Tuesday, July 14, 2020

EARLY OKLAHOMA CITY: THE WOMAN THEY CALLED "OLD ZULU"

Oddly enough when looking at the early days of the wild areas of Oklahoma City there is proof of early entreprenuerial women who flaunted societal limitations and restrictions. They were the "Bad Girls", women who made livings, bought land and property, and had sometimes an immense amount of influence.

For many parts of old Hell's Half Acre those women were Mable Warren, Eva Ryan, Anne Wynn Bailey and many other "madams."

For a segregated time, as that was largely on the surface at any rate, that meant that there was an African American community that operated in tandem serving a different section of the population. In theory, that is, because there is ample evidence that in vice the "color line" was not always strictly adhered to in a manner some would have liked to believe.

A "Kitty Hart" may have been an early madame in the area East of Front Street and Grand Avenue (modern Sheridan). This area on the east side of the tracks was a wilder and more robust region where the law was a little bit in question for many months and even years. The area of Bricktown was first reserved for Federal troops who were brought in keep the peace pre and post the Land Run of April 22, 1889.  Then it was taken over by the railroads and factories. It was often a place where "outlaws" who did not like crowds ended  up. Knifing, beatings, and various other violence occurred there.

Mid to late 1890's a larger than life figure emerges as a leader of vice among the African American community springing up in the eastern section.  She was called the Queen of Avenue A, probably as an insult of her role as a less than savory element and possibly also as a racial epitaph.  The greater Oklahoma City was being settled by two opposing elements: one group tended to settle and establish businesses north of Grand Avenue and the other South of California.  The northern group tended, in its vision of growing a vital business center tended to have a live and let live view of all vice. Visitors wanted a drink, a fine time, and the best the town could offer and so the town should provide those things.  The southern group, many from Kansas, tended to be more anti-drink and immorality in any form.  Into this group also came a lot of people with very "southern views" concerning the races. These two will butt heads along political and social lines for decades.

Who was this "Queen of Avenue A"?  The British were fighting against a growing and truly worthy opponent in South Africa at the time and articles of the fearsome fighting force of the Zulu tribesmen were common reading material. It may be natural that the often fierce Martha Fleming would earn the title "Old Zulu." It could also be just another of many racist labels.

Her name was Martha Fleming, but every one called her "Old Zulu", and she ran the prostitution in African-American Oklahoma City until about 1909. Born in Virginia, there is little else known about this woman other than the sometimes slanted accounts reported in local news articles and court records. She is profiled, again with a harsh biased brush, in McGill's early, agenda-driven, account of the rough and rowdy early days of Oklahoma City.  She apparently was the dominant figure who kept the girls on "Alabaster Row" (believed to be the local brothels catering to African American men located on California Street) in line, operated in her own establishment, ran for a time (it is believed ) a covy of women criminals who would accost men, free them of their monetary burdens, and sometimes bean them!  She is believed to have worked in an area once considered outside the city limits, that area east of the railroad tracks on Grand Ave. (now known as Sheridan) down through 2nd Street.

"Zulu" or "Zoo",as she was sometimes called, seems to emerge in the early days of the town.  She was believed to be a either a pawn or a collaborator of a much reviled Madame "Big Anne" (Anne Wynn Bailey). Thus, depending on which side of that relationship one falls, she is seen as either a link to the African American vice and the money that could be made there by the nefarious Big Anne or as mirror professional who functioned in a similar capacity in a different realm (in keeping with the segregated reality of the times).

Whichever was the truth, together, these two women managed a sizeable portion of the action to be found in Oklahoma City's "Hell's Half Acre." Her regular domain, the area of east Grand, just past the Santa Fe Depot may have been used by a variety of individuals for multiple purposes. The area, just after the run and for a long time later, was outside of town limits and thus beyond the sometimes inept or politically motivated city police force.

The south side of "Hell" was called "Alabaster Row" and it generally assumed this was a line of establishments with African-American or non-white women and customers. This may be true in full or in part.  Not enough objective evidence has been seen by this writer yet to define it strictly along those lines.  It is known, from establishments and writings from other locations (Leadville and San Francisco, etc.) that 'alabaster' was sometimes a term used to describe these women of the night. No matter what race. They were sometimes likened to marble statues of loveliness and perfection. In fact one early source does indicate there were "statues" along California in front of one wild place (thought be Clark's Saloon).

There could have been a little of both involved here. It does seem strange that such a line of houses would exist on California to the south and most identify "Old Zulu's" domain as the E. Grand Ave. area across the tracks. It may be there were two groups catering to altogether different clienteles.  Many of the gambling, drinking, or carousing dens in "Hell" were a broad spectrum selection. Low dives rubbed shoulders with fine Belgian carpets and cheap 'rot-gut' was just across the street from full bodied wines of the finest label. The outside of town places - east of the tracks - are believed to have catered to individuals who could not afford (or did not wish) to come into town, for economic, comfort,  or recognition reasons.
 
Most newspaper and early descriptions seem to agree that Martha was a tall woman of tremendous strength.  She stood approximately 6 feet and was considered by many to be too aggressive in those Victorian times to be attractive.  She always carried a pistol (a hogleg) on her from a belt holster, and usually wore a dress.  She sometimes wore a man's jacket and work boots.   

She appeared via the newspapers to be many things from petty thief, to drunk, to drug user, political activist, and con artist. What ever she might have become, her Achilles heel was clearly from modern understandings, an addiction. She was known to get a little energetic while under the influence of liqueur or heroin/cocaine. One instance, it took several full grown police officers to get her to the tank to sleep off her over indulgence and she once tore up the jail and wounded another prisoner before she finally came down from the high of the stimulant.

Oklahoma at the time did not have a prison, so prisoners were sent out of state to Kansas. In early 1907, she was sent to Kansas for a two year sentence but was part of an early release arranged by the Kansas governor in view of the pending statehood. Later, in November, Martha would be baptized in the Canadian River after a revival at the Pentecostal Mission downtown.  Although some would make fun of the fact she was back in front of a judge for being under the influence in coming months, today we can understand the difficulties faced by someone battling an addiction.

Descriptions of these women can prove as fascinating and insightful as a photograph. They say alot about how society viewed "these type of women":  "Big Annie", as a women in her early forties, was drawn in local papers as a fleshy, mean-faced, man-like woman used to pushing her weight around to keep control in Oklahoma City.  Social attitudes are apparent in the artistic renderings of her during a famous legal contest in 1908. 

Likewise, social attitudes are prevalent in the label given Martha, she was tall, powerful, and wild. So, of course as a woman of vice and color she was a "barbarian", she was comic figure of drink and drug, and she was "other" in a community seeking to acquire self-esteem and worth as a new upstart in the nation. The unrest in Africa at the time provided a new vocabulary as the Zulu army battled European armies for dominance.   It was important to rob her of dignity in the same way Anne Wynn Bailey was robbed of dignity. Added to the label of vice were the trappings of racism and so for many she became the archetypal savage black woman and while not aged, "Old Zulu."

In both instances, part of the problem was they were women operating out of the acceptable boundaries of society, women acting independently and  having some level of success. Lessor issues had to do with race and addictive behaviors aligned with perceptions of social status. In both women society had outcasts due to the work they did and so less focus was on the race of either woman.

The truth of the matter is that the earliest and best known entrepreneurial women of Oklahoma City were women of independence, strength, intelligence, and sometimes, bad luck. Despite her circumstances, her time, and her own personal challenges, Martha Fleming carved out a unique place in the annals of early day Oklahoma.  She was, in every sense of the word, one of a kind.



Friday, June 26, 2020

Hell's Grandchild: The Red Dog Saloon, OKC

Charles Bertrand Lewis (M. Quad).jpg

In 1911 a serial newspaper story carried mention of several mythical saloons. "Sandy Bent Hoke" by M. Quad, copyright 1911 by the American Literary Press was carried in several Oklahoma newspaper including the Capital Hill Press (Oklahoma County). "M.Quad" was a pseudonym of  Charles Bertrand Lewis (M Quad) (1842–1924).
In the series he names two saloons, The Red Dog Saloon and the Dead Shot Saloon.
They may have given inspiration in later days to local establishments made notorious. One in particular: The Red Dog Saloon.  (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937123/m1/5/zoom/?q= "Red Dog" "saloon"&resolution=1.5&lat=5002.197888175628&lon=734.8107253333612). 
In the 1960's and the following several decades a notorious establishment was a hot spot for partying, crime, drug use and violence in general. The Red Dog Saloon was primarily a hot party site and strip club.
For most of its early years the Red Dog was located at 7118 N. Western Avenue in Oklahoma City. In 1968, they were advertising for "Go Go Girls" aged 18-25, at $75 a week. In December of 1969, the saloon was locked and closed by local law enforcement agents.
By 1992 it was up and running again, and as reported in a Feb 1, 1992 issue of the Oklahoma Gayley, it was listed - on a scale of 1-10 with ten being the most desirable- as a 1 in the northwest area of Oklahoma City among establishments serving liqueur.
"Hell's Half Acre" was considered squashed by reformers in the early 1900's when most of the houses, dens and saloons were closed, restricted or recreated. The truth was that the raw and wild creature of vice simply learned how to function in polite socitety and lived on....and on....on on.


   
Oklahoma Gazette article from 2017-  https://www.okgazette.com/oklahoma/cover-story-red-dog-documentary-chronicles-a-childhood-spent-in-one-of-okcs-longest-running-strip-clubs/Content?oid=2981077

Documentary trailer:     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQiyG-M-Ioc

Friday, June 5, 2020

Ardmore and a Sad Tale: Vivia Gale aka Rose Welch 1894

Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 214, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1894 carries a sad story on its front page of a woman who committed suicide in east Ardmore.  She left behind a letter she had received from a brother in law that had 'blasted' her and the two letters she wrote to him and to her estranged husband.  Then, she laid down on a bed, placed a chloroform cloth over her face and died. She was known as Vivia Gale alias Rose Welch.

The newspaper alleged she was a fallen woman, who had been widely known the year before playing piano for a musical comedy troupe, but her letter indicate that perhaps more was going on in her life and that truly she was a victim of circumstances facing a woman on her  own.

Her brother in law was identified in the article and the letter as J.M. Barton of Iowa Park, Texas and her husband as John Gale of Butte, Montana.  A later article in another paper will identify him as "J.O. Gale of Spokane Falls, Washington."

The news writer was quick to point out that she was a fine example of womanhood and did not appear as many in that life but left the reader with the assurance she was indeed such a woman of ill repute.  Strangely, townsfolk, allegedly stepped forward to give her a decent burial but the second news article carrying that story does not say where she was buried or who may have shown the 'Christian charity' such an act required.  

It was a sad tale and one that may answer the questions of distant relatives of these individuals. Attempts to locate a grave for the woman have so far met with no success. The newspaper indicates she was buried in the Ardmore area but her grave may be unmarked.  If anyone knows more about this grave and these people, I would love to hear more. 

All in all it is a cautionary tale for all that forgiveness is the best gift we can give another human being and charity should be for everyone and not a select few..

Her haunting fnal words via her last letter was " my heart is breaking that I have been condemned without being given a hearing. Yours, Vivia."

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Hell's In Far Off Places

In 1900, in the Oklahoma State Capital newspaper of January 30 was an article on Rose Francis Blumpkin, Girl Gambler.  The 18-year old woman  in Dawson, Yukon Territory of Alaska, was playing the tables winning like a man and acting thus unwomanly.

Some associate her vaudevillian life with prostitution, others say she was just a drink and dance girl at a house in Dawson (or elsewhere) when she was between theater shows. What this article explains is she was daring, cagey and polished player.

"The other day she lost $3000 at...risky game called "craps." That same night she "beat the house" by no less than a sum of $5000."

This, the opinionated writer stressed, just could not be because, "When a man gambles he becomes as coldly metallic in his nervous system as the coin he covets. His nerves, in face, are nerves of steel.

When a woman gambles she becomes hysterically excitable in her nervous system. The eventual result is one of two things: she either commits suicide or is herself committed to a madhouse."

Apparently, the writer never hear of Poker Alice, Elenore Dumont, or Kitty LaRoy....

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Oklahoma City's First Female Entrepreneurs: Some Early Madam's

Most of the attention, deserved or not, in writings about the early days of "Hell's Half Acre"
went to Madam Annie Wynn Bailey aka "Big Ann" or "Big Annie."  There were lots of predecessors and competitors.  Here is a working list of some of the Madams and Working Girls found to date. Are these there real names?  Sometimes. Like many women in similar lives, they changed names and histories like some changed shoes. A woman might become someone new on leaving one location. Maybe as a way to start fresh, to hide, or pretend.

Some of the earliest papers are filled with one Mable Warren who ran a stable of saucy women who often took their parties out into the streets of "Hell" to the shock of nearby new citizens. One instance saw two women with two cowboy friends, the women in scanty clothes, and freely sharing bottles of liquer, shouting, cursing, and generally putting on quite a show for the people in a nearby hotel/boarding house seated on a balcony.

Ann Wynn Bailey does not show up in a police court report until 1895. The pages do contain many other women fined for operating a hose of prostitution or being an "inmate" of the same.

In 1898, a Lillian Day was fined for running a house of prostitution but no location was given.
The Vendome, Bunco Alley (24 1/2 W. Grand now Sheridan)  in Hell's Half Acre, was the most elite establishment with Brussels carpets and fine furnishings was run by Ethel, sometimes called Eva, Clopton. They also had a woman there known as "Sportive Lizzie."

In about 1890, most of the houses were moving out of "Hell" and going 'uptown' taking over W. 2nd (now Kerr) between Harvey and Hudson Streets. That area was called "Harlot's Lane" and many large houses did enthusiastic business there on both sides of the street: Etta Woods Creole Girls, The Arlington (an elegant established owned by Big Ann but run by Madame McDonald), Nina Truelove's place, a circus atmosphere prevailed at the building shaped like a ship called 'Noah's Ark' run by Big Liz aka Mary Belle Everhardt and sometimes Evans and Big Anne's Place 444 (once the Clopton Club) managed for her by Effie Fisher until she died by a mysterious assassin in 1903.

 In 1905, Jean (Julia) Lamonte, aka Madam Brentlinger was heading the "Red Star" at 431 W. 2nd (now Kerr).  She had come, with Big Anne, on the day of the run in 1889.

In 1906, Eva Ryan's house of prostitution was at 28 1/2 W. Grand when she was fined; Irene James was fined for operating a house but no address or name given in police court records Eva had been around a long time too and was apparently well known for offering wild entertatinment as well. 

At the same time Naomi Harris, Emma Bryan, Bernice Daniel, and Mary Mangold were fined for working in a bawdy house. That same year, it was recognized that one Ethel Preston was an 'inmate' of the Corn Exchange at 326 W. Grand, when one man shot and killed another over her favors.

In 1907, a 'high tone house' was being run in April by a "Mrs. Summers" at Broadway and Washington. The City Directory lists a widow Sara L. (Mrs. John) Summers at 129 W. Washington who may or may not be the same woman.

 In 1909, the inmates of a house at 31 W. Washington were fined...Mary Johnson, Nell Johnson, and Grace Davis.

There was also the Foss House at Washington and Robinson, south of Reno. Many of these streets were eradicated or renamed over time.
 

--(c) Marilyn A. Hudson

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

THE TRAGIC DEATH OF CORNELIUS VOORHIES (1915)

In February of 1915, an elderly recluse who owned a small farm near Jennings that was finally making some money for the first time because of the oil under it, made a trip to the bank in Maramac, Oklahoma. He collected about $200 dollars and then headed back home. Once there, two men waylaid him and ransacked his home, loaded him onto a wagon, perhaps nursing a head where one of the men had struck him and headed toward the nearby Cimarron.  The man's dog followed, barking and raising noise. The men shot it and tossed it into the river.  Soon after, the men stopped, walked the elderly man toward the river and killed him before shoving his body into the river.

Nearly a month later, after stories of his disappearance appeared in numerous newspapers in the region, a body was found just two miles south of Yale, Oklahoma.  Charles Cable found the body, reported it and soon Police Chief Byron was calling together in quest led by Justice Dixon.

Doctors Stark and Shortbaugh examined the remains and it was clear the man had been killed. There was a bullet hole to the back of the head. It soon became apparent the body belonged to the missing 72 year old man, Cornelius Voorhies, who had gone missing February 25, 1915.

There was little known about the elderly man, he had come into the Pawnee County area "in the early days", was apparently a bachelor, and was somewhat of a recluse on his small farm.

Evidence revealed he had drawn money from the bank at Maramec, a team known to belong to him had been left at a livery stable in Cushing, Oklahoma, and police had a description of the man who had left the team there.  They had a working theory that the day he withdrew money, or possible the next day, he had been robbed at his home, killed and then taken to the river, where his killer or killers had thrown the body into the river. They believed it had remained there in that place since the murder. Early remarks seem to indicate that the farm place looked disheveled but there had been no blood. That, coupled with the fact the body was found south of Yale, and the man's farm was far north along the river. Since the often bending course of the river is essentially to the east and south it meant the man had been thrown in the river closer to his home.

The remains were turned over to the Green and Combe Undertaking firm, prepared for burial and then it was noted they would be taken to Maramec.

Just how the case concluded is difficult to determine. Hobson counter sued in 2019 and an ex parte appeal by Rowe failed.

Federal census records provide some background on the victim. He was apparently the son of Isaac W. Voorhies and Salley Bozer Voorhies and had been born in Missouri in 1843/1844. His grave stone has the 1843 date. He can be found in Valley, Pawnee County, Oklahoma in 1910. In McElroy Twp., Pawnee, Oklahoma boarding with Frank and Rebecca Hoover. Note, this is also were Arthur Rowe is located. He can be found in Buchanan County, Missouri 1850, 1860, 1880.


In May 1916, the case came back to life with a convoluted story about a local "boy" who confessed to the murder while residing in Kansas City. Arthur Rowe, 32 was the son of a local Oklahoma farmer named A.C. (Alonzo Rowe). Some sources spell it as "Roe".  Rowe confessed he had lived in "terror for two years" because he had been the pawn of a stronger personality that had threatened him if he did not go along with some vague plan of vengeance against the old farmer. Rowe named the other man as Joe Hobson, of Kansas, as the actual murderer.

Rowe, however, had brushes with the law earlier in Oklahoma. He had, in fact, been charged with forging checks in October of 1915 and sent for two years to the penitentiary.

May 12, 1916, a Marshall was returning Rowe to Oklahoma and law officers were seeing Hobson on charges of murdering Cornelius Voorhies in February of 1915.

Pawnee and the surrounding areas, even as late as 1915, were 'in the neighborhood of hell' - a new hell created by the new wealth as useless oil was found to have a profitable market. In such times, cattle booms or oil booms, there are always those to whom the easy way to wealth had more appeal than effort, sacrifice, work and planning. For those people, no one, not even an elderly recluse of a man who troubled no one, would stand in their way.


THE BELLE OF THE CIMARRON : A POSSIBLE SOURCE FOR THE 'ROSE OF THE CIMARRON' LEGEND, SADIE MCCLOSKEY

The local legend was that shortly after the opening of the Sac and Fox lands was present in the Cushing and Ingalls, Oklahoma areas, a woman whose husband was killed. She went into or back to "business."  Reports were she was named Sadie  Comley McCloskey...
She went "into business" in the area, she opened and ran a gambling room in small Ingalls, and kept a couple of girls.  The outlaw element in the area liked to visit the small communities of Ripley, Ingalls, Cushing and elsewhere to drink, game, visit the ladies, and on more than one occasion they attended church fundraising suppers or community events. 

Now along with the outlaw groups better known - the Daltons, the Doolin's and the Dunns - there was a constantly shifting association of small-town bad guys and their hangeron's.  They were not above claiming the glory for some criminal activity to enhance their 'street cred' of that time period.

One bad guy was known as "Doc Stutzman" and he was often accompanied by his "wife." Now, this women seems to have changed names and appearance on more than one occasion. A local in the Cushing area was named Billy Johnson and he had a saloon with hardcore and wild regulars. One was "Doc" and it was alleged Doc's wife was named "Sadie McCloskey" (Young Cushing in Oklahoma Territory, pg. 37).

The time frame, the locales, and the descriptions of this woman at one point make her a likely candidate for the legend of the "Rose of the Cimarron" label that was slapped on to the most likely innocent young sister of the Dunn brothers.  

She was probably also responsible for some of the things people laid at the feet of Flora Quick Mundis aka "Tom King" and possible other women of that day.

In the autobiography of ex-cowboy and Rough Rider, Billy McGinty, he indicated "Sadie" wore a white hat, cowboy style, rode astride instead of side-saddle and was a "fine looking woman." (Oklahoma Rough Rider; Billy McGinty's own story. McGinty, Billy. Ed. by Jim Fulbright and Albert Stehno. Norman, Ok: U. of Oklahoma Press, 2008)

Some descriptions indicate she had a fine pair of pale horses pulling a fancy buggy.
She loved big hats with long feathers and trimmings. Sallie, Sadie Comley aka McCloskey, was "widow of a BAR X cowboy killed right after the Sac and Fox Land " opening September 22, 1891. It was said she had a "parlor" with 304 girls working in Ingalls.  Early maps of Ingalls do indicate the location of such a house.  

One year after the opening of the Sac and Fox lands, September 1, 1892, was the day of the Battle of Ingalls, according to Glenn Shirley's West of Hell's Fringe (pg.151,157), on that day outlaw Bittercreek left a card game and headed to the small building where "said Comley" was located - where she kept her "girls."

She ran two-three women from a gambling hall at Ingalls prior to 1893. She was later in the company of 'Doc Stutzman" and was called "Sadie McCloskey" but may have adopted several names including "Stella", "Daisy", and "Bertha."

In fading memories, confused accounts, and simple make believe - this woman was no doubt the source of the added layers of "information" related to the horse thief TOM KING aka Flora Quick Mundis, the more daring aspects of the "LITTLE BRITCHES" and "CATTLE ANNIE" escapades, and the relationships with members of the DOOLIN GANG aka Wild Bunch, and the DUNN group later. 

There is evidence of confusion in the later memoirs and interviews of some famous ex-U.S. Deputy Marshalls operating in the areas for the time period. They confused dates, places, and accounts but their words were accepted as gospel and used by writers - and even historians - without regard to validating the information. 

Charles Colcord, in his biography, reports accompanying a woman to a Massachusetts Reformatory. The person and the dates do not match his known legal duties at the time. 

Reporters hot and hungry for a good story are revealed to have made up, added on, and strongly embellished accounts of all events.  These included accounts of female outlaws where the added layer of sexual innuendo was strongly added to the whole account. Unfortunately, all of these elements combined to produce several decades of incorrect accounts and false representations of everyone. 


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