The Crucial Age
A Brooklyn judge said the other day “most of the criminals are boys and young men. To be exact, over 80 per cent of them are less than 25 years of age. If the people of Brooklyn ask why so many youths become criminals, I can tell them. A dozen years of investigation and experience in these matters have demonstrated that the vast majority of all the youthful offenders committed crime because they had associates and were not under the proper influences in the years when boyhood was turning into manhood—between the ages of 12 and 18. This is the most important period in a boy’s life. Then his ideals are acquired, his character formed.”
It seldom fails that when a boy is “raised on the street,” to use an expression of the streets, he grows up to be worthless and a curse instead of a joy to his parents.
You can look about any town and when you see youngsters sitting around the street corner discussing matters with older boys and men and getting wise to things or the world, you can pick some of the “black sheep” of the future.
There is nothing uplifting about the average “square” and if the boy is not careful, he will soon tire of the white [right?] ways even and long for dark retreats where he can try some of the things he hears discussed.
Parents who allow their youngsters free range between ages of 12 and 18 regret it later. We do not say that all boys who run wild at this age turn out failures but it is safe to predict that 90 percent of them suffer some experience that goes through life with them as a dark page in their history.
It is only natural that the formative age should be the crucial period in the life of the boy, and influences and habits of that age are certain to affect him in later life. Everything possible to interest the youngster in things worthwhile should be done by the parents. Neglect on their part will lead to a life of indifference quicker than anything else. If the boy can’t find comradeship and entertainment at home, he will seek it elsewhere. It is useless to try to change the nature of the boy. It is better to give wholesome recreation and comradeship than to force him to seek amusement away from home.
Editor's Note: I asked AI to compare FBI statistics today with 100 years ago. Here's what he came up with: Tt is accurate to say that males age 25 and younger are much less likely to commit crimes today than they were 100 years ago. And we can say this confidently using modern FBI Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) data. Young males (under 25) made up about 80% of offenders, according to judges, police chiefs, and early criminologists. Arrest data from the 1920s (pre‑UCR) show extremely high offending rates among boys and young men. Social conditions — poverty, lack of schooling, unstable work, no juvenile protections — pushed many young males into crime.
Today (FBI UCR data): Young males (under 25) make up about 40–50% of arrests, depending on the offense.
For violent crime, the peak age is still 18–24, but the number of offenders is far lower than in the past. Juvenile crime (under 18) has fallen over 70% since the mid‑1990s. So yes — young male crime has fallen sharply.
Thanks, Copilot.
From the editorial page of The Concord Daily Tribune, July 1, 1926
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn92073201/1926-07-01/ed-1/seq-4/
\