T H E S I N S O F N E W Y O R K
                     As  "Exposed" by the Police Gazette
                            By:   Edward  Van  Emery

                                       P A R T   I
             THE ORIGINAL POLICE GAZETTE  (1845)

                                      Chapter  1
                            The Moralizing Muckraker

                                                I

"In this Christian age,
'Tis strange, you'll engage,
When everything's doing high crimes to assuage,
That the direst offenses continue to rage;
That fibbing and fobbing,
and thieving and robbing,
The foulest maltreating,
And forging and lifting,
and wickedly shifting
The goods that belong to another away,
Are the dark misdemeanors of every day."

      Dark and sinful, indeed, were the ways of the city of New York in the
Forties. The poet of the period from whom we have just quoted had much
material for his nimble fancy, which touched on doings even more fell and
varied than those referred to in his next two lines:

"And then, too, the scrapes of seductions and rapes,
And foulest of crimes in the foulest of shapes."

      Only shortly before this rhythmic catalogue of crime had been accorded
the majesty of print by the National Police Gazette, the new Halls of
Justice, which soon came to be known as the Tombs Prison, had raised their
somber heights.

1)    THE  TOMBS  PRISON  INCIDENT

      The gibbet had already been erected for the third time in
the prison yard, and the cells had been the scene of a combined marriage,
honeymoon and tragic suicide; an  incident enthralling in drama and romance.
The world, indeed, had not yet ceased talking of the final hours upon this
earth, of John C. Colt, brother of the inventor of the revolver, who after a
long legal battle that carried through one court after another and a lavish
expenditure of money, had been sentenced to pay the penalty for the murder
of Samuel Adams.

      Caroline Henshaw, although not married to Colt, was during his
incarceration, a constant visitor to the Tombs. It was the doomed man's
desire to marry her before he was hanged, and the marriage ceremony was
performed at noon of the fatal day, the time of execution having been fixed
for four hours later.
      The bride was accompanied by Colt's brother and inappropriately enough
by John Howard Payne, author and composer of "Home Sweet Home." The Rev. Mr.
Anthon performed the ceremony. By law the mistress became the wife
just in time to become the widow. The marriage took place in the presence of
David Graham, Robert Emmett, Justice Merritt, John Howard Payne, and the
brother of the doomed man.  After it was over the bride and groom were
allowed to be alone one hour. And after this brief honeymoon the wife
departed and Colt requested to be alone.
      Just as the sheriff was about to intrude upon the prisoner's
privacy to summon him to the gibbet an alarm of fire was raised. The cupola
of the prison was ablaze. The hanging was forgotten in the excitement; but
once the blaze was extinguished the sheriff remembered his job and sought
his prisoner.
      Upon his bed in the cell John C. Colt was stretched, with his
hands composedly crossed upon his bosom and a knife buried in his heart.

      There were those, the POLICE GAZETTE included, who hinted that the
body found was not that of Colt but a corpse prepared for the occasion, and
that the supposed suicide escaped either to Texas or California. The
coroner, it was charged, was aware of the deception, and his jurymen were
selected for their ignorance of  Colt's appearance.

THE NEW YORK TOMBS Scenes and Incidents in the American Newgate.
2) OLD POLICE KNOWN AS LEATHERHEADS New York was a lawless city, as had been proved in the mysterious murder of Mary Rogers, a recent happening, and one that was ever to remain a crime unsolved. It was high time a new organized police had come to take the place of the old police, better known as Leatherheads, who had guarded the city previous to 1844. They prowled the town at night in camlet cloaks, carried huge lanterns and cried the hour. Their leather caps were varnished twice a year and became like iron. 3) MILL BOYS But we are now come to the year of Our Lord, 1845. Only a few months before, in the Polk-Clay presidential campaign, Political excitement had been running precariously high. During one of the mass meetings, among the out-of-town delegations that marched down Park Row, were the Mill Boys, one thousand strong. A Joyous free fight had developed during which knives, swords, pistols, clubs and fists were brought into play, six were killed and many dangerously wounded. 4) ADMINISTRATION OF MAYOR ROBERT H. MORRIS At this time, what was known as the "lamp district" did not extend above Fourteenth Street. The corrupt administration of Mayor Robert H. Morris had already felt the resentment of angry taxpayers at the public polls. Civic indignation was expressed over the fact that a city with a population of 400,000 persons should have a police department only eight hundred strong, and there was bitter protest against these men being compelled to work more than twelve hours a day. The Committee of Streets had reported in favor of employing Professor Morse to construct the new Magnetic telegraph so as to communicate with all police stations in town. The City Corporation had engaged Mr. Ackerman, the sign painter on Nassau Street, to affix the names of the streets on the gas-lamps. 5) GAZETTE TID-BITS The "unregenerate and unscrupulous vermin of the Five Points was for a time confined to its own breeding ground, which, in its debasements of crime and filth had been found to rival even the Whitechapel district of London, from which it had inherited many of its denizens." Not that the old town had been relegated to a tame place, confesses the Gazette some time later: .........for the devotees of Melody, Bacchus and Cupid there were many celebrated sporting haunts flourishing in the neighborhood of Broadway, Church and Walker Streets and along Park Row. The most famous probably was the Cooper House, corner Anthony (later Worth) Street and Broadway. And The Senate, in Church Street, was generally well thronged with women rich in raiment and poor in Chastity. Sandy Lawrence's hostelry, famed for its "square meals," was only a few minutes' walk from this resort. Mike Murphy (the celebrated Irish pugilist) had his sporting drum on Broadway, corner Leonard Street. "Butter-Cake" Dick's coffee-and-cake saloon under the Tribune building was a respectable though popular hang-out. For those who liked politics with their refreshments, on Elm Street was The Ivy Green, Headquarters of the Empire (afterwards the Americus) Club, then the Democratic stronghold of the State. It was presided over by John Clancy, later a member of the State Legislature. Tom Hyer, first champion pugilist of America, was at 26 Park row, which was the headquarters for the Union-ists, the Whig organization. There was strong rivalry between the two headquarters and the flagstones of Park Row were often thumped mercilessly with the brawny carcasses of the combatants. Notwithstanding claims that, through new reforms, New York had suddenly become the best regulated city in the world, Violations against law, morality and public welfare were still so much in evidence in 1845 that two of its more or less consequential citizens deemed it a fitting time to provide a new method of combating the evil-doer. And in this way there came into being the first of the American illustrated newspapers. It was named the NATIONAL POLICE GAZETTE and the name has never been changed. To the memory of not a few of the present generation, but in the main that of its fathers and grandfathers, the attractions of the Gazette's pink pages and what its pictures and printed content stood for, is still fairly fresh. But of the Gazette of three-quarters of a century and more ago, and its interesting history, little is now known. Its purposes and intent can best be explained by referring to its prospectus, which is reprinted in part, herewith. 6) THE NECESSITY OF THE NATIONAL POLICE GAZETTE TO ASSIST THE POLICE DEPARTMENT The necessity of such an instrument as the National Police Gazette to assist the operations of the Police department, and to perform the species of service which does not lie within the scope of the present system, will make itself felt at a glance. Our city, and indeed the whole country, swarms with hordes of English and other thieves, burglars, pick-pockets, and swindlers, whose daily and nightly exploits give continual employment to our officers, and whose course through the land, whatever direction they may take, may be traced by their depredations. These offenders, though known to our most experienced members of the police, are protected from the scrutiny of the community at large; and the natural result is, that the unconscious public are in continual contact with miscreants who date their last stationary residence from the walls of Newgate, the shore of Botany Bay, or who have but recently left the confines of our own State Prison. It is of first importance that these vagabonds should be notoriously known. The success of the felon depends mainly upon the ignorance of the community as to his character, and until a system be adopted which will effectually hold him up to public shame and irrevocable exposure, the public will remain at the mercy of his depredations and nine-tenths of his fraternity go scot-free of any punishment. Suffering under the continually increasing evils which the immunity thus enjoyed by large classes of offenders has encouraged, plan after plan has been devised, and system after system to reform and remedy, projected. The throes of years, and the undiscouraged travail of a thousand brains, instead of resulting in the adoption of new, bold and original measures, has merely eventuated in the remodelling of a department. The press--the mightiest conservator of social welfare__has been left from the category of appliances, while every other branch of civil polity feels the force of its protective surveillance. The success of felons depends mainly, as we said before, upon the public ignorance of their persons and pursuits. It will be our object, therefore to strip them of the advantages of a professional incognito, by publishing a minute description of their names, aliases, and persons; a succinct history of their previous career, their place of residence at the time of writing, and a current account of their movements from time to time. By this means the most dangerous offenders, the knowledge of whose infamy has slept for years in the bosoms of a few tenacious officers, will be spotted from one end of the Union to the other, and every community throughout its length and breadth be put upon its guard against them. The peculiar stock in trade of the officers will be made the common property of the public; and the felon, branded with his shame, will be pointed out on all sides, and be stripped of the social impunity which mainly emboldened him to offense. The result of an active adoption of this course must therefore necessarily be to drive all resident rogues to a more safe and congenial meridian, and to deter all floating tribes of vagabond adventurers from embarking to a region where an untiring and ubiquitous minister of public justice stands ready to hold them to the public gaze until they become powerless from the notoriety of their debasement.
A MASHER MASHED
II 7) GEORGE WILKES AND ENOCH CAMP FOUNDERS OF ORIGINAL GAZETTE It happened like this: George Wilkes, a journalistic genius of his day, and Enoch Camp, who had turned from journalism to the law and then combined both callings, were the founders of the original Gazette. The first-mentioned, just previous to this venture, had been the editor of a four-paged publication dubbed The Subterranean, which was devoted in the main to the expose of the source of various political incomes, and how these were derived from inelegant vices. Wilkes exposed to such purpose that he was set on by gangsters numerous times and was even shot at twice. In addition, he was arrested no less than six times. The final arrest, though followed by the demise of "The Subterranean", had an unpleasant aftermath for the administration of the city of New York. The editor's reports made up from what he had seen and heard during his residence at the Tombs made itself felt in the ensuing election by Mayor Robert H. Morris all the way down to the warden of the Tombs. Camp made an ideal partner for Wilkes. Camp handled the business and legal end of the affairs of the concern, while Wilkes had charge of the editorial end. After a few years Camp retired a rich man, and George W. Matsell, while yet a Chief of Police in New York, became a part owner. This partnership lacked the business acumen possessed by Camp, whose association with Wilkes must have been exciting while it lasted.
GEORGE WILKES The founder of the Police Gazette
8) FIRST APPEARANCE OF NEW PUBLICATION HAD FATAL RESULTS. If one chronicler is to be believed, the very first ppearance of the new publication had fatal results. Its first number chanced to be carried to the place of call of Jonas Burke, on Delancey Street, where the palatable blend in which he specialized gave his house the name of Gin and Calumus Hall. Some one took exception to an item in the Gazette and words wound up in a melee from which the proprietor emerged minus a couple of fingers and a portion of one ear, while the instigator had his nose very much disarranged, and a participant, who proved to be Croucher Collins, was carried out dead. 9) THE GAZETTE UNDER ASSAULT In the Gazette's initial issue, dated October 11, 1845, and under the title of "Lives of the Felons," the first of a series dealing with the notorious criminals of the period was started. No. 1, in this series, gave the opening chapter in the career of Robert Sutton, alias "Bob the Wheeler," whose exploits to lift from the POLICE GAZETTE, "were they not substantiated by irrefragable proofs, they would be discarded by the most susceptible imaginations as the merest vagaries of fiction." We will deal with this villain in a separate chapter, so it may be seen that the amanuensis in question did not let his fancy or flow of English run away with him. Before taking temporary leave of "Bob the Wheeler," it should be recorded how that personage was instrumental in putting the Gazette temporarily out of business, which happened every now and then. Soon after his release from jail, which was not so long after the completion of his life story in the Gazette columns, Bob Sutton descended on the latter's headquarters with a number of his cohorts, among them James Downer, the resurrectionist (whose grave-robbing exploits had been given attention by the Gazette). The roughs and the police milled all over Centre Street, and the railroad-tracks, which had not yet been laid down West Street to the Canal Street Depot of the Hudson River Railroad, were ripped up and used as weapons. Downer and two others of the Sutton forces were killed this time. Sergeant Belcher, who with Tim Mooney, the Keel Layer, were the bodyguards of Wilkes, were the only Gazette casualties. Mooney, who was alleged to have killed two policemen during a London riot, was only slightly injured, while Belcher suffered a broken arm. Though a mob of close to two hundred attacked the Gazette, the press and editorial rooms, then in the cellar of 27 Centre Street, seem to have been well barricaded. It was quite necessary that the Gazette sanctum should be well barricaded, as it was in a more or less perpetual state of siege from the rage of the underworld. The most serious assault came in 1850, and this time six deaths resulted. Not only Wilkes himself and Belcher were carried to the hospital, but so was the Gazette's star reporter, Andrew Frost, who passed away from his wounds. Of the attacking mob, which was led by Country McCloskey, who had stood one hundred rounds with Tom Hyer, Nobby McChester and other ruffians of the Five Points, and such well-known Amazons as Lizzie the Poor Beauty, and Donkey Dora Cole, five were left dead in the streets. The plant of the paper was demolished this time. 10) THE ASTOR PLACE RIOT These were perilous times for crusading tirades. Only the year before, which had opened with the excitement of the California gold rush, it had been the unfortunate duty of the militia to pour a rifle volley into a mass of rioting humanity, and twenty-two bodies had been left in Astor Place shot or trampled to death. While this horror was the outcome of jealousy between Edwin Forrest and the English tragedian, William C. Macready, there is plenty of reason for the belief that political chicanery brought about the crisis. Forrest had been coldly received in England. This was charged to Macready's envy and to the criticisms of the cuspidorial customs of the United States by Charles Dickens during a visit to this country. On May 7, 1849, both Forrest and Macready played Macbeth in New York and the latter's performance was broken up. Washington Irving and other leading citizens persuaded Macready to give another performance three nights later. On the same day handbills of an inflammatory character branding the appearance of the English actor as an insult to our Americanism were distributed through the city wherever they would do most harm. It was later proved by the Gazette that the handbills had been ordered by some one who had headquarters at the Empire Club, which was then led by Captain Isaiah Rynders. Where Bible House now stands was a stone-yard; also a sewer was being constructed along Fourth Avenue. Cobblestones and the contents of the yard made plentiful ammunition for the infuriated mob that descended on the Astor Place Theater to break up the Macready performance. When the militia was finally brought to the aid of the police the first round of fire was discharged above the heads of the rioters. Still they would not disperse.The fatal command then followed. 11) IN THE FIFTIES Going into the Fifties the Gazette was up against a twofold fight, battling not only the breakers of the law, but its guardians as a combination in addition. The municipality was sinking into such a mire of political corruption that in 1857 the city of New York was declared by the Legislature to be unfit to govern itself. There were two antagonistic police forces for a time that were more concerned in battling each other for authority than they were in fighting the enemies of public safety. As "an untiring and ubiquitous minister of public justice" the POLICE GAZETTE didn't have a chance. Still the weekly fired its barbs of righteous indignation, only the targets were far too numerous. [That frightful sink of human degeneracy in the forbidding heart of the Five Points, known as the Old Brewery, has been demolished several years by now. But the building, known as "the wickedest dwelling in the world" and its environs, had constituted merely the scum of human depravity and made up a quarter repellent to the normal citizen. The glittering and protected profligacy that had come into brazen existence along Broadway and Houston Street and its adjacent votaries is a far more dangerous snare. One of the first and worst in the area is the tough concert saloon at 50 Houston Street and of which the proprietor, Charley Sturges, is well known to the entire crooked brigade of both sexes. At this place plots are hatched to break into banks, flood the country with "queer," spirit some pal out of prison, to put away some principal or witness, or to square it with the police. Here not a little counterfeit engraving is turned out by that first-class workman, "Cooley" Keyes.] This is a fair example of how the Gazette kept after the underworld, a tribute to its courage rather than its judgment under the existing conditions. The attack was kept up on 50 Houston Street even after "Dusty Bob" took over the place and held forth there until he was called to "do his bit in the jug" for cutting off the ears of someone who had annoyed him in a crib on Ninth Avenue. 12) PLACES GIVEN ATTENTION IN THE COLUMNS OF THE GAZETTE Any number of similar places were given attention in the columns of the Gazette. There was Poughkeepsie Jake's at 27 Houston Street, and the House of Commons, which was right next door. And Fanny White's too well-known "palace of joy"; where her successor, Eliza Pratt, was referred to as "the madame known to widest shame in her day." Close by on Broadway was Stanwix Hall, where "Bill the Butcher" Poole was done to death shortly after his historic rough-and-tumble fight with John "Old Smoke" Morrissey. Near by was Abe Florence's famous The Corner, and a block or so away was Phil Maguire's equally notorious Lafayette Hall. Here and hereabouts the loosest and most desperate characters of the city were wont to congregate. Not only did the felon and fancy female hold forth in this district, but likewise the so-called sporting element, which was then made up of "shoulder-hitters," dog-fighters, gamblers, actors and politicians. Here festered an appalling record of knifing, shooting, gouging, biting and manhandling affrays, and mayhem and murder. Jim Irving, who, like Morrissey, later became a member of the Legislature, and Jack Somerindyke "tasted each other's mutton." Poole beat and kicked Wally Mason so severely he never recovered, and poole's brother-in-law, Charley Lozier, had holes blown through him by Johnny Lyng__just to cite a few of the doings with which the Gazette regaled its readers. Some years after the Gazette presented a list of the hangers-on of the Houston Street resorts who met a violent end, and enumerated half-a-hundred without much trouble. Some, like Poole and Tim Heenan, brother of John C Heenan, of pugilistic fame, were shot to death; others, including William Farley, better known as Reddy the Blacksmith, and Jack Hilton, alias the Limerick Boy, were carved to eternity; and not a few were hanged. The original Gazette started off bravely enough, but battling the criminal ranks when these were backed by the police and the politicians, was simply too much of an undertaking. I I I 13) POLICY GAMBLING EXPOSED BY THE POLICE GAZETTE One of the very first exposures that exercised the indignation of the Police Gazette had to do with the ruinous effects of policy gambling. For a time the prize numbers were drawn from a wheel on the steps of the old City Hall in the Park, until the Legislature, in 1832, annulled the charter of the lottery company. It moved over to New Jersey, where it was drawn as late as 1850. After being driven out of New Jersey the lottery companies operated from Delaware, Maryland, Louisiana and other southern states. The operations of the Drawing were revealed and one was also initiated into the mysteries of "station" and "day" numbers, "gigs," "whips" and "saddles." It was explained how "through this system of insurance" men of extensive capital were reaping a monetary harvest at the expense of the poor and at a rate of 31 per cent profit.
LOTTERY Annual Record 1885
[The results of this are easy to be seen. Its deluded victims, unable to satisfy; its exorbitant demands by their legitimate earnings, yield to its corrupting influence and commence pilfering from their employers. Step by step they wade deeper into crime, until advancing beyond the limit of precaution they are "engulfed" in ruin. The miserable victim is then consigned to the horror of a cell, and subsequently to a convict's doom, while those who are chargeable for his guilt, those who suborned him by their devilish traffic into crime, curse him for a "d------d black rascal," We do not hesitate to say, and we believe facts will bear us out, that nine-tenths of the crime and prostitution of the colored classes of the city are produced either directly or indirectly by policy gambling. Examine our prisons and see if the history of their inmates will not attest to this fact. (Apparently the Demon Rum did not get its just due for fell work.) Is this longer to be endured? Are the authorities of our city any longer to foster these jackals by tolerating their nefarious practices? Is the statute to be defied and the law mocked by a horde of villains who cluster like flies in every street where poverty has shrunk to its abode, and where gasping labor can be extorted of its pittance in the vain hope of casting a golden anchor in the future? What lacks, good Messieurs of the sword and scales: Cannot evenhanded Justice, who bestows her slashing strokes so liberally upon the impoverished and friendless victim, make one of her six cuts over the costards of this contemptible banditti? Do we live under laws, or is ruin and defiance licensed to grin from bow windows of five thousand dens of plunder without rebuke, while a force of eight hundred men loaf by turns on grocer's barrels, or hang about hydrants to pass soft compliments to errand serving-maids, or waste their tremendous energies upon the apprehension of wandering drunkards? Is there no one man in the country, in remembrance of his oath, bold enough to step into these nurseries of crime and cry " Forbear to violate the law!"] That is the kind of paper the original National Police Gazette was_____at the start. As a result of the attack on the policy-gambling interests, the following letter of warning came to the offices of Messrs. Camp & Wilkes: Some dozen of us have determined (if you persist in annoying us) to annoy you in a more disagreeable manner than the one you have so unsuccessfully aimed at us. Yours, The Policy Boys 14) POLICE GAZETTE WELCOMED LIBEL SUITS The Police Gazette, as already indicated, got quite used to this sort of thing through its years as a reform publication. And as for libel suits, they welcomed them. We do not heed threats or libel suits. We are strong in the justice of our motives and will have out the truth at any cost whatsoever. We never dodged a challenge or evaded an investigation in our lives. Those who fear, make truce, but coercion never swerves the just and bold. 15) SUBJECTS REFLECTED ON BY THE GAZETTE A) Employing Females instead of Males as Store-clerks Another objective that gave the Gazette considerable editorial concern in its very first days was an unusual one. It was nothing less than an argument in favor of employing females instead of males as store clerks as a remedy against theft, fraud and embezzlements in retail stores. Just get an eyeful of this: "It is an undoubted fact that one-third of the whole annual amount contributed by spendthrifts and debauchees to the support of houses of ill fame in this city, comes from the pockets of retailers' clerks; and many a shining satin and rustling silk that sweeps the pave, is extracted clandestinely from an employer's store as a return for illicit favors. If females were employed in stores instead of gay young men, we should be rid of these results. The employer would find his interests in the hands of safer guardians, for women have no outside pleasures to be dishonest. We have another motive in recommending the adoption of this system. It is said that ladies prefer to purchase of male clerks, and that the main inducement that sends many a fair one out a shopping, is the desire to be waited on by rosy-cheeked young men. We do not believe this against the sex, and on this ground we would like to see Stewart undertake the refutation of the slander. B) Crimes and Misdemeanors In those early days, just to give a slight line on its activities, the National Police Gazette waged an interesting warfare on the prominent abortionist, Madame Restall and others; gave much unwelcome publicity to Bob Sutton; and to John A.Murrell, the great western land pirate; Joseph I Hare, bold robber and highwayman; James Dowling, alias Cupid, the notorious pickpocket; John Honeyman, the celebrated City Bank robber; William Parkinson, the "Barge Robber," who robbed the Albany boat, the Clinton, of $34,000; and numerous others. One of its exposures found John B. Gough, foremost temperance lecturer of his time, very much intoxicated in a bawdy house on Walker Street.
CUPID IN TOMPKINS PARK A Place where Cupid has made his favorite stamping ground, and where the stern paterfamilias is wrost to appear.
The following paragraph from an early number tells its own story: We offer this week a most interesting record of horrid murders, outrageous robberies, bold forgeries, astounding burglaries, hideous rapes, vulgar seductions and recent exploits of pickpockets and hotel thieves in various parts of the country. What more could any one ask for a nickel, and later for only four cents per copy (the Gazette, with rapid increase in circulation reduced its price one penny), or two dollars per annum, payable in advance? Regular departments were given over to the crimes and misdemeanors above enumerated and to "Counterfeits," "False Pretenses," "Perjury," etc. The Gazette, though opposed to capital punishment, did not share the revulsion of other contemporaries over the public execution of the first woman in the State of New York. She (Mrs. Van Volkenburgh) deserved her fate, the gallows, and thus ended the story of her execution: The drop was then let fall, and as the rope straightened upon her neck and just as she raised from her feet, she gave a shriek and thus passed from time to eternity. Thus ended the life a lewd and wretched woman, who had sent two husbands (perhaps unprepared) into another world. 16) IN THE FORTIES Editorially, the National Police Gazette at the outset may seem uncouth in its treatment of news, and its comment at times must be pronounced naive. We find room for only a few examples: JUST SENTENCE____Heustis, the Long Island abductor, who ran away with another man's wife some weeks ago, has been tried for the offense of stealing the clothes which the lady wore at the time of her departure, and has been found guilty of petty larceny. He was thereupon sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for six months as a warning to all such villains in the future. According to this sentence, all scoundrels who meditate absconding with other men's wives will, hereafter, find it necessary to take them e puris naturabilis or not at all. ATTEMPTED RAPE____A villain by the name of Martin Shays, attempted a rape upon a young lady in this town Wednesday last, but entirely without success. The lady was in bed, but fought like a tigress in defense of her private rights. SHE DIDN'T LOVE HIM____Catherine Foster, a young woman of eighteen years, has been convicted of the murder of her husband, by arsenic; he was a respectable young man to whom she had been married but three weeks. CURIOUS SEDUCTION CASE____His Honor, Judge Edwards, of the Circuit Court, delivered several decisions, one of which, on a motion for a new trial in a case of seduction, disclosed some very curious facts, highly illustrative of the morals of the up-country folks. The case was tried by Judge Edmonds, at Hudson, September, 1844, and in which John D. Cater sought to recover damages from William H. Cook, for the seduction of his stepdaughter, Sally Ann Irvin. At the trial, Sally Ann testified that, in the summer of 1843, she was living as a maid servant in the family of Edward P. Livingston, Esq., where the defendant was a hired man. One warm night, she, Sally Ann, went to sleep with another girl in a small room in the long hall, when the girl proposed to smoke some cigars, which they did; the defendant soon after came in, put his hand on the bed, and asked who slept on the front side; a boy who was also in the bed said "Sally Ann"; he then got between the two, when she tried to get up, but the defendant lay on her clothes and she could not get away, and he tickled her so, she was out of breath, "and had to give up," and the seduction followed. The jury gave $350. damages. A new trial was asked, on the ground that a stepfather could not maintain the action, she being in service elsewhere. The court held he stood in loco parentis and denied the motion. With such goings on in the Forties, and others to which we will call attention in due time, it is evident that the National Police Gazette had work to do, and especially with female virtue valued as low as $350. And, possibly, incidents such as this, and others to be related, may go to prove that the Police Gazette did play some part toward laying the foundation for an improvement of later-day morals. For, while it is true that the sex, one time referred to as the weaker, is being caught in ticklish positions even today, yet is it not worthy of note how casually mention is made of flappers of that period smoking cigars? And we criticize our modern damsels for puffing the pernicious cigarette! 17) THE POLICE GAZETTE, AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM By the end of its second year of existence the Police Gazette, which had been launched with an edition of 4,200 copies, laid claim to having more than one hundred thousand readers, and had grown from four to eight pages, tabloid size, and four columns to the page. As an advertising medium it was doing very well, ten to twelve of its thirty-two columns being given over to such paid notice. Let us have a glance at the advertisements: A) Thirty-odd years later the Gazette not only had room for the advertising notices of the Louisiana State Lottery Company, but gave a column to the annual listing of those who had won prizes above one thousand dollars. B) Burgess, Stringer & Co., booksellers and publishers of Broadway, corner Ann Street, call attention to the very latest of Alexander Dumas, "The Count of Monte Cristo"; to J. Fenimore Cooper's brand-new novel, "The Chainbearer"; to the romances of Eugene Sue, which includes the now-forgotten "Matilda," "a firt-rate domestic tale albeit by a Frenchman." C) Medical advertisements were numerous. Drs. Ivans & Hawes bring to notice "a great triumph" in "Vegetable Extract" for epileptic fits, which the proprietors of the compound "have no delicacy in saying can be cured." H. Johnston, Chemist, in making known his "Italian Hair Dye," advises that "it is perhaps a commendable deception to give a beautiful color to one's curls and locks if nature has not done so. It is used by hundreds of our fashionables with approbation." The same advertiser catered to the patent-leather sheiks of the Forties with his pure and highly scented "Bear's Oil," an unequaled preparation for the hair or whiskers. D) Dr. Townsend's "Compound Extract of Sarsaparilla" was good for a column in not a few issues and offered testimonials which told of marvelous cures in the way of dyspepsia, scrofula, cancers and much else. The certificate of his cure from one John McGown, who, "after using a bottle or two," had his cheek cleared of a tumor, has his letter backed up by his good pastor, who writes: "I am acquainted with Mr. McGown, and know that for several years he had a very bad face....." E) Another full column extolled Dr. Brandreth's Pills, which had made a certain D. Stors feels just half his fifty years after a delorable visitation of ills, and he was so appreciative that he prayed that God would bless Dr. Brandreth, the maker of Brandreth's Pills. F) McAlister's "All-Healing Ointment," which checked "insensible perspiration," is acknowledged to have power to "cure more diseases than any other five remedies before the world." G) Very few theatrical advertisements were to be noted, though the Bowery Amphi-theatre desired it known that "Dale and McFarland throw 60 somersaults each night, besides all else to be seen in this establishment." H) Thefts and Personal 1) 'STOP THE VILLAIN," was the heading over a personal advertisement, which went on to tell how: "William G. Moody, formerly of Boston and New York, but recently of Jersey City, opposite New York, has run away leaving a wife and two helpless children to the tender mercies of an unpitying world and who has taken with him a valuable piano belonging to the little son of a friend who has every been kind to him." Details as to the appearance and characteristics of the unfeeling scoundrel are set forth. "He has large whiskers extending under his chin, is a great talker, very conceited and has an awkward imitation of the French shrug of the shoulders when in conversation. He will probably pass himself off as a professor of music. His voice is very harsh and cracked in singing...." 2) "STOP THIEF---$20. REWARD." This call and offer comes from the Protestant Episcopal Church in Mount Holly, New Jersey, from which edifice sixteen yards of carpet had been stolen. I ) Advertising Deserters It was in the second year of publication that the United States went to war with Mexico, and it may be significant of the weight that was already carried by the National Police Gazette that, "by Command of Major General Scott," the following official order came from "Head Quarters of the Army in Washington," and dated October 24, 1846; It being supposed that advertising deserters in the "National Police Gazette" may have a tendency to check desertion by increasing the chances of apprehension of the offender. A large subscription has been authorized with a view to its general distribution among the troops. Accordingly, every company, military post and recruiting station will be supplied with a copy. The Civil War, however, found the Gazette coming into its lean years. After hostilities between the North and the South had ceased, its popularity waned steadily and from a once lucrative property it became a dead weight and Wilkes now seemed more interested in the Spirit of the Times, which he had purchased from William T. Porter in 1856; on this weekly, the first all-around sporting journal, Horace Greeley had once been a typesetter.
DESERTER LIST
18) RICHARD K. FOX TAKES OVER THE NATIONAL POLICE GAZETTE. In 1876 Richard K. Fox took over the National Police Gazette and made a complete change in its appearance and purposes. Under his proprietorship this weekly became a powerful sports and theatrical organ; the forerunner of the present day tabloid as a picture paper and the dispenser of sensational news; and the means of bringing its head wealth, prominence, and a degree of power. Of the pink decades of the Police Gazette, with which many of us are more or less familiar, these will be dealt with further along in this history. " It sank so low," stated a Fox editorial in reviewing the past history of the publication just taken over, "that it appealed for support to the very class that provided it with subjects for its pages and had regular columns devoted to the lawless classes and printed in their slang, the argot of the New York gutters. Even this did not stem the tide of disaster. The circulation kept dropping until Mr.Matsell, who had come into sole ownership in 1873, disposed of his unremunerative property to two engravers, father and son, who had been providing the pictures for the paper. But it failed to restore itself to its old popularity and so passed into the hands of Richard Kyle Fox." 19) THE NATIONAL POLICE GAZETTE HAD NOT WORKED OUT ACCORDING TO ITS PLAN. Now it is patent from a present-day digest of doings in the criminal world, that the primal scheme of the National Police Gazette, and as set forth in its prospectus has not worked out in accordance with its ambitious plan. For the years have proven that crime and the criminal are still with us in spite of the efforts of the original National Police Gazette. And the failure cannot be charged to any reluctance on the part of the publishers to acquaint the public with the deplorable propensities and peccadillos of certain of the citizenry. But no matter how primitive an example of journalism the original National Police Gazette may be now accepted, its criminal chronicles and rude illustrations struck the public fancy for quite a period, even though it was printed on rather coarse paper and mainly in agate type. 20) A RHYMED ANNUAL ADDRESS There was one other feature that was special to the National Police Gazette pages previous to the Fifties_____a rhymed annual address, which poetic effusion gave a partial review of matters that had commanded the attention of the publication during the year, and a sample of which has already been presented. In chapters to come this history will be devoted to some of the outstanding cases. Some reference to these will be found in the address, of which a few of its numerous stanzas are appended: Then let us not scoff, Too severe at poor Gough, Though constrained to exclaim---"What a sad falling off!" From "tinct. of Tolou" and pure syrup and soda, To riot and rum in a house of bad odour! From orthodox slumbers and dreams apostolic, To the rank ups and downs of an amorous frolic. "What a sad falling off! What a sad falling off!" Then Mercy, we pray, for the fall of poor Gough! The next strangest case that the old year has seen, Is the vexed prosecution of Polly Bodine: Tried twice__once convicted___the inhuman fury Gave the scaffold the slip through the loops of a jury. Oh, Polly Bodine! Oh, Polly Bodine! Such a case on our records has never been seen! Such a chapter of horror in which scarce a doubt Mocks the efforts of justice in tracing it out; But tho' vengeance is baffled, not hushed is the scream Of unappeased ghosts upon Polly Bodine! Bob Sutton, Bob Sutton, bold burglar, come out, And unravel the train-work which bringeth about The grasp of the law in its own proper time--- The doom of the felon___the stamp of his crime___ You may wander at large, but naught will disperse The dark shades of your deeds___their brand and their curse, Then shrink back, old burglar, shrink back to your den! And pray for old Time's everlasting "amen!" But why further relate With name and by date, The long list of felons disgracing the State, From Honeyman down to old Parkinson, all___ Some infamous thieves have been pinned to the wall, And murderers blackened in crime have been tried And condemned by the laws of the land they defied: For Justice, though slow, brings at last the poor wretch who poisons or stabs, to the string of Jack Ketch. Sins of New York As "Exposed" by the Police Gazette By Edward Van Every Publisher: Frederick A. Stokes Company--New York Copyright: 1930 3 Printings October 15, October 23 and October 30. Prepared and Transcribed by Miriam Medina RETURN to POLICE MAIN RETURN to MANHATTAN MAIN Back To BROOKLYN Main