Charles Brace began the Children's Aid Society in the year 1853. In 1854, the Society opened the first of its "newsies' hotel houses", which would end up noticeably one of Brace's best tasks. These houses gave fundamental food and lodging at low costs to destitute kids who peddled daily papers in the city of American urban communities. Despite the fact that Brace saw the newsies as youngsters needing the administrations gave by the houses, they likewise propelled a few of Horatio Alger's stories in which the paperboys' autonomy and cull are compensated with extraordinary riches.