Tuesday, February 12, 2019
Reforming the Nineteenth Century Police System :: Law Enforcement
Reforming the Nineteenth Century practice of law System American cities of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries had problems with crime, vice, and disorder. Some urbanites complained more or less the extent of prostitution, brawling and robbery. Yet few cities felt cities felt impelled to take in subsequent changes in the traditional pattern of night keep an eye on and uncompensated practice of law officers before the 1830s. There are legion(predicate) reasons for problems getting worse in American cities. One reason for this is that serious crimes, by the tired of subsequent decades at any rate, were infrequent. Another reason was because there was a good deal of corruption in the old governance of policing. The geographic growth of the cities and its population was change magnitude. The crime was happening more frequently. There were a lot of problems in the old system of policing. As a result, in major cities like New York, there was a demand for re forming the police system. By the 1830s, larger northern cities found their problems of crime and disorder overwhelm the traditional instruments for dealing with them. The old system was not able to declare order or prevent crimes. This coincided with a tremendous growth of urban population. America was shifting from a farming civilization to a large-minded business society. Also there was mass immigration into the United States and umteen men and women settled in cities. For example, cities such as New York, Boston, and Philadelphia underwent quick social and economic change in this condemnation period. Because of the pace of this change, the policing system could not keep maintain order. Maintaining order seemed imperative and the demands for reform increased as well. Immigration jumped substantially after 1830. The total number of arrivals at the port of New York was more than three times greater in the 1830s than it had been the previous decade and there was a great movement on Manhattan Island as well as many other major cities. From time to time New York State officials extended the citys lamp and enchant district, the area in which the municipal corporation was to provided street lighting and watch protection and to collect taxes to pay for these services.1 Boston had twice as many people in 1840 as twenty years before. This caused problems in the urban cities.
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