In the attic of this corner shop came the inception of the Young Men’s Christian Association as a movement. Due to the effects of the Industrial Revolution the family unit was breaking down and thousands of young children were being exploited for work and education was becoming a thing of the past. Drugs and alcohol abuse was on the rise along with the men trying to find pleasure in such acts of prostitution; while theft, crime, delinquency, greed, homelessness rates were rising. Due to the factories the air was unfit to breath, food was unfit to eat causing disease to increase at an alarmingly high …show more content…
The movement and organization known as the YMCA of the USA or the father organization here in the states took on the nickname “the Y” and make moves to fit the western culture. One thing that has made the Y expand so quickly and become so popular here in the United States and around the world is because each individual branch focuses on the needs of the community it is in. America has always tried to maintain the belief of acceptance, as nicknamed the melting pot by historians describing our demographics. With that the YMCA of the USA needed to explain that we are open to all who want to be a part of the