Dw. Galenson, NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECTS ON THE SCHOOL ATTENDANCE OF IRISH IMMIGRANTS SONS IN BOSTON AND CHICAGO IN 1860, American journal of education, 105(3), 1997, pp. 261-293
Evidence drawn from the manuscripts of the 1860 federal census of popu
lation reveals that whereas living in a poor immigrant neighborhood in
Boston reduced the probability that the son of an Irish immigrant wou
ld attend school, in Chicago living in a poor immigrant neighborhood i
ncreased that probability. This difference may have resulted from diff
erences in the structure of the two cities' markets for education: in
Boston, immigrants faced discrimination from a public school monopoly,
whereas in Chicago immigrants benefited from competition between publ
ic and parochial schools.