I come late to this, over forty years too late probably, long after the
fact, and some time after it’s appeared in various places on the interwebs:
It’s a pamphlet about the horrors of life in New York, published in
1975, warning of the dangers of muggings, break-ins, fires in hotels, the risks
of travelling by subway, and what not. There’s a dire warning not to go out
after dark, and the passage on walking is especially hair-raising:
Now it so happens 1975 was when I first set foot in New York, and
although I never saw the pamphlet, its message had somehow soaked into the general
consciousness. New York was by many
accounts a terrifying place where no sane person would dare to set foot. A stroll in Central Park was to be considered a
suicide mission. We were led to believe the place looked like a war zone, and obviously parts of it did, like this:
Now, I’m as much of a coward as the next man, and as I set foot on the
streets of Manhattan, leaving the apartment I was staying in on 101st Street
and West End, I certainly did see plenty of hookers and pimps and drug dealers on many
a street, though I can’t say they were very scary.
photo by Leland Bobbe |
More than that, as I made my first forays into New York
I couldn’t help noticing that there were lots of little old men and women, lots
of young girls, lots of people who looked a great deal more feeble and
vulnerable than me. If they were brave
enough to walk the mean streets of New York, then I surely had to be too.
And I was. Yes there was the
occasional hassle as I walked, but the experience was not at all as
advertised. It was only as scary as you
allowed it to be. Famous last words, I
know. However, I realize now that I
didn’t take any photographs on that trip.
I’m not sure why. I think I was
probably afraid that it would have made me look too much like a tourist, like
an easy mark. And I don’t remember ever seeing a cop on the streets.
Here are the other pages from "Welcome to Fear City."