Here, in this tenement, No. 59½, next to Bandits' Roost, fourteen persons died that year, and eleven of them were children; in No. 61 eleven, and eight of them not jet five years old. According to the records in the Bureau of Vital Statistics only thirty-nine people lived in No. 59½ in the year 1888, nine of them little children. There were five baby funerals in that house the same year. Out of the alley itself, No. 59, nine dead were carried in 1S88, five in baby coffins. Here is the record of the year for the whole block, as furnished by the Registrar of Vital Statistics, Dr. Roger S. Tracy:
Deaths and Death-rates in 1888 in Baxter and Mulberry Streets, between Park and Bayard Streets.
Population. | Deaths. | Death-Rate. | |||||||
Five years old and over | Under five years | Total | Five years old and over | Under five years | Total | Five years old and over | Under five years | General | |
Baxter Street | 1,918 | 315 | 2,233 | 26 | 46 | 72 | 13.56 | 146.02 | 32.24 |
Mulberry Street | 2,788 | 629 | 3,417 | 44 | 86 | 130 | 15.78 | 136.70 | 38.05 |
Total | 4,706 | 944 | 5,650 | 70 | 132 | 202 | 14.87 | 139.83 | 35.75 |
The general death-rate for the whole city that year was 26.27.
These figures speak for themselves, when it is shown that in the model tenement across the way at Nos. 48 and 50, where the same class of people live in greater swarms (161, according to the record), but under good management, and in decent quarters, the hearse called that year only twice, once for a baby. The agent of the Christian people who built that tenement will tell you that Italians are good tenants, while the owner of the