passed on May 26, 1914. He was buried in an unmarked grave in Riverside Cemetery in Barre. Mary carried on her late husband's mission, becoming, amongst other things, a board member of the Jacob A. Riis Settlement House.

After his death, Riis's photographs were essentially "lost" since he had not considered them to be of much merit in their own right. He did not considered himself a photographer but saw his photographs rather as visual aids that supplemented his articles and public lectures. Only decades later were over 700 negatives and slides found by his son in the attic of Riis's old home in Richmond Hill. He donated these to the photographer Alexander Alland who brought them to the attention of the Museum of the City of New York under whose curatorship their significance to social history was fully realized.

The Legacy of Jacob Riis

Riis is generally considered the first "investigative" journalist, exposing the worst of society's ills with the aim of enacting social reform to ameliorate the situation of thousands of individuals, families, and children who lived in New York City's streets, slums, and tenements. Although he himself never considered his photograph to be of special value, his images have taken on great significance as historical documents and have provided inspiration to future Documentary Photographers. Indeed, by 1900 Riis had established social reform photography as a sub-genre of Documentary Photography. This was highlighted by the National Child Labor Committee who employed Lewis Hine in 1908 to photograph child laborers in a variety of industries throughout the United States. Indeed, Hine's images played a major role in the 1916 Keating-Owen Act, one of the first laws to reform child labor. His legacy lives on and his influence on American Documentary Photography has influenced subsequent generations of documentary photographers including Dorothea Lange , Walker Evans , and Camilo José Vergara.

Revisionist histories have been quick to highlight the racial stereotypes in Riis's writing, and which display attitudes that were very much of their time and place. Faith in his writings has suffered as a result, but his photography stands the test of time as visual evidence (since one always believes the evidence of one's eyes over what they are told) of the downsides of the rise of industrialization and urbanization. Moreover, within two decades of the publication of How the Other Half Lives , the worst of New York's slums were torn down; new building codes were passed to improve safety and health; all tenement areas were required to have playgrounds; and all households required to have indoor showers and toilets. Today Riis legacy is kept alive through The Jacob A. Riis Settlement House, now situated in Queens, New York. The organization (established in his name in 1901) provides immigration and education services and participates in cultural exchange programs with Riis's homeland, Denmark.

Influences and Connections

Dorothea Lange

Useful Resources on Jacob Riis

  • Jacob Riis (55) By Bonnie Yochelsem
  • Jacob Riis's Camera: Bringing Light to Tenement Children Our Pick By Alexis O'Neill
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  • How the Other Half Lives: Studies Among the Tenements of New York Our Pick
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  • Jacob Riis: The Photographer Who Showed "How the Other Half Lives" in 1890s NYC Our Pick By Kelly Richman-Abdou / My Modern Met / July 21, 2020
  • Jacob Riis: Shedding Light On NYC's 'Other Half' Our Pick By Robert Siegal / NPR / June 30, 2008
  • Pioneering Social Reformer Jacob Riis Revealed "How The Other Half Lives" in America By Jimmy Stamp / Smithsonian Magazine / May 27, 2014
  • The Performative Dimension of Surveillance: Jacob Riis' How the Other Half Lives Our Pick By Reginald Twigg / Text and Performance Quarterly / 1992
  • Jacob A. Riis: How the Other Half Lives Louisiana's Old State Capitol
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  • Jacob Riis and How the Other Half Lived: Immigration & Urbanization in the Gilded Age History for Humans
  • A Layman's Sermon: Jacob A. Riis on How the Other Half Lives & Dies in NY Our Pick Museum of New York City
  • Jacob Riis Exhibit - Bonnie Yochelson at the Library of Congress Our Pick C-SPAN

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Edited and revised, with Summary and Accomplishments added by Antony Todd

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  • Jacob Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half
  • Bonnie Yochelson describes her book, "Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half: A Complete Catalog of His Photographs" and how Riis, a Danish-born immigrant to the United States who found his life's most important work in the slums of early 20th-century New York City, changed the course of history.
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Library Of Congress, and Sponsoring Body Library Of Congress. Center For The Book. Jacob Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half . Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, -05-23, 2016. Video. https://www.loc.gov/item/2021690196/.

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Library Of Congress & Library Of Congress. Center For The Book, S. B. (2016) Jacob Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half . Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, -05-23. [Video] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2021690196/.

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Library Of Congress, and Sponsoring Body Library Of Congress. Center For The Book. Jacob Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half . Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, -05-23, 2016. Video. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/2021690196/>.

IMAGES

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  2. 33 Jacob Riis Photographs From How The Other Half Lives And Beyond

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  3. 33 Jacob Riis Photographs From How The Other Half Lives And Beyond

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  4. 33 Jacob Riis Photographs From How The Other Half Lives And Beyond

    jacob riis photo essay

  5. The other half: the activist photography of Jacob Riis

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  6. Pioneering Social Reformer Jacob Riis Revealed "How The Other Half

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COMMENTS

  1. Jacob Riis Photographs Still Revealing New York's Other Half

    By Sam Roberts. Oct. 22, 2015. By the city government's own broader definition of poverty, nearly one of every two New Yorkers is still struggling to get by today, fully 125 years after Jacob ...

  2. Pioneering Social Reformer Jacob Riis Revealed "How The Other Half

    Riis's 1890 treatise of social criticism How the Other Half Lives was written in the belief "that every man's experience ought to be worth something to the community from which he drew it ...

  3. Jacob Riis: Revealing "How the Other Half Lives" Riis and Reform

    When Jacob Riis published How the Other Half Lives in 1890, the U.S. Census Bureau ranked New York as the most densely populated city in the United States—1.5 million inhabitants.Riis claimed that per square mile, it was one of the most densely populated places on the planet. The city is pictured in this large-scale panoramic map, a popular cartographic form used to depict U.S. and Canadian ...

  4. Jacob Riis How The Other Half Lives (Jacob Riis Photographs)

    Riis' work became an important part of his legacy for photographers that followed. As a pioneer of investigative photojournalism, Riis would show others that through photography they can make a change.American photographer and sociologist Lewis Hine is a good example of someone who followed in Riis' footsteps.. In the early 20th century, Hine's photographs of children working in factories were ...

  5. Object Lesson: Photographs by Jacob August Riis

    April 16, 2020 2020, News, Object Lessons, Photography. Jacob August Riis, (American, born Denmark, 1849-1914), Untitled, c. 1898, print 1941, Gelatin silver print, Gift of Milton Esterow, 99.362. When the reporter and newspaper editor Jacob Riis purchased a camera in 1888, his chief concern was to obtain pictures that would reveal a world ...

  6. How the Other Half Lives

    Original Cover of 1890 edition Bandits' Roost, 59 1/2 Mulberry Street (1888). How the Other Half Lives: Studies among the Tenements of New York (1890) is an early publication of photojournalism by Jacob Riis, documenting squalid living conditions in New York City slums in the 1880s. The photographs served as a basis for future "muckraking" journalism by exposing the slums to New York City's ...

  7. Jacob Riis: Revealing "How the Other Half Lives"

    Jacob A. Riis (1849-1914) was a journalist and social reformer who publicized the crises in housing, education, and poverty at the height of European immigration to New York City in the late nineteenth century. His career as a reformer was shaped by his innovative use of photographs of New York's slums to substantiate his words and vividly expose the realities of squalid living and working ...

  8. Jacob Riis: Revealing "How the Other Half Lives"

    Riis's earliest lantern slide shows were modeled on the "slum tour" genre that he honed into a popular lecture and his bestselling book How the Other Half Lives.In his later years, Riis offered lectures based on two of his books, The Making of an American (1901) and The Battle with the Slum (1902). His standard lecture fee was $150, and the venue was required to supply a magic lantern ...

  9. Recovering the Complex Legacy of the Photographer Jacob Riis

    The memory of how Riis actually used his photographs, especially in his lectures, has faded. We expect the harshness of the camera's eye, its unblinking testimony. But according to two students ...

  10. Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half, Museum of the City of

    Jacob Riis's photograph of a man on a makeshift bed in Ludlow Street, New York (c1892) Riis would walk into flophouses and fire off his flash, freezing shocked faces for the benefit of his social ...

  11. 33 Jacob Riis Photographs From How The Other Half Lives And Beyond

    The New York City to which the poor young Jacob Riis immigrated from Denmark in 1870 was a city booming beyond belief. In the three decades leading up to his arrival, the city's population, driven relentlessly upward by intense immigration, had more than tripled. Over the next three decades, it would nearly quadruple.

  12. Jacob Riis

    A pioneer in the use of photography as an agent of social reform, Jacob Riis immigrated to the United States in 1870. While working as a police reporter for the New York Tribune, he did a series of exposés on slum conditions in a series of tenement photographs on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, which led him to view photography as a way of communicating the need for slum reform to the public.

  13. Jacob Riis: Muckraking in alleys at the turn of the century

    A Library of Congress exhibition "Jacob Riis: Revealing 'How the Other Half Lives' " combines Riis's papers with photos found in an attic and donated to the Museum of the City of New York.

  14. Early Documentary Photography

    Jacob Riis (1849-1914) was a police reporter for the New York Tribune newspaper. In the early 1880s, he supplemented his investigative reporting of the city's notorious Lower East Side slums with his own photographs and soon became known as one of the city's most important social reformers.

  15. Jacob A. Riis

    Jacob Riis (1849-1914) was a pioneering newspaper reporter and social reformer in New York at the turn of the 20th century. His then-novel idea of using photographs of the city's slums to illustrate the plight of impoverished residents established Riis as forerunner of modern photojournalism. Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half ...

  16. Jacob Riis

    Jacob Riis. Jacob August Riis ( / riːs / REESS; May 3, 1849 - May 26, 1914) was a Danish-American social reformer, "muck-raking" journalist, and social documentary photographer. He contributed significantly to the cause of urban reform in the United States of America at the turn of the twentieth century. [ 1]

  17. Jacob Riis

    Jacob Riis (born May 3, 1849, Ribe, Denmark—died May 26, 1914, Barre, Massachusetts, U.S.) was an American newspaper reporter, social reformer, and photographer who, with his book How the Other Half Lives (1890), shocked the conscience of his readers with factual descriptions of slum conditions in New York City.. Riis, whose father was a schoolteacher, was one of 15 children.

  18. Photos Reveal Shocking Conditions of Tenement Slums in Late 1800s

    Jacob Riis worked as a police reporter for the New York Tribune after immigrating to the United States in 1870. Throughout the late 19th century, a large part of his work uncovered the lifestyle ...

  19. Jacob Riis: Revealing "How the Other Half Lives"

    Jacob Riis's 1901 autobiography, The Making of an American regaled readers with accounts of the degrading experiences of his early years as a struggling immigrant through his astounding rise as a celebrated writer and confidant of the president of the United States—a story he used to promote his reform causes. In his later years, Riis offered illustrated lantern slide lectures based, in ...

  20. Jacob Riis Paintings, Bio, Ideas

    Bandits' Roost, 59 1/2 Mulberry Street. Eighteen of Riis's photographs first appeared in a photo essay called "How the Other Half Lives" in Scribner Magazine's 1889 Christmas edition, one of which was Bandits' Roost.The iconic image shows a gang of Italian toughs, all sporting bowler caps, in a notoriously dangerous alley called The Bend, a neighborhood between Mulberry, Baxter, Bayard, and ...

  21. How the Other Half Lives, a photo essay by Jacob Riis

    Free essays, homework help, flashcards, research papers, book reports, term papers, history, science, politics. Studylib. Documents Flashcards Chrome extension Login Upload document Create flashcards ... Social Science; Law; How the Other Half Lives, a photo essay by Jacob Riis.

  22. Jacob Riis: Revealing "How the Other Half Lives"

    Jacob A. Riis Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress (019.00.00) Lantern slide box owned by Jacob Riis. Canvas on cardboard. Museum of the City of New York (085.00.00) Jacob Riis. Negative inventory, ca. 1902. Museum of the City of New York (084.00.00) Jacob Riis, Richard Hoe Lawrence, and Henry G. Piffard. The Tramp. Original lantern ...

  23. Denver Post takes top honors in Colorado Press Association awards

    That work also won Sangosti and photo editor Patrick Traylor a first-place award for best slideshow or photo essay. Sports photograph: AAron Ontiveroz was awarded for one of his photos of Jamal ...

  24. Jacob Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half

    Title Jacob Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half; Summary Bonnie Yochelson describes her book, "Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York's Other Half: A Complete Catalog of His Photographs" and how Riis, a Danish-born immigrant to the United States who found his life's most important work in the slums of early 20th-century New York City, changed the course of history.