Showing posts with label City Hall War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City Hall War. Show all posts

January 21, 2022

Artifact #96: Soapy Smith political cartoon in the National Populist, March 24, 1894

Soapy Smith leading the pack
Artifact #96-Front Page, Part 1
National Populist
March 24, 1894
Jeff Smith collection

(Click image to enlarge)



 
amblers, Thugs, Murders and Rogues.
"The alliance of the gamblers and bunco men with the old Fire and Police Board is not a pleasant thing to contemplate. It has come to a pretty pass if the interests of the city and the lives and property of citizens can't be protected without the assistance of such men."
 
 
Soapy Smith obtained a copy of the National Populist and saved it with all the newspapers, letters and documents he saved, much like a personal scrapbook. 
 
The March 24, 1894 issue of the National Populist had a political cartoon right on the front cover. Soapy is at the front of the throng, "Soapy" scrawled across his coat. He is carrying two kegs that read, Dynamite." He leads the Committee of Safety, made up of Gambler's, Thugs, Murderers and Rogues. Others following Soapy are figures emblazoned with "Money," "Banker," "Politician," "Hobo," and "Gambler." Three signs are being carried by the followers; "Committee of Safety," "Governors have no power which gamblers need respect," and "We are a committee of Safety too."  
 
 
Soapy Smith leading the pack
Artifact #96-Front Page, Part 2
National Populist
March 24, 1894
Jeff Smith collection
 
(Click image to enlarge)
 
 
I cannot find another surviving copy of this newspaper, and this issue is falling apart, so it's impossible at this time to report on missing sections. 
     The left-hand column one is titled, MULLINS BARNES [the new city commissioners appointed by Governor Davis Waite]. Subtitles include, "The Supreme Court has Rendered a Decision," and,  "AWFUL COMMISSIONERS." The article speaks of the Governors orders to send in the National Guard. 
     The second column is titled, THE COXEY ARMY. The "On to Washington" Movement Growing Daily. This is not related to the Denver City Hall War, but is directly related to Soapy, as he wrote a well-circulated, published piece on August 26, 1893, called, "MARCH ON! Let The Workingmen Go Straight To The National Capitol" that has plenty of circumstantial evidence that it gave Jacob Coxey (Coxey's Army) the idea to march to Washington D.C., seven months later, in March 1894.
     The right-hand column six is titled, A WORD OF CENSURE - Thugs Aid a So-Called Committee of Safety. It speaks of men concerned with the safety of Denver, while also supporting those barricading inside city hall. The remaining pages of the newspaper regard other issues.
 
 
Soapy Smith leading the pack
Artifact #96-Page 2, Part 1
National Populist
March 24, 1894
Jeff Smith collection

(Click image to enlarge)
 
 
Soapy Smith leading the pack
Artifact #96-Page 2, Part 2
National Populist
March 24, 1894
Jeff Smith collection

 
(Click image to enlarge)
 
 
THE CITY HALL WAR
 
 
     Denver was well known, though no more than Chicago, for its saloons with their risqué tableaus and saloon girls, houses of prostitution, “sure thing” cons, other frauds, and, though illegal, plentiful games of chance. Also well known was that “corruption, disorganization, and poor leadership” persisted in the police department. Governor Davis H. Waite, known as "Blood to the bridles," chose evil Denver to begin his reform of Colorado.
     On Wednesday, March 7, 1894 the governor fired police and fire commissioners, Martin and Orr for malfeasance and neglect, and on the next day, he named their replacements: Dennis Mullins as fire commissioner and Samuel D. Barnes as police commissioner. The reaction was broad and immediate. Martin and Orr refused to vacate their offices. The issue went before the court and a settlement could not be reached that favored Governor Wait, so on March 14 he ordered out the Colorado National Guard.
     News on the evening of March 14 that the militia was marching on Denver triggered a call to arms. Policemen, firemen, politicians, and sheriff’s deputies were ordered to report for duty, and for the rest of the night, they came to the castle-like city hall at the northwest corner of Larimer and Fourteenth streets. The call was also heard beyond the rank-in-file of city employees. Generally accepted was that Waite’s appointees were ready to ban, permanently, all gambling in the city. This and that the new commissioners would be installed by force provoked the ire of the wagering community. Upwards of two hundred gamblers, bunco men, and “hard cases” came forward to be commissioned as deputy sheriffs and special police. To all of the assembling combatants, the governor threatened their world order, their loyalties, and, in such dire economic times, their livelihoods. They were prepared to fight, and Denver City Hall was the fort they chose to defend.
     The Denver Republican reported that “Jeff Smith arrived at the head of the guerrilla contingent, and men wearing red badges bearing the words, ‘Special Police,’ began to grow numerous in the corridor.”
     By 11 a.m., the streets were “blockaded with a seething mass” of spectators. Police Chief Stone appeared at one point to make a public statement:
We will hold the city hall against all attacks from the outside, if it takes dynamite to do it…. We have 110 men on duty, and they will be here as long as they are needed. They are all loyal men, and have been too long in the service to permit anyone to intimidate them. We are prepared for any emergency, and we will risk everything to protect the property which the citizens and tax-payers have entrusted to our care. No interference with the fire department will be permitted. The city hall will not be surrendered while the courts are dealing with the city. If the governor wants blood to the bridles we will give it to him; but he can’t have the city hall. (1)
The Denver Republican described the defensive force:
The solid stone building was now an arsenal and manned from the basement to the tower above the roof by armed men. 
     In the basement were about 150 policemen, deputy sheriffs and special policemen. Every entrance was barricaded … by armed men. On the floor above 42 uniformed policemen faced the front door in close array, the front rank men to the number of 30 having rifles or shotguns. Flanking these were about 50 deputy sheriffs and specials [special police] carrying clubs and revolvers. 
     On the second floor the Fire and Police board rooms, corridors and stairways were guarded by armed men. …
     In the room to the east of the building on the third floor was the bomb brigade with their store of giant powder, dynamite, fuses and caps. The explosives were all ready to be hurled through the windows, and men accustomed to the handling of such missiles stood ready to use them. [This is Soapy and his men]
     A floor higher [were] knots of sharpshooters—men who have made records with the rifle and revolver—waited silently to pick off the gunners and militia officers at the first overt act. … But this was not all. Even the tower above the roof had its quota of riflemen ready to open fire at the first hostile movement of the state troops. (2)
After a tense period of waiting,
     A delegation arrived with a message from the governor, stating that if the city hall was not vacated within thirty minutes orders would be sent to the troops to bombard the building with cannon balls. This created much excitement among the mob and much activity among the besieged garrison. 
     Jeff Smith and five others climbed upstairs into the third story and took up places at two windows. They took ready-to-fling stacks of giant powder and dynamite torpedoes [to throw] into the street as soon as the militia menaced the civic citadel. (3)
Various other sources report that Jeff, wearing two .45 caliber revolvers, stood with a contingent of his men, at the ready with a
large quantity of dynamite. The men had all been sworn to defend the building against the attack of the militia and the most desperate and disreputable characters in the city had been employed to explode the dynamite without regard to the consequences…. The explosives were fitted with fuses and detonating caps, and were to be hurled into the midst of the state troops if they approached the hall too closely. (4)
The Denver Times reported how at one point Jeff leaned out, apparently with dynamite in hand, and called down to soldiers near the city hall perimeter.
Say, you guys had better make a sneak. I've got enough of the stuff to send us all to hell, and as I am nearer to heaven than any of you, I'll not be the first to die. (5)
The standoff between the heavily armed, determined forces was intense, but cooler heads prevailed and no shots were ever fired. The city powers, the police and the Denver underworld saw great bravery in Soapy Smith, the Denver Mercury calling his a brave hero, adding,
Col. Jeff Smith is called the king gambler, “Soapy,” a “sure thing” and God only knows what, by a gang of parasites who are no good on earth; but gambler as he is, he exhibited more manhood in standing by the courts and peace officers than nineteenth twentieth’s of those moral pulpit-pounding ministers who are always howling against the saloons and club rooms. 
     People who believe in giving justice to whom justice is due, will now please admit that Col. Jefferson R. Smith has established the undisputed right to be called one of Denver’s most reliable citizens. And that’s what he is. (6)
     The City Hall War received national attention, and people wanted to know more. On March 19 when the Colorado Washington delegation was asked about it, Jeff’s old neighbor and former lawyer Congressman Lafe Pence was willing to speak up: 
 
“SOAPY” SMITH. 
Who the Leader of the Denver Opponents to Governor Waite Is. 
 
Washington, March 20.—Governor Waite of Colorado and his recent actions form a common topic of current gossip. No one is better able to talk of Colorado matters than that brilliant young representative, Lafe Pence. He told a good story of "Soapy” Smith, whose recent exploits in Denver at the head of the mob is much talked of. “He is one of the greatest characters in the west,” said Mr. Pence. “He is probably not over 30 years of age, and by no means impressive in his build. He is, however, the king of the lawless element in Denver. If Smith and four men were in the city hall tower and five dynamite bombs were thrown into the militia, the world would naturally say that Smith and the other four men each threw one. But I am willing to bet that if the bombs had been thrown and Smith had been indicted, each of his four companions would have sworn that Smith begged them not to throw a single bomb, and that in the scuffle one of the men threw two, which would account for the five. You never knew anyone to have such power. He never lets one of his followers go hungry if he has a dollar in his pocket, and they know it. (7)
Soapy was seen as a man who would risk his life for his allies in political office. He was a man they could trust. But the rest of Colorado saw that Denver was run by corruption and criminals. Though Soapy's reign prospered for another 1-1/2 years, there are some historians that mark the City Hall Wall as the turning point of Soapy's empire in Denver.
 
 
 
Soapy Smith leading the pack
Artifact #96-Page 3, Bottom
National Populist
March 24, 1894
(The top portion of this page is missing)
Jeff Smith collection
 
 (Click image to enlarge)
 
 
Soapy Smith leading the pack
Artifact #96-Page 4, Bottom
National Populist
March 24, 1894
(The top portion of this page is missing)
Jeff Smith collection
 
 (Click image to enlarge)
 
 
 
NOTES:
(1) Decatur Daily Republican 03/16/1894.
(2) Denver Republican 03/16/1894.
(3) IBID.
(4) IBID.
(5) Denver Times 08/01/1898.
(6) Newspaper clipping of unknown origin regarding story in The Denver Mercury, March (unknown date) 1894.
(7) Register 03/23/1894
 
 
 




 









City Hall War
Oct 20, 2013 










City Hall War: pages 3, 59, 292, 294, 298, 310, 312, 321, 328-29, 334, 359, 379, 390, 594.





"If, after the first twenty minutes, you don't know who the sucker at the table is, it's you."
—author unknown










October 20, 2013

History as it wasn't. A steampunk vision of Soapy Smith and the Denver City Hall War.








 
esterday, while researching for my post on the Denver City Hall War, published October 18, 2013, I accidentally came across a Soapy Smith steampunk story. The story just so happens to center on the City Hall War. There is no author listed and I wrote the site, but have yet to receive a reply. It is published as a page of the main website, Obsidian Portal, and called The Story is the Game/The Weird West, which they advertise "This is the Wild West as it wasn’t, with a heavy dose of fantasy and steampunk." The site invites members to invent history and this one author chose Soapy and the City Hall War. Soapy even has his own biography page on this site. The author of this piece appears to have done a little research Soapy, probably on my website or from my book, Alias Soapy Smith. I found it very entertaining. Below is the complete story as published. Put a little steam in your day.

Denver City Hall War

A Foolproof Plan

Having agreed to both the Governor’s plan to take down Denver kingpin Soapy Smith and Soapy’s plan to take down Governor Waite, the heroes need to find some way out of their predicament. Fortunately, Vincent has a cunning plan.
      The following morning, June 15, after taking in breakfast at Mrs. Alford’s, the party treks over to the Governor’s office, where they lay their cards on the table: Soapy has seen through the Governor’s ruse and wants them to take one of his items for use in a spell. Governor Waite doesn’t believe in sorcery, but he’s troubled by the leak of his plan. Vincent then urges the Governor to mobilize the militia and have them surround City Hall. This escalation will keep Soapy’s attention while the heroes put into effect the rest of their plan. Governor Waite declares martial law in Denver and prepares to join his troops.
      The heroes then hurry back to the Tivoli Club. Word of the escalation has spread fast (thanks to Denver’s telephone system) and the place is practically deserted. The heroes convince Soapy’s remaining men that they need to see him immediately. They are taken over to the Clubs room, where Soapy is going over things with his top lieutenant Fatty Gray and his brother Bascomb Smith.
      The heroes convince Soapy that they need to speak with him alone. Once that happens, Vincent whips out the Mnemomizer before his big mouth foils the plan. Successfully operating the device, Vincent blanks Soapy’s memory and leaves him highly suggestible, at which point the party asks about the location of Soapy’s illicit records. The records are inside the frame of a picture in Soapy’s office next door. Jack also wisely asks if there are any surprises and Soapy warns them about a bomb in the desk. Jack immediately takes the tin ID chip that will keep the bomb from going off. Hightower then clocks Soapy and ties him up.
      Realizing that they won’t be able to talk or sneak their way past the two guards downstairs, Vincent begins to assemble two makeshift stun grenades. Low on spare parts, he has to dismantle the room’s light fixtures and in the process finds a tiny listening device shaped like a beetle.
      After they get past the guards, Vincent and Hightower carry the unconscious Soapy towards City Hall, while Argent and Jack swing by Soapy’s office. There they find Bascomb and another henchman going over the floor plans of the city building.
      Argent overcomes Bascomb’s initial suspicions and convinces him to let them into Soapy’s office, where Jack finds the scrapbook hidden in the false back of a picture of Soapy’s family. The book contains newspaper clippings of Soapy’s exploits, as well as records of Soapy’s bribes to local officials. It also contains references to his dealings with someone called “Wizzie,” including the sale of around 50 Cavalry uniforms. As they leave, Bascomb lets them know that most of Soapy’s men are holed up in City Hall with at least one case of dynamite.
      The party reunites and approaches City Hall, which is now surrounded by militia who’ve deployed two Gatling guns and a small cannon. A hundred or so Denver Police Officers have taken up defensive positions outside the building, while more gunmen can be seen through the windows. The heroes are taken to the command post, where they present Soapy and the evidence to the Governor.

Coyote Angry

      They are interrupted by the arrival of Thomas Edison, who drives an industrial load lifter between the soldiers and the police. He urges the Governor to peacefully resolve the situation by taking it to the Supreme Court. When Edison learns of Soapy’s arrest, he speaks to the heroes privately. The bug they found was his, planted by his technicians as they “repaired” the Tivoli Club’s wiring. While there, Edison’s men suspected that there was a hidden room behind the janitor’s closet. Edison speculates that this is the site of a power source that fuels Soapy’s ability to influence people.
      The heroes return to the now-deserted Tivoli Club to investigate. Unable to find the hidden trigger for the entrance to the secret room, Hightower and Argent just bash in the back wall of the janitor’s closet, which does the trick. Inside, they find a circular room much larger than the space it occupies on the second floor. It is decorated everywhere with paintings of coyotes, has a strange red symbol painted on the floor, and at the far end has an altar with a pile of soap bars including one wrapped in a hundred dollar bill. Jack recognizes the room as a shrine to the trickster spirit Coyote, drawing its energy from the deceit taking place all around it in the rigged casino.
      After talking Jack out of burning the place down, Hightower gets some mops and buckets and tries to wash the paint off without offending Coyote. However, disrupting the symbol on the floor causes the pile of soap bars to assemble itself into a man-sized Soap Golem. Vincent’s flamethrower is only semi-effective, while the water from the buckets has no impact. A well-placed shot from Hightower, however, pierces the hundred dollar bill and breaks the spell animating the golem. All supernatural energy drains from the room and the heroes get out before it shrinks back to its proper size.

I Need You For The U.S. Secret Service

      After breaking Soapy’s mystical power source, the heroes go to Edison’s townhouse, where he introduces them to “Sam,” an agent with the U.S. Secret Service. Sam has received Col. Mackenzie’s report on the Cheyenne incidents, which link the Pinkerton Detectives and reclusive industrialist Darius Hellstromme to the Wizard. Both the Pinkertons and Hellstromme are based out of Salt Lake City, the site of numerous sightings of the Wizard’s top lieutenant, the Dark Woman.
      Sam says that the Secret Service has had difficulty inserting agents into Deseret, but he thinks the heroes will have an easier time of it. He asks them to cross the Rocky Mountains and take the Bee Line railroad from the town of Defiance, CO to a stop just outside of Salt Lake, known as the Junkyard. Its the site of Hellstromme’s massive factories and one of the few places a Gentile won’t stand out. They are to confront the Pinkertons and Hellstromme and search for any evidence on the Wizard’s identity. In return, they will be “handsomely rewarded” by the U.S. government.
      The heroes accept the offer and then spend the rest of the afternoon and evening shopping for equipment. By the time they return to Mrs. Alford’s, it has grown dark. Outside the boarding house, they are accosted by some toughs that seem to be under the influence of the Hateful Thing. Hightower manages to talk them down by assuring them that the party will be out at dawn tomorrow.

Escape From Denver

      Inside, however, a new crisis is awaiting them. Ed Chase, an influential local gambler and owner of the Palace Theater urgently needs to speak with the heroes. Chase runs an honest casino, but he explains that he also operates a safehouse for those in need. He is currently sheltering a pregnant young woman named Maria, who was married to a Union Blue Railroad enforcer gunned down by Central Rail thugs. A Central posse is in town looking to keep her from testifying about the murder, while a Union Blue squad is gunning for her to prevent her from revealing any company secrets. Chase has lined up an escape plan for her, but for it to work he needs her on the South Platte Ferry by 8:10 a.m. tomorrow. Unfortunately, Soapy had hired all the local gunhands and thanks to the heroes, they’re all in jail. So now he has to turn to the party at the last minute.
      Chase runs down some of the background on the Great Railroads: they are powerful, ruthless companies that have been waging their own private war against each other for 15 years. Union Blue’s founder, Dr. Thomas Durant, has close ties with the War Department, allowing him to equip his goons with military grade heavy weapons. Central Rail, meanwhile, has fallen under the sway of a cabal of hexslingers known as the Wichita Witches. Neither group should be tangled with lightly.
      Chase says he’s doing this out of charity but offers to pay the heroes. Hightower declines for the group, noting it’s on their way out anyway. The party reviews the potential routes to the Ferry and decide to try smuggling Maria through the alleyway behind the Palace Theater while Jack attempts to divert attention by driving the stagecoach down 17th Street. Unfortunately, the party isn’t able to slip out without being noticed and they are ambushed by a Union Blue squad armed with a small cannon. In the ensuing firefight, Vincent commandeers an Industrial Load Lifter and uses it to smash the cannon and the rail warriors’ makeshift barricade.
      At the ferry, Hightower, Jack and Maria walk into a trap laid by the Central Rail team, whose witch had foreseen their plan. Maria reveals that her “pregnant” belly was actually concealing a pair of Colt Peacemakers. She and the witch badly wound one another. In the bloody firefight that follows, several heroes are wounded but only one Central thug manages to escape. After treating Maria with the Heal-o-tron 9000, the party takes her out to the middle of the river on a ferry. She orders them to stop midway, just in time for her ride to show up—an auto-gyro fitted with floatation devices. Maria thanks the heroes for their help and then climbs aboard the aircraft, which soars up and then west.
      As a result of their actions over the past three days, the PCs have become folk heroes in Denver, where they will always find a helping hand.
 



"The challenge of history is to recover the past and introduce it to the present."
—David Thelen



OCTOBER 20


1774: The Continental Congress passes a proclamation that citizens "discountenance and discourage all horse racing and all kinds of gaming, cock fighting, exhibitions of shows, plays and other expensive diversions and entertainment."

1803: The U.S. Senate approves the Louisiana Purchase.

1818: The U.S. and Great Britain establish the 49th parallel boundary between the U.S. and Canada.

1870: The town site of Phoenix, Arizona Territory is established.

1871: Bad man “Coal Oil” Jimmy and two others rob a stage near Vermeho, New Mexico Territory.

1873: Phineus. T. Barnum opens his Hippodrome in New York City.

1877: Dick Brewer, Charles Bowdre, and Doc Skurlock arrive in Las Cruces, New Mexico Territory with arrest warrants for Jesse Evans and his gang.

1880: Charles Earl Bowles alias “Black Bart” holds up the Redding, California-Roseburg, Oregon stage 1 mile from the Oregon state line.

1889: Oil is discovered in Douglas, Wyoming.

1890: General Nelson Miles recommends that the U.S. government turn its abandoned forts and military posts into schools or reservations.

1892: The city of Chicago dedicates the World's Columbian Exposition. Soapy Smith took his wife in October 1893.

1903: A Joint Commission made up of Great Britain and the U.S. rules in favor of the U.S. concerning a dispute over the boundary line between Canada and the District of Alaska. The U.S. legally gains the ports along the coast of southeast Alaska that it already possessed.




October 18, 2013

Denver City Hall War special police ribbon, 1894.

Special Police ribbon
Could this be from the Denver City Hall War?
Jeff Smith collection
(Click image to enlarge)








 
he Denver City Hall War of March 1894 was the defining moment in which Soapy Smith showed that he was ready and willing to put his very life on the line to support the corrupt Denver city officials in their time of need, during the armed confrontation between the state militia and the regular and deputized men of the Denver police and sheriff’s departments. While it is true that he needed them as much as they needed him, at this moment, he could have easily abandoned the very real and dangerous standoff, as most men might have done in his position. He chose to stay and fight.



(Click image to enlarge)

A cartoon depicting the event appeared on the front page of the National Populist newspaper. In it, Jeff carries two kegs of dynamite at the head of a “Committee of Safety,” marching to city hall. Following him was a parade of gamblers, bankers, brokers, politicians, and hobos carrying signs. One reads, “Governors have no power which gamblers need respect.” The Denver Republican reported that “Jeff Smith arrived at the head of the guerrilla contingent, and men wearing red badges bearing the words, ‘Special Police,’ began to grow numerous in the corridor.” (see red badge at top of page)


 (Click image to enlarge)


The City Hall War received national attention, and people wanted to know more. On March 19 when the Colorado Washington delegation was asked about it, Jeff’s old neighbor and former lawyer Congressman Lafe Pence was willing to speak up:

“SOAPY” SMITH.
Who the Leader of the Denver Opponents to Governor Waite Is. 

Washington, March 20.—Governor Waite of Colorado and his recent actions form a common topic of current gossip. No one is better able to talk of Colorado matters than that brilliant young representative, Lafe Pence. He told a good story of "Soapy” Smith, whose recent exploits in Denver at the head of the mob is much talked of. “He is one of the greatest characters in the west,” said Mr. Pence. “He is probably not over 30 years of age, and by no means impressive in his build. He is, however, the king of the lawless element in Denver. If Smith and four men were in the city hall tower and five dynamite bombs were thrown into the militia, the world would naturally say that Smith and the other four men each threw one. But I am willing to bet that if the bombs had been thrown and Smith had been indicted, each of his four companions would have sworn that Smith begged them not to throw a single bomb, and that in the scuffle one of the men threw two, which would account for the five. You never knew anyone to have such power. He never lets one of his followers go hungry if he has a dollar in his pocket, and they know it.Register 03/23/1894. Jeff had enjoyed power and authority during the day-long City Hall War as the leader of a company of special policemen and later as a deputy sheriff. As for Jeff, the Denver City Hall War had brought him greatness and disaster. He proved to friends and peers that he was a leader of men, ready to lay down his life for a cause. That high point, though, had been the beginning of the end of gang rule as it had been in the city’s government. New powers were emerging, including expanding public utility companies. With these edging into the main stream and Jeff was feeling his fit with Denver becoming uncomfortably tight. 


Details on the Denver City Hall War can be found in chapter 12 of my book, Alias Soapy Smith. There are a couple of links below on the blog which have some information as well.



 








City Hall War
March 14, 2011
March 17, 2011










City Hall War: pages 3, 59, 292, 294, 298, 310, 312, 321,328-29, 334, 359, 379, 390, 594.





"Those who cannot remember the past, are condemned to repeat it. "
—George Santayana, The Life of Reason, 1905.



OCTOBER 18

1763: It is reported in the Boston Gazette that the first piano had been built in the U.S. by John Harris, who named it the spinet.

1789: Alexander Hamilton negotiates and secures the first loan for the United States. The Temporary Loan of 1789 is repaid on June 8, 1790 at the sum of $191,608.81.

1793: U.S. President George Washington lays the actual cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol.

1830: “Tom Thumb," the first locomotive built in America, races a horse on a nine-mile course. The horse won when the locomotive had some mechanical difficulties.

1850: The Fugitive Slave Act is enacted by the U.S. Congress. The act allows slave owners to claim slaves that had escaped into other states.

1851: The New York Times is published.

1861: Construction of the transcontinental telegraph from Missouri reaches Salt Lake City, Utah. Brigham Young sends a telegram to President Lincoln.

1867: Alaska is formally transferred to the U.S. from Russia.

1868: The 10th Cavalry kills 10 Indians in a battle at Beaver Creek, Kansas.

1868: Vigilantes hang 4 and shoot 2 in Laramie, Wyoming Territory.

1871: 600 kegs of gunpowder explode inside a freight car for the Colorado Central Railroad, 6 miles outside of Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory. No deaths or injuries are reported.

1877: Outlaw Sam Bass and his men rob a Union Pacific train at Big Springs, Nebraska, escaping with $60,000 in gold coin. They will be unsuccessfully tracked by Charles Bassett and Bat Masterson. Soapy Smith will later witness the shooting death of Sam Bass in Round Rock, Texas.

1877: Bad man Jesse Evans and his sons steal horses belonging to John Tunstall, Alexander McSween, and Dick Brewer at the Brewer Ranch in New Mexico Territory.

1884: The Black Canyon stage is robbed in Arizona Territory.

1886: Eight Apache Indians surrender to Captain Cooper in the Black River Mountains, Arizona Territory.

1891: Harriet Maxwell Converse became the first white woman to ever be named chief of an Indian tribe. The tribe is the Six Nations Tribe at Towanda Reservation in New York.

1895: Daniel David Palmer gives the first chiropractic adjustment.





September 15, 2012

Denver Behind Bars: a book review.








enver Behind Bars
by Lenny Ortiz





Denver Behind Bars: The History of the Denver Sheriff Department and Denver’s Jail System 1858-1956
Author: Lenny Ortiz
Paperback: 234 pages
Publisher: Aventine Press
Date published: 2004
Illustrated: 51 historic photographs
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1-59330-232-0
Retail price: $15.95
Purchase on Amazon


      I found Denver Behind Bars by Lenny Ortiz to be an invaluable history of the Colorado correctional system and the office of the sheriff, the oldest officer of the law in recorded history. The book covers not only the work related conditions and hardships of the jail guard, but those of the prisoner as well. To my personal preference much of the history concerns Colorado’s capitol of Denver and its hectic quest in building a safe, humane, and profitable prison framework to protect the citizens, the guards, and the prisoners.
      Lenny Ortiz is a native of Colorado, who spent 20 years employed as a sheriff in the detention centers of Colorado. In that capacity he became a published historian and collector of Colorado sheriff and prison history. His book is an honest hard look at the American correctional system and its history. Extremely thorough, it is a detail history of the Colorado sheriffs, jail and prison system from the earliest years to the present day. I learned a lot about the jail process that I had not known previously and just one read through has helped my own research on the criminal underworld of Denver, and I’m certain this book will continue to aid my work for many years to come.
      One might not think that a book on Colorado's prison history would be all that exciting but the author takes the reader on a very interesting history of imprisoning law breakers and wrong doers as far back as Biblical times, on up to the present day. Interesting to note that the American prison system in the 1840s held a mere 4,000 inmates, however, by 1870 that number grew to over 70,000, an astronomical number for that era. That number dropped to 57,000 by 1900. Another interesting note I found fascinating is that many prisons in the United States, including Alcatraz, Folsom, and San Quentin, were built by the prisoners themselves?
      My personal interest for this book relates to Denver's famed underworld crime boss, Soapy Smith and his corps of bunco men who knew the cells in the city intimately. Although Soapy is only mentioned in passing, familiar names associated with him, discussed in the book include famous Denverites such as Sam Howe, Frank Smith, Charles Linton, Bat Masterson, John “Doc” Holiday, Henry Brady, and William Burchinell. Familiar places include the Canon City Penitentiary, the Denver court house, the Denver city hall, the Palace Theater, and the Euclid Hall police station. There’s even a section on the 1894 City Hall War. The history of the Euclid Hall intrigued me as I had visited the place several times in the 1980s and 1990s. Located on 14th street across from where city hall once stood, Euclid Hall still stands. When I visited the location it was a restaurant and bar, aptly named, Soapy Smith’s Eagle Bar. However, until I read Denver Behind Bars, I did not know that it was once a police station with jail cells in the basement where surely Soapy and members of the Soap Gang were reluctant, even if only temporary, residents.
      For me, well researched books like Denver Behind Bars tend to divulge all kinds of new information that fill in gaps that complete some of the mysteries regarding Soapy Smith, that I would most likely have never found on my own; For instance, when Soapy was in Skagway, Alaska one of his last, well-known quotes partially came from the bible; “The way of the transgressor is hard.” Soapy added, “to quit” at the end of the sentence to make it uniquely his, but where did he come across the original bible verse? It is very possible that he learned it as a young boy in Georgia, but he could have also come across the quote while in jail. In his book, author Lenny Ortiz discloses that the passage was prominently framed on the jailors office wall of the Denver city jail located in the Butterick Meat market until 1884 when the jail was relocated. Most likely, but unknown, is the probability that the framed bible quote again adorned another jail office wall. 
      The book is laced with 51 rare historic photographs.
      Some of the tantalizing sub-titles and subjects in the book include,
The Sheriff and His Deputies
Sheriff and Jail Facts
The History of Corrections and the Sheriff
The Colorado and Denver Sheriff
Early Law Enforcement
Denver’s First Criminal Trial
Chain Gang and the Ball and Chain
Denver’s First Murder Trials
Vigilance Committees
First Jail Break
Denver Marshal’s Office
Denver Police Corps
The Turkey War
City Jailers
Doc Holiday in Denver
Bat Masterson in Denver
First Female Prisoner
The First Escape
The Chinese Riots
Kids in Jail
Denver’s First Paddy Wagon
Denver’s One Man Jail
Denver’s First Female Deputy Sheriff
and many more.

      The only nugatory point is that the book has no index. If your research involves the history of Colorado's jail system and the sheriffs I very strongly recommend this fine work. It has already found a special place of honor on my bookshelf.

 


"He owns the town. A world of meaning is contained in that expression. He has it to do with it what he will in so far as all professional swindling and stealing is concerned. Denver may not be aware of this interesting fact but it is none the less true. The city is absolutely under the control of this prince of knaves, and there is not a confidence man, a sneak thief, or any other kind of a parasite upon the public who does not pursue his avocation under license from the man who has become great through the power vested in him by those whose sworn duty it is to administer the laws without fear or favor."
Rocky Mountain News. July 29, 1889.