Mary E Reeder | attends school

Known Information

Mary Elizabeth Reeder was born in 1870 to Thomas and Martha Reeder

Sources

1880; Census Place: Washington, Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia; Roll: 123; Page: 147B;Enumeration District: 050

Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library. (1880). City of Washington, statistical maps Retrieved from https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/8415c030-0053-0135-53d1-0a7dead16a1b

Asch, C. M., & Musgrove, G. D. (2019). Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation’s Capital. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

    Mary Reeder, age 10, attended school in 1880 while living with her parents in Jackson Alley. She most likely attended School No. 5 in the second division based on its geographic proximity to Jackson Alley.

    Education in post Civil War Washington

    In 1862, Congress directed ten percent of tax money toward primary schools for Black students, and an independent Board of Trustees was established, which included S. J Bowen, who later became the mayor of DC in 1868. By the 1870s, the Board of Trustees was replaced by a superintendent of schools. Advocates demanded parity between both school systems schools and “the haphazard postwar collection of semiprivate black schools had solidified into a stable system of black public schools run by the Board of Trustees.” (Chocolate City)

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      Damon Jackson | craps game gone wrong

      Known Information

      Damon Jackson lived in Jackson Alley according to the City Directories. He was married to Mary E Reeder.

      Sources

      Photos

      The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs: Picture Collection, The New York Public Library. “Shooting craps.” The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1890-12-27. https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47e2-ee71-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99

      Newspapers

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      01 Nov 1890, Sat  •  Page 12

      The Critic 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      28 Apr 1890, Mon  •  Page 1

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      28 Mar 1887, Mon  •  Page 4

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      11 Feb 1889, Mon  •  Page 3

      The Washington Bee 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      10 Mar 1888, Sat  •  Page 1

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      06 Feb 1893, Mon  •  Page 9

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      08 Nov 1889, Fri  •  Page 2

      “CITY NEWS IN A NUTSHELL: A DAY’S STORY OF THE CAPITAL CITY BRIEFLY TOLD BY “POST” REPORTERS.” The Washington Post (1877-1922), May 06 1893, p. 4. ProQuest.

      An 1890 article in the Evening Star claims that the game of craps was originated in the “cotton fields of the sunny south”, played by enslaved laborers forced to work in the fields and forbidden to take articles of entertainment with them. A game of craps only requires two “bones” to be thrown from the hand. Throwing a seven or a eleven is a “pass” and he wins the stake. Throwing two, three, or twelve means an automatic loss, while any other number is a “point” and a chance to throw again.

      Historically, there are two forms of craps, “Casino Craps” and “Street Craps”. Dice games with any number of variants have been found in many cultures across time. In the 1700s, the French created a form of Hazard that transformed into Craps. French immigrants took it to Arcadia, Nova Scotia and then from there to New Orleans. From New Orleans, the African-Americans picked it up as a game and as with any game, it evolved. Casino Craps was introduced in settings like river boats where there were formal “banks” to bet against, whereas Street Craps were played by people anywhere they could get a smooth setting and placed their bets against each other. The players were referred to as “bone-shooters” and the game “shooting de bones” in newspaper briefs from the 1890s.

      In contrast, the Evening Star ran hundreds of articles in the 1890s about the police raiding crap games. The police and the newspapers painted it as a type of robbery as the game “fleeced” young gamblers and allowed large groups of Black men to gather, who were characterized as “boisterous”, using profane language. The Washington Bee, an African-American newspaper from DC, printed a speech in which the speaker lamented “pool and crap games swallowing up their money and monopolizing their thoughts.”

      An 1889 article about the “Foggy Bottom” gang, described an alley as “a place where loafers, thieves, crap-shooters, and murderers congregate”, exposing how the newspapers like to paint crap-shooting as a lurid game associated with violence.

      Police Take Notice

      There were only a handful of articles about craps in the Evening Star in the 1880s. In 1887, it ran its first short brief and place the game in quotation marks, “shooting crap” and named the role of “shaker”. The article contrasts Craps with Sweat, a type of card game that resembles poker and considered the “Old Army and Navy game”, and another form of street gambling.

      Damon Jackson

      In May 1893, Damon Jackson was charged with an assault to kill. Damon had been playing a game of crap with Joseph Plummer which ended by “Damon’s little hatchet which clove the skull oof Joseph Plummer”. Damon had been winning the game, and Joseph requested that he be staked another nickel “to buck gain the fickle goddess once more.” Both Mrs. Jackson and Damon berated him and drove him into the street where he was struck with the hatchet. Witnesses for Damon “with equal zeal asseverated” that Jackson was trying to nail up the door to keep Plummer out. After the flowery and descriptive language of the article, the post article ends simple with “Jackson was acquitted.”

      Further Research Needed:

      • Locate the court records in the National Archives.

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      Thomas Reeder | Jackson alley

      Known Information

      Thomas Reeder lived in DC after the Civil War.

      Sources

      Newspapers

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      23 Jul 1866, Mon  •  Page 2

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      13 Jul 1867, Sat  •  Page 3

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      27 Jul 1867, Sat  •  Page 3

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      26 Sep 1867, Thu  •  Page 3

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      07 Jun 1873, Sat  •  Page 4

      Evening Star 
      Washington, District of Columbia
      24 Dec 1877, Mon  •  Page 2

      Map

      Gamble, W. H, and S. Augustus Mitchell. Plan of the city of Washington: the capitol sic of the United States of America. [Philadelphia: S. Augustus Mitchell Jr, 1869] Map. https://www.loc.gov/item/88693479/

      Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia. Sanborn Map Company, 1888. Map. https://www.loc.gov/item/sanborn01227_001/.

      City Directory

      Washington, District of Columbia, City Directory, 1864

      Print

      Kollner, Augustus, Artist. Tiber Creek north-east of the Capitol. Washington, D.C. Washington D.C. United States Tiber Creek, 1839. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2004662005/

      Currier & Ives, Publisher, and Charles R Parsons. The City of Washington birds-eye view from the Potomac-looking north / drawn by C.R. Parsons. United States Washington D.C. District of Columbia Washington, ca. 1880. New York: Published by Currier & Ives. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/90716011/

      Swampoodle

      The Tiber Creek ran northeast of the Capitol, no longer a contained canal. When there were storms, the creek often flooded, washing away bridges and filling basements. Due to the swampy nature of this floodplain and the left behind puddles, the area near the Union Pr. Office was called Swampoodle.

      In this rendering of Washington, Massachusetts Ave intersects with North Capitol Street near the center seam of the picture. The blocks north of this intersection was called Swampoodle and contained Jackson Alley.

      Jackson Alley was considered the heart of Swampoodle, and ran between G and H street, along the Printing Office. Originally an Irish enclave, when refugees from slavery arrived in the City of Washington during the Civil War, African-American families also found homes in Swampoodle.

      1880 Census

      In the 1880 Census, Thomas Reeder was recorded living with his family with Robert Childs and his family in 71 Jackson Alley. Thomas and his wife Martha had three children: Mary E, 10, Joseph, 8, and Georgiana, 4. Thomas and his wife, Martha, were born in Maryland while their children were all born in DC.

      Mary E. is marked as having attended school.

      The City Directories for 1883-1901 show Thomas living at various addresses in Jackson Alley; sometimes at #65, or #50, or #34. The variety of house numbers suggests that the Reeder family shifted as rent prices and space shifted in the alley. The excerpt from the Sanborn Fire Insurance maps shows the variation in size and that some homes were frame and some were brick. The end of the block near the Printing Office was more industrial in nature, containing a livery station, a factory and storehouse.

      Further Research Needed:

      • Locate residences in earlier censuses

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