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Beggars Night
Beggars Night
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Beggars Night, or Beggars' Night, is a regional term for the practice of going "Trick or Treat" in the period before Halloween night. Beggars Night emerged to address security concerns over young children involved in unsupervised Trick-or-Treating. Instead, younger children were encouraged to Trick-or-Treat on another night, before Halloween. The chosen date for Beggars Night varies and is typically dependent on the day Halloween falls each year.[1] Beggars Night typically begins after school and often concludes between 6 and 8 pm.

The practice was fundamentally identical to that of Ragamuffin Day, a similar celebration in New York City from 1870 to the 1930s. Ragamuffin Day was traditionally associated with Thanksgiving before the interruptions of Thanksgiving dinner became seen as a nuisance, eventually moving into October.[2][3]

Regional celebrations

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The practice occurs in parts of Ohio (central, the northeast and the northwest), Iowa,[4][5][6] Nebraska, South Dakota, Kansas, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Western New York,[7] Southern Maine and Western Pennsylvania.

Buffalo, New York

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In the Buffalo area, Beggars Night falls on October 30 and is a scaled up version[clarify] of Halloween.[8]

Des Moines, Iowa

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In Des Moines Beggars Night falls on October 30 and children ring doorbells, say "Trick or Treat", then tell riddles or jokes such as, "What did the priest say when the church caught on fire?" "Holy smoke!" or, “What did the pumpkin do when it got hurt?” “It put on a pumpkin patch!”[9][10] Children could historically recite a poem or sing a song instead of the joke.[11] The tradition began in 1938, after early Halloween celebrations were rife with violence and vandalism; Beggars Night was adopted in hopes of deterring the chaos and providing a safer environment.[12]

Des Moines and surrounding communities have continued to hold Beggars Nights on October 30 in lieu of traditional Halloween trick-or-treating; city law maintained that date for the next 86 years. In 2024, Beggars Night moved to coincide with Halloween for the first time since 1938, ostensibly due to severe weather;[13] other communities had occasionally done the same in that span by local resolution, either to accommodate weather or to avoid holding it on a Sunday.[14] Des Moines mayor Connie Boesen stated that, though the change would not be permanent, the city council would consider the results of the 2024 experiment and decide whether or not to make the move permanent.[11]

In March of 2025, Des Moines City Council voted to officially move Trick-or-Treating to October 31st permanently for Des Moines. Surrounding communities followed also moving their Trick-or-Treating nights to the 31st or the last Saturday of October. This effectively ends the 80+ year old Beggars Night tradition in the Des Moines area.[15]

Columbus, Ohio

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In Columbus, Ohio, a 1954 police report claimed that Halloween festivities had gotten too rowdy, and the city discontinued Trick-or-Treating. As a result, the cities surrounding Columbus started celebrating the day before or the Thursday before Halloween.[16][17][18] The Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission (MORPC) sets Beggars Night dates for the region.

Washington, DC

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In 1950s Washington, D.C., and its immediate suburbs, Beggars Night fell on October 30. On Halloween night (October 31), schools held student costume parties. In the late 1940s, Greenbelt, Maryland the community celebrated Beggars Night and in 1947 there were reports of youths also participating in "Devil's Night" which on that occasion was held the night before Beggars Night.[19][20]

New Hampshire

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In Dover, New Hampshire, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Seabrook, New Hampshire, Beggars Night is observed.[21] [22]

Houston, Texas

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In 1993 residents of Candlelight Plaza, a small neighborhood north of the 610 Loop in Houston, Texas, decided to end Trick-or-Treat for kids who lived outside their neighborhood. They moved celebrations to October 30 and turned out lights on the 31st. The average age of the residents decreased over time, and more people began to go out on Halloween. However, the majority of residents (and adjacent neighborhoods of similar socioeconomic status) continue to celebrate Beggars Night. No person who enters is denied participation on the 30th, but some residents treat it as a private party whose details should only be shared with those personally known by the residents. Unlike other Beggars Night celebrations, this was not created or promoted by a municipality.

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On the week of October 27, 2014, some of General Hospital's characters celebrated Beggars Night.[23][24]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Beggars' Night is a regional American Halloween tradition in which children in costumes go door-to-door soliciting treats, typically on October 30 rather than Halloween night, with participants often required to perform a joke, riddle, song, or trick to receive candy. The practice originated in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1938, when local authorities organized it as a one-time event on October 30 to divert younger children from unsupervised Halloween activities amid reports of widespread vandalism and mischief by older youth, resulting in over 550 police calls the prior year. This initiative proved effective in reducing incidents, leading to its annual adoption in central Iowa and eventual spread to communities in Ohio, including Northeast Ohio areas like Cleveland suburbs, where it has persisted as a scheduled event on the last Thursday of October or October 30 to prioritize child safety and minimize disruptions. In Des Moines, the tradition endured for nearly nine decades until 2024, when city officials voted to align trick-or-treating with October 31, citing lower vandalism rates and parental preferences for the traditional date, though some Iowa suburbs continue it.

History

Origins in Des Moines, Iowa

Beggar's Night originated in , during the late 1930s amid rising concerns over juvenile vandalism associated with Halloween celebrations. Throughout the decade, police received numerous reports of property damage, fires, and other mischief on , culminating in over 500 calls in 1938 alone. To address this, community leaders sought structured alternatives to redirect children's energies away from destructive "tricks" toward supervised activities. The event was formally established by the City of Des Moines Playground Commission on October 30, 1938, as a pre-Halloween occasion designed to promote safety and reduce nighttime disruptions. Key figures, including Playground and Recreation superintendent E.C. Krieg, Des Moines Police Chief John Henry, and a judge, collaborated to implement the program, encouraging children to participate in organized games, performances, and treat collection earlier in the evening. Unlike standard , participants were required to entertain homeowners with a , , poem, or in exchange for , fostering a performative element to emphasize positive interaction over threats of . This approach allowed police to concentrate enforcement efforts on Halloween proper while providing families a contained window for festivities, typically from 6 to 8 p.m. Initial success was evident as vandalism incidents declined substantially within a few years, solidifying Beggar's Night as an annual tradition in Des Moines and surrounding areas. By , city resolutions further reinforced the custom by discouraging candy distribution on October 31 to prioritize the designated event. The program's emphasis on community involvement and child supervision reflected pragmatic efforts to mitigate risks without suppressing holiday spirit, drawing from empirical observations of prior chaos rather than ideological mandates.

Early Expansion and Adoption Elsewhere

Following its initiation in Des Moines on , 1938, Beggar's Night rapidly gained traction in other communities facing comparable issues with Halloween-related vandalism and juvenile mischief. Cities such as Fort Madison, Mason City, and Boone adopted the practice around the same time, shifting organized to to channel children's energies into supervised, performative activities like telling jokes or reciting poems in exchange for treats. This early diffusion within reflected a shared regional response to pre-existing patterns of , with Des Moines reporting over 550 police calls in prior years, prompting civic leaders to promote the event via media and law enforcement endorsements. The tradition's appeal lay in its demonstrable short-term efficacy; Des Moines experienced a sharp drop to dozens of mischief reports post-adoption, compared to over 200 in unaffected cities, encouraging neighboring municipalities to replicate the model without requiring extensive changes. By the early 1940s, most central towns had integrated Beggar's Night into their annual calendars, standardizing it on regardless of the day of the week, which facilitated community-wide participation and reduced uncoordinated chaos on Halloween proper. However, adoption remained largely confined to during this period, with no widespread emulation in other states until later decades, as local conditions like and historical rates varied significantly elsewhere.

Purpose and Rationale

Addressing Vandalism and Juvenile Mischief

Beggar's Night originated in , in response to escalating juvenile on during the 1930s, particularly highlighted by over 550 police calls in 1938 alone for incidents including , brick-throwing, and window soaping by unsupervised teenagers. City officials, through the Des Moines Playground Commission, shifted organized to October 30, designating it Beggar's Night, to channel youthful energy into supervised, family-oriented activities where children performed jokes, songs, or poems for treats rather than engaging in destructive pranks. This restructuring promoted parental oversight during daylight or early evening hours on the alternative date, reducing opportunities for unsupervised gatherings that fueled , while Halloween proper became a quieter evening with fewer children outdoors after dark. Within a few years of implementation, reports indicate a substantial decline in Halloween-night and criminal rates, transforming community narratives from accounts of youth marauding to minimal disruptions. The approach's success stemmed from preemptively addressing causal factors like idle evening hours and lack of structured alternatives, rather than reactive policing, though quantitative metrics beyond the initial drop remain anecdotal in historical records; nonetheless, the tradition persisted for over 85 years as evidence of its efficacy in curbing such behaviors.

Promoting Safety and Structured Community Activities

Beggar's Night promotes safety by scheduling on October 30 rather than , thereby diverting children from potential -prone activities on October 31. In , where the tradition originated in 1938 following a record 550 police calls related to Halloween mischief, the shift led to a substantial drop in criminal incidents on the actual . This structured timing allows for supervised participation, particularly for younger children, minimizing unsupervised roaming and associated risks like traffic accidents or encounters with older youth engaging in pranks. The event's logistics enforce community-wide coordination, with municipalities setting fixed hours—typically 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.—to concentrate activities in daylight or early evening, reducing exposure to darkness and fatigue. Safety protocols, such as requiring reflective costumes, flashlights, and factory-wrapped treats, are promoted by local authorities and organizations like the Red Cross, fostering parental oversight and visibility. In areas like , volunteer "Pumpkin Patrols" actively monitor neighborhoods, distribute treats, and enforce rules, enhancing security through organized adult presence. Beyond risk reduction, Beggar's Night structures interactions via the joke- or song-telling requirement, channeling youthful energy into performative, non-destructive exchanges that build and bonds. This ritual, rooted in the initiative by Des Moines parks director , emphasizes "wholesome fun" over mischief, encouraging family preparation of age-appropriate humor and reinforcing positive neighborhood engagement. bodies, such as Ohio's Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission, standardize dates across communities, promoting equitable participation and minimizing logistical chaos. These elements collectively transform unstructured Halloween antics into a predictable, inclusive event that prioritizes collective well-being.

Traditions and Practices

The Joke-Telling Requirement

The joke-telling requirement distinguishes Beggar's Night in central communities, particularly Des Moines, from standard , mandating that children recite a , , poem, or perform a brief act—such as a , , or skit—before receiving . This practice, formalized in 1938 by Des Moines Mayor John Carmody, required participants to "earn" treats through performance on , aiming to channel youthful energy into constructive, interactive behavior amid rising Halloween reports of over 100 incidents citywide that year. Participants typically approach homes, announce "trick or treat," deliver their prepared contribution, and only then collect treats, with households often withholding candy until the requirement is met to reinforce the custom. While not legally enforced, adherence remains widespread, as evidenced by local accounts where children without jokes receive no candy, promoting preparation and politeness; for instance, former Des Moines resident recalled her mother's strict enforcement during her childhood in the and . Common jokes are simple and pun-based, often repeated across generations, such as "How do you make a handkerchief dance? Put a little boogie in it" or "Why did the scarecrow win an award? Because he was outstanding in his field." This element serves to reduce passive demanding, encourage creativity, and facilitate neighborly engagement, with variations allowing non-verbal performances for younger children. In contrast to Beggar's Night in Columbus, Ohio—where no such performance is expected—the Iowa version emphasizes this performative aspect as a core anti-mischief measure, though enforcement has softened in recent decades amid shifting schedules toward October 31.

Scheduling and Logistics

Beggar's Night events are coordinated at the municipal level, with local governments announcing specific dates and times via official calendars and community notifications to ensure organized participation. In central Iowa, where the tradition originated, scheduling traditionally avoids October 31 to separate trick-or-treating from potential Halloween vandalism, often setting the event for the preceding evening, such as October 30 when Halloween falls on a Friday. However, in 2025, cities like Des Moines have shifted permanently to October 31, aligning with national Halloween practices while maintaining structured hours. Standard durations run from early evening to limit unsupervised activity, typically 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. in participating communities like Ankeny, , and Indianola. Shorter windows, such as 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., appear in some smaller towns to accommodate younger children and earlier bedtimes. Logistical guidelines emphasize safety and visibility: residents are encouraged to illuminate porches or doorways to signal treat distribution, promote adult accompaniment for children, and adhere to rules amid increased activity. Dates may adjust for weather or conflicts like events, with updates disseminated through outlets and websites. In variants, such as Upper Arlington, scheduling follows a weekday policy—if October 31 is a Monday through Thursday, the event occurs then; otherwise, it shifts to an earlier "Beggar's Night" from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Regional Variations

Central Iowa Communities

In Central Iowa, Beggar's Night spread rapidly from its Des Moines origins in 1938 to numerous surrounding communities as a coordinated response to Halloween , with cities like Ankeny, Urbandale, West Des Moines, Johnston, , and Windsor Heights adopting trick-or-treating schedules by the mid-20th century. These areas typically enforced the joke-telling requirement, where children exchanged riddles or short jokes for , fostering a structured alternative to unstructured mischief on October 31. Smaller towns in the region, such as Indianola, Newton, Story City, and Van Meter, maintained the tradition longer, scheduling Beggar's Night on with times from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m., often citing community preference and reduced vandalism rates as justifications for deviation from Halloween. Bondurant, Granger, and Windsor Heights have varied by holding events on the preceding Halloween in recent years, such as in 2025, to accommodate family schedules while preserving the core elements of costumed solicitation and humor. The practice's persistence in these locales reflects local autonomy in scheduling, with municipal councils voting annually based on weather forecasts, school calendars, and resident input, though empirical data on sustained reduction remains anecdotal rather than systematically tracked. Larger metro suburbs increasingly aligned with October 31 starting in 2024, driven by desires for national synchronization and parental convenience, leaving Beggar's Night more prominent in rural-adjacent Central pockets.

Columbus, Ohio

In , Beggar's Night serves as the primary occasion for door-to-door by children in costumes, typically scheduled for the evening before Halloween to accommodate community events and promote safety. The practice emerged around , when local children began dressing up and soliciting treats from neighbors, establishing it as a structured alternative to unstructured Halloween activities. By the mid-20th century, concerns over rowdiness prompted temporary adjustments; a 1954 police highlighted excessive disruptions during , leading to its brief discontinuation before resumption under organized guidelines. The event's timing in Columbus and surrounding central communities is determined annually by local authorities, often set for 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. on a weekday evening, such as when Halloween falls midweek, to minimize conflicts with adult-oriented Halloween parties and parades. This scheduling reflects a broader regional strategy to channel juvenile energy into supervised activities, reducing incidents of and mischief that historically plagued ; comparable practices elsewhere have documented substantial declines in such crimes following implementation. Unlike variants in emphasizing joke-telling, Columbus's Beggar's Night focuses on straightforward treat collection without mandatory performances, emphasizing family participation and neighborhood engagement. Participation remains voluntary but widespread, with households encouraged to leave porch lights on as a signal for treat distribution, fostering community cohesion while aligning with public safety campaigns from local police.

Other U.S. Locations

In , particularly Buffalo and surrounding communities, Beggar's Night is observed on October 30 as a prelude to Halloween, with children engaging in door-to-door for candy. This practice, rooted in mid-20th-century efforts to separate youthful mischief from the holiday proper, persists in neighborhoods like Kaisertown, where families participate in costume-clad outings, though some suburbs such as Depew have implemented restrictions like barricades to limit traffic and disruptions. Smaller towns including Albion and in Orleans County also host organized Beggar's Night events, featuring downtown routes coordinated by local businesses and merchants, typically from late afternoon into evening hours. In , select coastal and southern towns maintain Beggar's Night as an alternative to Halloween evening , scheduling it for October 30 to prioritize child safety amid concerns over traffic and older teenagers' pranks on the 31st. Communities such as Seabrook, Dover, and participate, with parents encouraged to supervise closely during the designated window, often 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., reflecting a localized similar to Iowa's model but without the mandatory joke-telling element. Historical observance extended to the Washington, D.C., area in the 1950s, where Beggar's Night on October 30 served to channel begging activities away from Halloween, but this custom has largely faded, with contemporary celebrations aligning to October 31. Sporadic mentions of the tradition in other states like Nebraska exist, but lack widespread municipal adoption or recent documentation beyond anecdotal reports.

Decline and Modern Adaptations

Evidence of Reduced Vandalism and Evolving Needs

Beggars' Night was instituted in , in 1938 following over 550 police reports of on Halloween that year, primarily involving youth such as soaping windows and overturning privies. The event, organized by city parks director Jack Tuttle, aimed to channel children's energy into supervised on , requiring a or for treats to promote orderly behavior. Within a few years, reports indicate the rate of criminal and on dropped substantially, validating the initiative's effectiveness in reducing incidents by occupying youth earlier and fostering community oversight. This success persisted for decades, with the tradition expanding to central communities where it similarly curbed Halloween-related disruptions, as evidenced by sustained low rates attributed to the preemptive activity. However, by the , evolving community needs prompted reevaluation, as parental surveys in Des Moines metro areas showed strong preference for aligning with to match national norms and avoid dual evenings that strained family schedules. Weather patterns, often inclement on October 30, further highlighted logistical challenges, leading 13 metro cities to shift to Halloween in 2024 despite initial scheduling conflicts. The decline reflects broader safety improvements, including better street lighting, increased parental , and reduced incidence of unsupervised gatherings, diminishing the original anti- imperative. For the first time since 1938, Des Moines officially designated October 31, 2025, for , signaling that contemporary priorities—such as national synchronization and convenience—now outweigh the tradition's historical role in mischief prevention. This adaptation underscores a transition from reactive vandalism control to proactive alignment with modern familial and cultural expectations.

Recent Shifts to Halloween Alignment

In recent years, several central communities have transitioned Beggar's Night from its traditional October 30 date to Halloween on , marking a significant departure from a practice established in Des Moines in 1938 to curb . The Des Moines City Council voted unanimously on March 24, 2025, to permanently adopt for from 6 to 8 p.m., following community feedback after in 2024 forced a one-time shift to Halloween—the first such occurrence since the tradition's inception. This alignment gained momentum in 2024 and 2025, with cities including Urbandale, West Des Moines, Altoona, Ankeny, and others following suit; for instance, Urbandale's City Council approved the permanent change on December 18, 2024, effective for 2025, while Altoona's council voted on September 15, 2025, to synchronize with regional peers. By October 2025, trick-or-treating on October 31 from 6 to 8 p.m. was standardized across Adel, Altoona, Ankeny, Carlisle, , Des Moines, and additional suburbs, effectively ending the metro area's near-90-year Beggar's Night custom. The shifts were driven by factors such as parental preferences for national Halloween uniformity, logistical challenges from weather events like the 2024 rain forecasts that prompted rescheduling, and evolving community needs, including alignment with school and event schedules. Local polls and public input sessions, as conducted by Des Moines post-2024, revealed strong support for the change, with residents citing safety and tradition normalization as key rationales. While some smaller communities retained flexible dates, the broader trend reflects a return to October 31 as the default, reducing variations that once characterized the region.

Cultural Significance

Community Cohesion and Local Autonomy

Beggar's Night has contributed to community cohesion in participating regions by channeling collective energy into a structured, family-oriented event that encourages neighborly interaction and shared participation. Originating in , in 1938 as a municipal initiative to curb Halloween through organized on , the tradition involved residents, families, and local authorities coordinating to provide a safe alternative to unsupervised mischief, thereby fostering a sense of mutual responsibility and communal safety. This approach spread to surrounding Iowa suburbs and cities like , where similar practices emerged independently to address local and property damage concerns dating back to the mid-20th century, promoting repeated annual engagement that reinforced social bonds among participants. The tradition's emphasis on local customs, such as requiring children to tell jokes or riddles in exchange for treats—a rule codified in Des Moines since its inception—further enhanced cohesion by creating distinctive rituals that differentiated communities from broader national Halloween observances, encouraging pride in regional identity. In practice, this manifested through limited evening hours (typically 6-8 p.m.) designed for visibility and supervision, which drew high turnout and minimized disruptions, as evidenced by sustained observance across multiple generations until recent shifts. Local autonomy is exemplified by the decentralized decision-making process for scheduling and implementation, with individual municipalities retaining control over dates and rules rather than adhering to a uniform national standard. For instance, central communities like Bondurant, Granger, and Windsor Heights continued Beggar's Night on October 25 or 30 in 2025, even as Des Moines aligned with following a city council vote informed by public surveys gauging resident preferences. Similarly, in , Columbus and surrounding areas have maintained flexibility in adapting the event to weather or safety needs, underscoring how Beggar's Night empowered to tailor Halloween activities to specific demographic and environmental contexts, such as staggering events from adult gatherings to reduce risks. This variability persisted into 2025, with some locales opting out of the Des Moines-led change, highlighting ongoing community-driven variance over centralized mandates. Beggar's Night, as a localized variant of , has garnered minimal depiction in mainstream films, television, or literature, reflecting its regional confinement primarily to central communities. Instead, it surfaces sporadically in and segments exploring Halloween customs, often framed as an anomalous American tradition aimed at curbing through structured, joke-required collection on October 30. In audio media, the practice receives brief mention in the 2013 "" on origins, where hosts Josh Clark and Chuck Bryant reference "Beggar's Night" amid broader etymological discussions, attributing its naming to Midwestern idleness in a humorous aside—though the tradition's core roots predate such characterizations. National visibility spiked in 2024 via basketball player , a West Des Moines native, who described the custom on media appearances as involving mandatory jokes or stunts for treats, labeling her hometown's scheduling "weird Halloween rules" while affirming her dominance in local participation. Print and broadcast coverage, concentrated in Iowa outlets like and WHO-TV, portrays Beggar's Night through annual logistics reports and historical retrospectives, emphasizing its 1938 Des Moines inception as a vandalism deterrent with enforced performances over unstructured mischief. National outlets such as and the amplified it in October 2024 amid Des Moines' weather-driven shift to Halloween proper—the first since 1940—portraying the event as a quirky, 80-year holdover with fixed 6-8 p.m. windows and suburban adaptations. These accounts underscore its community-specific evolution rather than broader cultural iconography, with no prominent fictional integrations identified.

References

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