Hello all,
I present herewith some information about prostitution in London in 1868 that may be of some interest.
The actually date of this particular piece is from 1870. It was compiled and written by William Acton, and is entitled:-
Prostitution, Considered in its Moral, Social and Sanitary Aspects, 2nd edition 1870.
I have edited part of his work, for our interest purposes only, and thus Mr. Acton writes the following:-
It is perhaps worth our while noting are the areas of Whitchapel and Stepney, and to which grouping the numbers of prostitutes fall in to. Also of interest is the area of Covent Garden.
Although this was compiled in 1868, 20 years before our main time period, it gives the indication of the downfall of the areas around Whitechapel in regard to prostitution. It is also to be noted that the numbers of peostitutes rose significantly after this time period. Destitution was becoming more and more common in the poorest of areas, although not by any means total.
Hope this is of some interest to you all.
best wishes
Phil
I present herewith some information about prostitution in London in 1868 that may be of some interest.
The actually date of this particular piece is from 1870. It was compiled and written by William Acton, and is entitled:-
Prostitution, Considered in its Moral, Social and Sanitary Aspects, 2nd edition 1870.
I have edited part of his work, for our interest purposes only, and thus Mr. Acton writes the following:-
The headings of the table (below) demand a few explanatory observations. It is, in the first place, desirable that the reader should understand the distinction between the three classes of houses, termed by the police, brothels.
The first, or 'houses in which prostitutes are kept', are those whose proprietors overtly devote their establishments to the lodging, and sometimes to the boarding, of prostitutes, and prostitutes only. At first sight it might appear that, by the phrase employed, were indicated houses in which prostitutes are harboured, fed, and clothed at the cost of speculators, who derive a revenue from the farm of their persons. Such is, however, not the intention of the framers of the document. The houses last mentioned are, doubtless, included in the first column of the above returns, but these have now almost disappeared from the Metropolis.
By 'houses in which prostitutes lodge', the reader must understand those in which one or two prostitutes occupy private apartments, generally with, though perhaps in rare cases without, the connivance of the proprietor. It often occurs, it must be remembered, that females of no virtue are so desirous of preserving the appearance of it before those among whom they reside that they will not introduce their paramours to their apartments; but both they and their domicile, being generally known to the police, both figure on the return. Houses to which prostitutes resort' represent night houses - the brothels devoted to casual entertainment of these women and their companions, and the coffee-shops and supper- shops which they haunt.
The 'well-dressed, living in lodgings' prostitute is supposed to be the female who, though to all intents and purposes common, extending her pursuit of acquaintances over the town at large, or limiting it to the places of public recreation, eschews absolute streetwalking'.
The 'well-dressed, walking the streets' is the prostitute errant, or absolute street-walker, who plies in the open thoroughfare and there only, restricting herself generally to a definite parade, whereon she may always be found by her friends, and hence becomes, of course, 'perfectly well known to the police'.
The 'low prostitute, infesting low neighbourhoods', is a phrase which speaks for itself. The police have not attempted to include - in fact, could not have justly included, I might almost say - the unnumbered prostitutes whose appearance in the streets as such never takes place; who are not seen abroad at unseemly hours; who are reserved in manners, quiet and unobtrusive in their houses or lodgings, and whose general conduct is such that the most vigilant of constables could have no pretence for claiming to be officially aware of their existence or pursuits. The 1869 Report on the Contagious Diseases Act enables us for the first time to show the proportions of common prostitutes to soldiers at Aldershot. Thus, Inspector Smith gave in a report proving that there were in June 1869, 243 recognized prostitutes to about 12,000 troops. This paucity of prostitutes, according to Dr Barr, causes some of them to have intercourse with 20 or 23 men in one night. * [Report from the Select Committee on Contagious Diseases Act (1866) (1869), q. 751.]
The falling off (amounting almost to extinction of the class) of the number of 'houses where prostitutes are kept',..... the number given being two only as against 410 in 1857 and 933 in 1841. It appears that of the eleven prostitutes returned, as inhabiting such houses, one only resides in one of these houses, and ten in the other; this latter is kept by a Frenchwoman. It is satisfactory to find that this class of house is, if we may trust the police, rapidly disappearing from London. It is not too much to say that the brothel where prostitutes are kept is an institution alien to English feelings, and that even if the government should sanction the maintenance of such houses, which is far from probable, public opinion may be confidently expected to work their extinction.
I may here call attention to a lesson taught us pretty clearly by these returns, which is, that to attempt to put down prostitution by law is to attempt the impossible. Notwithstanding the numerous prosecutions and parish raids which have been directed against prostitutes and their dwellings during the past few years, there were in the year 1868, 1,756 houses where prostitutes lodge, against 1,766 in 1857. What can show more strongly the impossibility of [suppressing prostitution by the arm of the law]? Eleven years ago I pointed out that if a prostitute is prosecuted for plying her trade in one parish, she will only move into another. The result has proved the truth of my prediction, and recent failures add their testimony to that of world-wide experience, and prove the impolicy of making attempts of this nature, except in cases when the houses proceeded against are shown to be productive of open scandal or a cause of intolerable annoyance.
I must observe that these returns give but a faint idea of the grand total of prostitution by which we are oppressed, as the police include in them only those women and houses whose nature is well and accurately known to them. There can be little doubt that numbers of women who live by prostitution lead apparently respectable lives in the lodgings or houses which they occupy; but all such are necessarily excluded from the returns.
Were there any possibility of reckoning all those in London who would come within the definition of prostitutes, I am inclined to think that the estimates of the boldest who have preceded me would be thrown into the shade.
The first, or 'houses in which prostitutes are kept', are those whose proprietors overtly devote their establishments to the lodging, and sometimes to the boarding, of prostitutes, and prostitutes only. At first sight it might appear that, by the phrase employed, were indicated houses in which prostitutes are harboured, fed, and clothed at the cost of speculators, who derive a revenue from the farm of their persons. Such is, however, not the intention of the framers of the document. The houses last mentioned are, doubtless, included in the first column of the above returns, but these have now almost disappeared from the Metropolis.
By 'houses in which prostitutes lodge', the reader must understand those in which one or two prostitutes occupy private apartments, generally with, though perhaps in rare cases without, the connivance of the proprietor. It often occurs, it must be remembered, that females of no virtue are so desirous of preserving the appearance of it before those among whom they reside that they will not introduce their paramours to their apartments; but both they and their domicile, being generally known to the police, both figure on the return. Houses to which prostitutes resort' represent night houses - the brothels devoted to casual entertainment of these women and their companions, and the coffee-shops and supper- shops which they haunt.
The 'well-dressed, living in lodgings' prostitute is supposed to be the female who, though to all intents and purposes common, extending her pursuit of acquaintances over the town at large, or limiting it to the places of public recreation, eschews absolute streetwalking'.
The 'well-dressed, walking the streets' is the prostitute errant, or absolute street-walker, who plies in the open thoroughfare and there only, restricting herself generally to a definite parade, whereon she may always be found by her friends, and hence becomes, of course, 'perfectly well known to the police'.
The 'low prostitute, infesting low neighbourhoods', is a phrase which speaks for itself. The police have not attempted to include - in fact, could not have justly included, I might almost say - the unnumbered prostitutes whose appearance in the streets as such never takes place; who are not seen abroad at unseemly hours; who are reserved in manners, quiet and unobtrusive in their houses or lodgings, and whose general conduct is such that the most vigilant of constables could have no pretence for claiming to be officially aware of their existence or pursuits. The 1869 Report on the Contagious Diseases Act enables us for the first time to show the proportions of common prostitutes to soldiers at Aldershot. Thus, Inspector Smith gave in a report proving that there were in June 1869, 243 recognized prostitutes to about 12,000 troops. This paucity of prostitutes, according to Dr Barr, causes some of them to have intercourse with 20 or 23 men in one night. * [Report from the Select Committee on Contagious Diseases Act (1866) (1869), q. 751.]
The falling off (amounting almost to extinction of the class) of the number of 'houses where prostitutes are kept',..... the number given being two only as against 410 in 1857 and 933 in 1841. It appears that of the eleven prostitutes returned, as inhabiting such houses, one only resides in one of these houses, and ten in the other; this latter is kept by a Frenchwoman. It is satisfactory to find that this class of house is, if we may trust the police, rapidly disappearing from London. It is not too much to say that the brothel where prostitutes are kept is an institution alien to English feelings, and that even if the government should sanction the maintenance of such houses, which is far from probable, public opinion may be confidently expected to work their extinction.
I may here call attention to a lesson taught us pretty clearly by these returns, which is, that to attempt to put down prostitution by law is to attempt the impossible. Notwithstanding the numerous prosecutions and parish raids which have been directed against prostitutes and their dwellings during the past few years, there were in the year 1868, 1,756 houses where prostitutes lodge, against 1,766 in 1857. What can show more strongly the impossibility of [suppressing prostitution by the arm of the law]? Eleven years ago I pointed out that if a prostitute is prosecuted for plying her trade in one parish, she will only move into another. The result has proved the truth of my prediction, and recent failures add their testimony to that of world-wide experience, and prove the impolicy of making attempts of this nature, except in cases when the houses proceeded against are shown to be productive of open scandal or a cause of intolerable annoyance.
I must observe that these returns give but a faint idea of the grand total of prostitution by which we are oppressed, as the police include in them only those women and houses whose nature is well and accurately known to them. There can be little doubt that numbers of women who live by prostitution lead apparently respectable lives in the lodgings or houses which they occupy; but all such are necessarily excluded from the returns.
Were there any possibility of reckoning all those in London who would come within the definition of prostitutes, I am inclined to think that the estimates of the boldest who have preceded me would be thrown into the shade.
Although this was compiled in 1868, 20 years before our main time period, it gives the indication of the downfall of the areas around Whitechapel in regard to prostitution. It is also to be noted that the numbers of peostitutes rose significantly after this time period. Destitution was becoming more and more common in the poorest of areas, although not by any means total.
Hope this is of some interest to you all.
best wishes
Phil
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