Ragged Dick

Horatio Alger, Jr. was well known for his best-selling series of books highlighting “the American Dream” of poor boys making good and becoming rich and successful through “luck and pluck”. Ragged Dick was the first in this niche, and follows the adventures of Dick Hunter, a ragged bootblack as he makes the decision to “grow up ’spectable”, and how he goes about achieving his goals through the help of his friends, his inherent honesty, and his belief in hard work and study.

By : Horatio Alger, Jr. (1832 - 1899)

01 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 01 and 02



02 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 03 and 04



03 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 05 and 06



04 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 07 and 08



05 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 09 and 10



06 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 11 and 12



07 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 13 and 14



08 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 15 and 16



09 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 17 and 18



10 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 19 and 20



11 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 21 and 22



12 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 23 and 24



13 - Ragged Dick - Chapters 25, 26, and 27


The text of Ragged Dick is based on the 1868 first book edition, annotated for student readers. "Contexts" begins by looking at Ragged Dick through the lenses of 1860s New York and Alger's own life there. Ragged Dick is a fourteen-year-old bootblack – he smokes, drinks occasionally, and sleeps on the streets – but he is anxious "to turn over a new leaf, and try to grow up 'spectable". He won't steal under any circumstances, and many gentlemen who are impressed with this virtue (and his determination to succeed) offer their aid. Mr. Greyson, for example, invites him to church and Mr. Whitney gives him five dollars for performing a service. Dick uses the money to open a bank account and to rent his first apartment. He fattens his bank account by practicing frugality and is tutored by his roommate Fosdick in the three R's. When Dick rescues a drowning child, the grateful father rewards him with a new suit and a job in his mercantile firm. With this final event, Richard is "cut off from the old vagabond life which he hoped never to resume" and henceforth will call himself Richard Hunter, Esq.

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