Prostitution in York busted during World War II

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Prostitution in York, in the headlines this week, has made big type of front pages for years. http://www.ydr.com/search/ci_4733139

No time was prostitution in York a bigger problem than during World War II.

Veneral disease outbreaks near military bases and defense plants presented problems on an international scale before and during the war. York County was well supplied with both bases and plants, men away from home and ample women ready to ply the world's oldest profession.

Officials saw a crisis brewing with serious downstream effects: Veneral disease was causing absences in defense plants and military camps, thus hindering the war effort.

In York County, prostitution was taking a different, younger, twist... .

In an October 1941 raid of 11 bawdy houses, two male and nine female operators and five prostitutes were nabbed. They were held overnight in jail for physical exams.

We pick up here from my York County WW II book “In the thick of the fight:"

"Police revealed the raid came after reports that two 12-year-old girls and a 15-year-old girl were schooled in sexual practices by prostitutes and left to wander the streets to solicit sex. "This led to the call for a trained city policewoman. "The ages of the girls played on Netta Ford’s greatest fears. The Visiting Nurse Association official had attended a conference in Philadelphia that pointed to 'glamour girls,' 12 to 17 years in age, as a principal source of veneral disease infections. "The professional prostitutes were not the problem, she said. Additional women police officers and public health education could help."
During this world war when America faced a clouded future, no one could dare make the argument that prostitution was a victimless crime.

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This page contains a single entry by Jim McClure published on November 30, 2006 11:54 AM.

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What was that Eastern York County pit before it filled with water? is the next entry in this blog.

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