"Broke," The Man Without the Dime

audiobook

"Broke," The Man Without the Dime

by Edwin A. Brown

EN·~8 hours·40 chapters

Chapters

40 total
1

Transcriber’s Note

0:21
2

“BROKE” THE MAN WITHOUT THE DIME

0:37
3

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

2:27
4

INTRODUCTORY

10:12
5

CHAPTER I My Itinerary and Working Plan

5:45
6

CHAPTER II The Welcome in the City Beautiful to its Builders

28:21
7

CHAPTER III Chicago—A Landlord for Its Homeless Workers

19:18
8

CHAPTER IV The Merciful Awakening of New York

8:17
9

CHAPTER V Homeless—in the National Capital

12:15
10

CHAPTER VI The Little Pittsburg of the West and Its Great Wrong

6:00

Description

A stark, first‑person portrait of early‑20th‑century urban poverty, this memoir follows a man who grew up in a comfortable Midwestern family before tragedy thrust him into a world of hardship. He recounts his childhood along the Mississippi, the loss of his father, and the education that took him from Boston to the rugged plains of Colorado, setting the stage for a radical shift in purpose.

Driven by compassion rather than self‑interest, he turns his attention to the invisible millions forced to survive in municipal lodging houses, workrooms, and street corners. Vivid descriptions of crowded dormitories, cold wagon‑beds, and the daily indignities endured by the destitute bring the era to life, while his personal resolve to challenge societal neglect forms the heart of the narrative. Listeners will be drawn into his earnest quest to understand why basic needs are denied, and to witness the beginnings of a lifelong crusade for the forgotten.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (479K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by KD Weeks, Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-04-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

EA

Edwin A. Brown

1857–1946

A reform-minded writer who turned firsthand experience into a vivid account of homelessness and unemployment in early 20th-century America. His best-known work follows his travels in disguise as a penniless laborer and argues for more humane public support.

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