Hobohemia Explained

Hobohemia is a low-rent district in a city where artistic bohemians and the down-and-outs or hobos mix. In Chicago from the turn of the century to circa 1940s this was Tower Town and the area often known as "The West Madison Stem"[1] (Madison Street west of downtown) which was known as "Skid road" and home to thousands of transient men and women, and Ben Reitman's Hobo College.[2] In New York City it was the neighborhood of the Bowery, and Greenwich Village.[3] It was the title of a short story by Sinclair Lewis originally published in The Saturday Evening Post, which Lewis subsequently reworked into a three-act comedy which was first performed at the Greenwich Village Theatre in 1919.[4]

A reference appears in the Rodgers and Hart song The Lady is a Tramp: "My Hobohemia is the place to be."[3]

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Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hobohemia West Madison Street. University of Illinois Chicago.
  2. Web site: The Hobo College of Hobohemia. Livia. Gershon. May 16, 2019. JSTOR Daily.
  3. Book: The City in Slang . Irving Lewis Allen. 9780195357769 . 1995-02-23 .
  4. News: . Drama . New York Times . 1919.