Why were the conditions of tenements a concern to many?

A tenement can refer to any multi-occupancy residential rental building. However, the term is associated most often with crowded, run-down buildings with low-quality living conditions.

Tenement buildings date back to the growth of the industrial revolution in the 19th century and the sudden influx of people moving to cities. In modern times, the term is associated with inner-city housing or low-income housing projects.

Key Takeaways

  • "Tenements" may refer to low-income housing units characterized by high-occupancy and below-average conditions.
  • Tenement housing dates back to the 19th century but still exists in the 21st century, often in the form of low-income housing complexes.
  • Tenements first arose during the industrial revolution, as newly landed immigrants seeking opportunities and looking for work needed affordable housing.
  • In NYC, tenement buildings, for example, were low-rise apartment buildings, often without indoor plumbing, with cramped living spaces and not enough ventilation or access to natural light.
  • The Tenement Act of 1901 required indoor plumbing for toilets, fireproofing and mandated better ventilation and lighting.

Understanding Tenements

Historically, the word "tenement" meant any permanent residential property used for rental purposes. It could refer to houses, land, and other buildings and the rights attached to this property. In Scotland, the word is still used mainly in this way, primarily when referring to a multi-occupancy building. The word is also used in this way for some legal purposes. For example, a "dominant tenement" is an estate with the benefit of an easement, while a "servient tenement" is an estate that is subject to the burden of an easement.

In the U.S., however, the word has come to predominantly mean a crowded, dilapidated apartment building for low-income tenants. This building typically has many units under one roof, divided by walls to give each family privacy. The rental agreement usually involves a contract that specifies the period the apartment will be leased out to the tenant and the cost of renting the property.

The Tenement House Act of 1867 legally defined (for the first time) a tenement as "any house, building, or portion thereof, which is rented, leased, let or hired out to be occupied or is occupied, as the home or residence of more than three families living independently of one another and doing their own cooking upon the premises, or by more than two families upon a floor, so living and cooking and having a common right in the halls, stairways, yards, water-closets, or privies, or some of them."

The History of Tenements

During the Industrial Revolution, many tenements were built to house working-class families, many of whom were moving to cities to work manufacturing jobs. Other buildings, such as middle-class houses or warehouses, were repurposed as tenements. These repurposed buildings were known as "rookeries," after the term for a collection of nests.

In 1867 the New York State Legislature passed the Tenement House Act, which defined a tenement as any building rented out to at least three families, each of which lives independently but shares halls, stairways, and yards. In the late-nineteenth century, tenements contrasted with middle-class apartment buildings.

Some of the most well-known tenements existed on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in the nineteenth century. Many were three- and four-story buildings converted into so-called "railroad flats," many of whose rooms lacked windows. These buildings were poorly regulated and were under constant threat of collapse or fire. Communal water taps and water closets could often be found in the narrow spaces between tenements. An 1865 report asserted that 500,000 people lived in tenements. Many of these residents were immigrant families, and at this time, the Lower East Side was one of the most densely populated places on earth.

The Tenement Act of 1901 improved tenement conditions dramatically, mandating better lighting and fireproofing, as well as requiring privies to be replaced with indoor toilet facilities connected to the city sewers.

What Is Tenement Housing?

In the 19th century, tenement housing was single-family buildings divided into multiple living spaces. Often narrow, low-rise apartments, the rooms were built "railroad style" which meant rooms without windows and poor ventilation. Many of the properties were overcrowded and lacked indoor plumbing.

Are There Tenements Today?

Legally, the term "tenement" refers to an apartment building with multiple dwellings, usually with a few apartments on each floor that all share an entry staircase. However, some people refer to tenements as a reference to low-income housing.

Are Tenements Illegal?

No. Tenements were apartment housing complexes and they were not illegal, however, the conditions were unsanitary and at times dangerous. The Tenement Act of 1901 was passed to protect individuals who lived in tenements and made it mandatory for tenements to be fireproofed, have indoor plumbing, and ventilation.

What were problems with tenements?

Cramped, poorly lit, under ventilated, and usually without indoor plumbing, the tenements were hotbeds of vermin and disease, and were frequently swept by cholera, typhus, and tuberculosis.

What was one problem a tenement neighborhood experienced?

Disease, sanitation, garbage and hygiene issues were constant concerns in crowded impoverished tenement districts, where vital statistics were alarming.

Why were tenements important?

During 1850 to 1920, people immigrating to America needed a place to live. Many were poor and needed jobs. The jobs people found paid low wages so many people had to live together. Therefore, tenements were the only places new immigrants could afford.

How was the tenement problem addressed?

Reforms enacted. The first housing law, passed in 1867, required tenements to have one toilet for every twenty residents. Those toilets had to be connected to sewer lines whenever possible. The next law was passed in 1879 and required that all new tenements had to be built so that every room received air.