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Halloween In The 1900s: How Applied Behavior Analysis Shaped The Future Of Trick-Or-Treating


On a typical October 31st, dozens of children may ring your doorbell, yell “trick-or-treat,” and hold out their bag for candy. Have you ever thought about how trick-or-treating came to be? There is a lot of interesting history that makes trick-or-treating what it is today, but you may not have heard of a lesser-known story of a Des Moines woman in 1938 (who we could consider an early behaviorist) who shaped a whole community’s behavior on Halloween night that has persisted even until today. 


Halloween in the 1930s looked very different from today. Although children dressed in costumes, it was a night where children caused some serious mischief. Children played pranks on neighbors they disliked, made bonfires in the streets, soaped people’s windows, or threw rocks and bricks at people’s homes. The pranks were also accompanied by begging for food and treats where adults felt blackmailed into giving children food for fear they would be prey to vandalism. In Des Moines, Iowa, every year on November 1st, the newspaper would publish a police report of the list of children and teens charged with crimes committed on the previous night. Although these crimes were punished, the list continued to grow each year.


Enough was enough! In 1938, when police answered a record of 550 calls concerning vandalism, Kathryn Krieg, who was the Director of Recreation for the Des Moines Playground Commission (known today as the Parks and Recreation Department), initiated a campaign to change Halloween misconduct. She set out to replace violent crimes with some Halloween fun. 


She announced that October 30 would be set aside as Beggars’ Night where, for that night only, children would be allowed to go door to door, ring the doorbell, and say the phrase “tricks or eats.” She urged the community to have treats available to children who would perform a “trick,” which meant singing a song, reciting a joke or poem, demonstrating cartwheels, or juggling. Krieg used a very effective procedure of behavior change that behavior professionals might call Reinforcing Alternate Behaviors. 


Every year, she reiterated that children who participate in Beggars’ Night should not get rewarded unless they have earned it with their “trick” or “stunt”. Now, instead of providing a treat to prevent being pranked or vandalized, homeowners were reinforcing entertaining and alternate behaviors. Not only did Beggars’ Night gain traction, it worked! The following year had less than half the police calls reporting vandalism than the previous year, and by 1941, just three years later, there were a recorded 22 police calls on Beggars’ Night. Even today, if you live in the areas of Des Moines, Iowa, parts of Ohio, Massachusetts, and New York, you may still get children performing “tricks” as part of their Halloween trick-or-treating. Let us know about your Halloween adventures in the comments below!


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