Porn In Philly, 1912 (October 1976 | Volume: 27, Issue: 6)

Porn In Philly, 1912

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October 1976 | Volume 27, Issue 6

Pornography seems to be doing very well these days. Every fair-sized town has its “adult-book store,” and x-rated feature films have advanced from their first big-city beachheads of the midigGo’s to occupy theatres in suburban shopping centers. Naturally, the vigorous state of the industry has not gone unnoticed. A national news magazine, for instance, devoted a cover story to the proliferation of pornographic films, topless bars, and what are universally and euphemistically known as “massage parlors.”

Those who fear that all this is yet another indication of the imminent disintegration of our society might take heart from a study made by one Franklin Fretz in 1912. In a book entitled The Furnished Room Problem in Philadelphia , Fretz discussed patterns of life in the city’s rooming-house district. He was appalled by the licentious diversions available to the people who lived there. Here is what he saw:

Amusement places of every kind abound in the district. … On April i, 1910, there were eighteen places of amusement on Eighth street between Race and Vine. … This block is a regular midway of license and pleasure, drawing the rabble from all parts of the city.

On Arch street are found a number of vile theatres such as the Trocadero, the Dime Museum, and others. … At Broad and Fairmount avenue is The Grand, which until two years ago was one of the most popular theatres in the city, but which has now been converted into a moving-picture and vaudeville house. What is to be the outcome of all this melodrama, music, picture-shows, vaudeville, etc? Archbishop Parley, of New York City, says: “The stage is worse today than it was in the days of paganism. We see today men and women—old men and women—who ought to know better, bringing their young to these orgies of obscenity. …”

A certain amount of amusement is both necessary and desirable in this age of the industrial revolution. … We need more amusements today than ever before. It seems, however, that the character of our amusements is degenerating. The trail of the Tenderloin is on our stage. What does this mean? It means that a trivial, pleasure-loving, hectic class of men and women, who make up so large a part of the theatrical audiences of Broadway, New York, are imposing their standards, their vulgarity upon the American stage. It means, as Walter Prichard Eaton, in Success Magazine for April, 1909, declares: “That today, as the result of the tyrannical dominance of a group of New York theatrical managers over the theatres of the entire country, an unprecedented wave of licentiousness in theatrical entertainment has arisen and is moving out from the Tenderloin, into the real United States. Vaudeville is already inundated. Musical comedy has in the past two or three y ars sunk in many cases to the level of back-alley Parisian indecency. The dramatic stage has felt the influence and let down the gates to forces of the