The wooden statue of Jimmy Reynolds stands on the roof --advertisement from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
By the 1830s New York had established itself as an international
destination. Ships from Europe
discharged passengers who required safe, comfortable lodgings. As the commercial district downtown grew and
the city’s residential neighborhoods moved further north, hotels sprung up along
the thoroughfares.
In 1830 John Jacob Astor began buying up properties on
Broadway and Vesey Streets for his magnificent world-class Astor House
hotel. In the meantime, the substantial
North American Hotel, a few blocks north, was
already well established. Sitting
on the Bowery at the northwest corner of Bayard Street, it was a handsome
Federal-style structure four stories tall.
Deep pedimented dormers lined the roof line and a cast iron balcony wrapped
around the corner at the second floor where French doors provided ample
ventilation on sultry evenings. Its
location, across from Chatham Square, provided breezes and a pleasant view.
The hotel was built in 1826 on the site of the 18th
century Bulls Head tavern and, more recently, a small commercial building,
possibly a grocery, that was destroyed by fire. Decades
later The New York Times would reminisce “The public still traveled in stage
coaches and on horseback when the old North American Hotel was built over the
ruins of the burned building.”
According to hotel lore, the proprietor noticed a young boy
standing against the large tree outside on Bayard Street seemingly
unhappy. The man approached him and
learned he had come to the city “to make his fortune,” but had not eaten all
day and had no money to buy food. He
needed work.
The boy was named “Jimmy” Reynolds and he started work in
the hotel that day. Before many years he
became the proprietor and had a wooden carving of himself leaning against the
tree mounted on the top of the hotel.
(On February 11, 1843 the Portland Transcript published a slightly varied version of the story. It said that a boy named David Reynolds, around 12 or 14 years old, arrived "some fifty yars ago" and helped a man carry a trunk to the wharf. From his earnings he bought fruit which he sold under that tree. From those profits he set up a fruit stand, and eventually had enough money to built the hotel. The tree meant so much to him and his success that he had the statue carved from it.)
Its success as a lodging house was quickly equaled by its
popularity as a meeting place for New Yorkers.
A British tourist was taken aback by the democratic nature of the New
York hotels and noted that Americans “of very different conditions and
occupations were at ease with one another conversationally.” Nowhere was that more evident than in the
North American Hotel.
By 1834 the hotel was run by “Mr. Montague” and the supper
club in the basement was a favorite for the crowds leaving the nearby Bowery
theaters. Not only theater-goers, but
the actors and actresses themselves stopped in for after-theater supper—a concept
quite shocking to some foreign visitors.
The meeting rooms of the North American Hotel were in
near-constant use by workers’ and other political groups. Throughout the 1830s and '40s newspapers
routinely announced meetings of the Working Men’s Party, the General Executive
Committee of the Mechanics and Working Men, and others. The Whig Committee of the Sixth Ward held its
meetings here for more than a decade.
Unlike the haughty Broadway neighborhood of John J. Astor’s
hotel, the Bowery was by now the center of entertainment where the working class
swarmed. The term “Bowery B’hoy,” or
Bowery Boy, was common by 1834 in describing a young blue-collar man who enjoyed a
night of hard drinking and fun with his fellows. During the day street vendors purveyed
oysters, hot corn, baked pears and yams and peanuts. At night Punch and Judy shows, street
entertainers like singers, jugglers and sword swallowers, and organ grinders
would appear.
The Bowery filled with beer halls, saloons and music
halls. Among the most celebrated was the
Atlantic Garden on the opposite corner from the North American Hotel. The hotel opened its own bar which, partially
because of the large number of men attending the political meetings held here,
was hugely popular.
Across from the hotel in 1843 was the Bowery Amphitheatre Circus. It was a hard time for the entertainment
industry. The Financial Panic of 1837
had left the theaters virtually empty and on November 30, 1842 the New York
Herald reported that “Scarcely a theatre in the Union is now paying its
expenses.” The newspaper suggested that “Musical
entertainments, concerts, etc., are the only affairs of the kind that are patronized.”
Four out-of-work performers, Dan Emmett, Frank Brower, Dick
Pelham and Billy Whitlock, were sitting in the North American Hotel one summer
afternoon in 1843. The men had all
worked in the city during the past season, sometimes alone, sometimes as pairs,
but never together as a group. Among
their other performances, they had all apparently done blackface. Emmett and Brower had appeared at the Bowery
Amphitheatre Circus in a bit titled “Negro Holiday Sports, in Carolina and
Virginia,” that year.
The group decided to cross the Bowery and audition a “charivari”
for one of the Circus’s proprietors.
With no rehearsal and no real planning, they picked up their banjo,
violin, tambourine and drum and, according to Emmett “with hardly the ghost of
an idea as to what was to follow, [we] crossed the street to “browbeat” Uncle
Nat Howes into giving [us] an engagement.”
Following the impromptu audition they returned to the North
American and continued what Emmett described as our “horrible noise” in the
reading room. It quickly filled with
spectators. Manager Jonas Bartlett was among those hearing the new
sound and gave them the opportunity to entertain in the billiard room. It was their foot in the door.
Calling themselves the Virginia Minstrels, they were America’s
first professional minstrel group. Their
start at the hotel landed them the headlining act at the Bowery Amphitheatre
Circus and a place in American entertainment history.
A year later improvements were made to the hotel. A marble floor was installed and the main
entrance was enlarged and updated. In
April 1844, possibly due to the ill health of owner John Emmans, it was offered for lease. The furnishings were available for sale to the new leaser.
By 1846 Emmans had died and the North American Hotel was
offered for sale. The advertisement in
the New-York Tribune on April 7 described the hostelry. “It is fitted up in the most elegant style,
with two splendid bar-rooms in the first and second stories; with a large and
elegant ball-room in the rear, with spring floor. The whole is in complete order, and
possession given immediately. It is now
doing the most profitable business ever done before. To a person of character and acquaintance
with the business, it is sure to yield a fortune in a few years.”
Early in 1851 the 200-room hotel suffered some adverse publicity when
23-year old George Robinet died in his room here. A native of Indiana, he checked into the
hotel in December 1850 and began suffering from what the New-York Daily Tribune
called “excessive thirst.” The newspaper
said he was “in the habit of drinking six gallons of water daily.” The Tribune noted on February 3, 1851 “The
deceased was very fleshy, weighing nearly 400 lbs., and was publicly exhibited
at the North American Hotel until a few days since.”
E. J. Latham promised the obese man that he could relieve
his excessive thirst for five dollars.
Latham then gave him a mixture called lobelia, along with “blood root and
other medicines, and also an emetic.”
Robinet immediately became very ill, vomiting and becoming
delirious. Other doctors were called to
his room, but the patient died. Latham
was arrested and charged with manslaughter while Robinet suffered the
posthumous embarrassment of the New-York Daily Tribune’s headline “Death of the
Fat Young Man.”
Patrick Fay purchased the hotel in 1855 in a partition
sale and rented it to Daniel Moss for a
period of 10 years. Moss redecorated the
interiors and reopened it as the Moss Hotel By now the once-benign title “Bowery Boys”
had been taken over by a street gang. New
York’s violent gangs of the mid 19th century were fearless,
dangerous and territorial. Outside of the hotel in 1857 the first of three
days of bloody conflicts between the Bowery Boys and the Dead Rabbits erupted.
Three months later, on July 2, disorder still reigned. And when the immigrants of the neighborhood
learned that the new chief of police took office without hiring a single Irish
policeman, tensions spilled over. A mob
consisting of members of assorted gangs descended on Chatham Square a little
after midnight on July 4. Its intention
was to get rid of any new policemen in their territory.
Several officers were attacked, then the rioters focused
their anger on the Branch Hotel nearby at No. 36 Bowery. Terrorized guests held off the mob until the
Bowery Boys and Atlantic Guards came to their rescue. The Rabbits were forced to retreat; although
they regrouped and a major battle ensued later in the day that lasted several
days and resulted in hundreds of victims, at least 22 of which were dead.
The New York Times would later recall the restaurant that
Daniel Moss opened in the basement, saying it “ran all night and did its
principal business after dark. It was
frequented by theatrical and circus people, and by the leading representatives
of the gambling and pugilistic ‘professions.’”
Moss would say that he had spoken with nearly “every actor and actress
of prominence on the American stage” from 1855 to 1865 in the restaurant.”
The hotel was sold and renamed the New England Hotel. Among its guests in 1863 was song-writer Stephen Foster. Although his songs like “Oh Susanna,” “Camptown Races,” and "Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair” gained national popularity, he was never highly paid. His songwriting style was no longer fashionable and in 1863 when he moved into the hotel he was despondent and financially strapped.
The hotel was sold and renamed the New England Hotel. Among its guests in 1863 was song-writer Stephen Foster. Although his songs like “Oh Susanna,” “Camptown Races,” and "Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair” gained national popularity, he was never highly paid. His songwriting style was no longer fashionable and in 1863 when he moved into the hotel he was despondent and financially strapped.
Friends and family tried in vain to persuade Foster to leave
New York. A relative from Cleveland
even made the trip to try to convince him to return to Ohio. Henry Foster reported that he was relieved to
find that the New England was “a very respectable Hotel.”
The songwriter remained.
Then on the Sunday morning of January 13, 1864 Foster, suffering from a
fever, fell in his room. He struck a
crockery wash basin or chamber pot which gashed his neck. A doctor arrived from four blocks away to
find the naked Foster on the floor bleeding.
Foster’s friend,
George Cooper, was mortified when he noticed that the doctor was stitching the
wound with black thread. Years later he
recalled:
“Haven’t you any white thread,” I asked, and he said no, he
had picked up the first thing he could find.
I decided the doctor was not much good and I went down stairs and got
Steve a big drink of rum…which seemed to help him a lot.”
Stephen Foster was rushed by carriage to Bellevue
Hospital. Three days later, before any
family members could make it to New York to see him, he was propped up in his
hospital bed being fed soup. Without
warning, he suddenly collapsed, dead.
In the pocket of his trousers in his room at the New England
Hotel the “Father of American Music” left thirty-eight cents and a scrawled
note that read merely “Dear friends and gentle hearts.”
As with hotels then and today, guests sometimes arrived with
the intention of committing suicide away from their homes. The New England Hotel took only male guests
and on March 9, 1868 one who checked in only as “Janson” had been here for two
weeks. The 25-year old was found dead
that afternoon on his bed, leaving a note for the proprietor on a table. “To Mr. Johnson, down stairs: When I am dead in my room, No. 9, please send
my valise to Mr. Cummings, No. 256 Broadway.
Yours, Janson. March 8.” It appeared that Janson had poisoned himself.
Another self-poisoning was discovered two years later on
April 13, when porter James Brady found the body of Dr. Henry Marshall. Like Janson, the doctor left a note, this one
addressed to the Coroner. He diagnosed
his own death apparently in hopes that the Coroner would not mutilate his body. The New York Times reported that in the note
he “stated that he had died of congestion of the brain, and asked that his
body should not be dissected.”
On October 5, 1874 Paul Fremont, a sailor recently
discharged from the United States Navy killed himself by taking laudanum in his
room. By now the Bowery neighborhood was
becoming a bit seedier and the hotel guests a bit rougher. In 1878 Peter Perez lived here and late in
September that year he got in a quarrel with a friend, Jose Garagorta, about
the payment of an old loan. Perez
resolved the dispute by stabbing a pocket knife into Garagorta’s neck.
A decade later, on October 9, 1884, C. W. Remington who had
lived in the hotel for five years, hanged himself from a gas bracket. The gas bracket was part of the hotel’s
earlier upgrading and was the latest in modern lighting technology. The innovation proved a problem, at times,
however.
A month to the day after Remington’s suicide, on November 9,
A. Kalb from Albany, New York stumbled back to the hotel early in the morning,
inebriated. Around 11:00 the drunken
30-year old was “found insensible in the room, which was filled with gas
escaping from the burner, turned full on,” said The Times. The newspaper surmised “It is believed that
in his drunken state he first put the light out and then turned the gas on
again, and went to bed ignorant of his danger.”
He was taken to New-York Hospital where he was expected to recover. The Times headlined its article “The Danger
of Drunkenness.”
It was ignorance of gas lighting, not drunkenness, that
caused problems for cowboys Alfred Spozatto and Frank Sappi in September
1890. The two ranchmen, aged 19 and 21
respectively, had never seen gas lights before.
They arrived at the hotel “from the West yesterday,” said The Evening
World on September 29, “Last night was the first time they ever stopped at a
house with gas in it.”
The boys went out on the town, having blown out the gas
light as though it were a candle. A
porter explained “matters to them” upon their return. “Notwithstanding which they blew it out
again,” said the newspaper. “They are
now in Chambers Street Hospital half dead.”
As the nearby neighborhood changed into New York’s
Chinatown, related problems arose for police.
Among these was the establishment of opium dens. One, located at No. 8 Pell Street was begun
by Ah Foo and run in 1883 not only as an “opium joint,” according to The Times,
but a “house of ill-fame.” Police kept
the house under surveillance for some time; but were unable to get detectives
inside. The newspaper explained that “The
doors were kept bolted, and the greatest precautions were exercised in
admitting persons not known to the proprietor.”
At last Police Captain Petty had an idea.
He convinced a bartender from the New England Hotel, Charles
F. Richardson, to visit the establishment with a woman. The ruse worked and the impromptu undercover
informants reported back. The captain
was told that “the upper part of the premises, a three-story and basement
dwelling, was fitted up as an opium ‘joint,’ while the lower floors were used
for immoral purposes.”
Richardson’s complaint resulted in the arrest of Ah Foo, “his
wife, Jennie, a good-looking white woman,” and prostitutes, drug users and
others found in the place.
Sixty-five years after it opened its doors, the hotel at the
corner of the Bowery and Bayard Streets shut them for the last time. The New York Times reported on August 31 1891
“Many an old landmark in the lower part of the city familiar to the eyes of
New-Yorkers of past generations has within the last few years been made to
disappear. The last to go until within a
fortnight stood on the corner of the Bowery and Bayard Street.” The newspaper called it a monument “of the
time when New-York was renowned throughout the civilized world as the toughest
centre of population known to exist.”
The Third Avenue Railroad Company had purchased up the site
as the location for a power station to operate its new cable railroad
system. At the time of the writing, The
Times lamented that “Now nothing remains of [the hotel] but an expanse of
bricks and plaster and protruding foundation walls.
The Bull's Head tavern was about 10 lots North at 50-52 Bowery, the building which later became the Atlantic Garden. The whole stock yard complex that the tavern sat on (and sometimes the general area around Chatham Square) was commonly referred to as the Bull's Head. This has often lead to erroneous reporting of various structures on the block being "built on the ruins of the old bull's head" tavern". When it was written in the 1820's that the Bowery Theatre was built on the old Bull's Head that almost certainly would have refered to the cattle market grounds and not specifically the tavern which was still standing. Great piece, Thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteThe music of Stephen Foster was hardly "out of style" at the time of Foster's death. You imply that his failing popularity caused his financial and psychological poverty. The real story is far more complex. But Foster's songs continued to be popular long after his death, and any new songs would have been met with great acceptance.
ReplyDeleteI don't necessarily see the implication that you did; but nevertheless thank you for the clarification and additional information. Very helpful.
DeleteI tend to agree with the author, at the time of Foster's death his songs were seen as more "old-fashioned" and he himself was trying to move away from the plantation songs he was most famous for - what was in vogue were patriotic songs and shows like The General's Daughter - and it was only after he died and the war ended that people looked back fondly to the days and songs before the civil war with nostalgia. Foster struggled; his financial, psychological, creative and indeed, his family life were all bound together in his decline. New songs would have been met with great acceptance, especially from his publishers, but alas, toward the end of his life they were few and far between. Of course, he did write one great, enduring song during his time in NYC, Beautiful Dreamer, but it came at a human cost.
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