The City of New York is
governed by a Mayor, a Board of
Aldermen and a Board of Common
Councilmen. The Mayor has been
stripped by the Legislature of
the State of almost every power
or attribute of power, and is
to-day merely an ornamental
figure-head to the City
government.
The real power lies in the
Boards named above, and in the
various "Commissioners"
appointed by the Legislature.
These are the Commissioners in
charge of the streets, the
Croton Aqueduct, Public
Charities and Corrections, the
Police and Fire Departments.
We do not seek to lay the
blame for the mismanagement and
infamy of the government of this
City on any party or parties. It
is a fact that affairs here are
sadly mismanaged, whoever may be
at fault.
In place of any statements of
our own concerning this branch
of our subject, we ask the
reader's attention to the
following extracts from a
pamphlet recently published by
Mr. James Parton. He says:
The twenty-four Councilmen
who have provided themselves
with such ample assistance at
such costly accommodation are
mostly very young men,--the
majority appear to be under
thirty. Does the reader remember
the pleasant description given
by Mr. Hawthorne of the
sprightly young bar- keeper who
rainbows the glittering drink so
dexterously from one tumbler to
another? That sprightly young
barkeeper might stand as the
type of the young men composing
this board. There are
respectable men in the body.
There are six who have never
knowingly cast an improper vote.
There is one respectable
physician, three lawyers, ten
mechanics, and only four who
acknowledge to be dealers in
liquors. But there is a certain
air about most of these young
Councilmen which, in the eyes of
a New-Yorker, stamps them as
belonging to what has been
styled of late years "our ruling
class,"--butcher-boys who have
got into politics, bar-keepers
who have taken a leading part in
primary ward meetings, and young
fellows who hang about
engine-houses and
billiard-rooms. A stranger would
naturally expect to find in such
a board men who have shown
ability and acquired distinction
in private business.
We say,
again, that there are honest and
estimable men in the body; but
we also assert, that there is
not an individual in it who has
attained any considerable rank
in the vocation which he
professes. If we were to print
the list here, not a name would
be generally recognized. Honest
Christopher Pullman, for
example, who leads the honest
minority of six that vainly
oppose every scheme of plunder,
is a young man of twenty-seven,
just beginning business as a
cabinet maker. Honest William B.
White, another of the six, is
the manager of a printing
office. Honest Stephen Roberts
is a sturdy smith, who has a
shop near a wharf for repairing
the iron work of ships. Morris
A. Tyng, another of the honest
six, is a young lawyer getting
into practice. We make no remark
upon these facts, being only
desirous to show the business
standing of the men to whom the
citizens of New York have
confided the spending of sundry
millions per annum. The majority
of this board are about equal,
in point of experience and
ability, to the management of an
oyster stand in a market. Such
expressions as 'them laws,' 'sot
the table,' '71st regiment,' and
'them arguments is played out,'
may be heard on almost any
Monday or Thursday afternoon,
between two and three o'clock,
in this sumptuous chamber.
But what most strikes and
puzzles the stranger is the
crowd of spectators outside the
railing. It is the rogues'
gallery come to life, with here
and there an honest looking
laborer wearing the garments of
his calling. We attended six
sessions of this 'honorable
body,' and on every occasion
there was the same kind of crowd
looking on, who sat the session
out. Frequently we observed
looks and words of recognition
pass between the members and
this curious audience; and,
once, we saw a member gaily toss
a paper of tobacco to one of
them, who caught it with
pleasing dexterity. We are
unable to explain the regular
presence of this great number of
the unornamented portion of our
fellow-beings, since we could
never see any indications that
any of the crowd had an interest
in the proceedings. As the
debates are never reported by
any one of the seventeen
reporters who are paid two
hundred dollars a year for not
doing it, and as the educated
portion of the community never
attend the sessions, this board
sits, practically, with closed
doors. Their schemes are both
conceived and executed in
secrecy, though the door is open
to all who wish to enter. This
is the more surprising, because
almost every session of the
board furnishes the material for
a report, which an able and
public-spirited journalist would
gladly buy at the highest price
paid for such work in any city.
Debates is a ludicrous word
to apply to the proceedings of
the Councilmen. Most of the
business done by them is pushed
through without the slightest
discussion, and is of such a
nature that members cannot be
prepared to discuss it. The most
reckless haste marks every part
of the performance. A member
proposes that certain lots be
provided with curbstones;
another, that a free drinking
hydrant be placed on a certain
corner five miles up town; and
another, that certain blocks of
a distant street be paved with
Belgian pavement. Respecting the
utility of these works, members
generally know nothing and can
say nothing; nor are they proper
objects of legislation. The
resolutions are adopted,
usually, without a word of
explanation, and at a speed that
must be seen to be appreciated.
At almost every session we
witnessed scenes like the
following: A member proposed to
lease a certain building for a
city court at two thousand
dollars a year for ten years.
Honest Christopher Pullman, a
faithful and laborious public
servant, objected, on one or two
grounds; first, rents being
unnaturally high, owing to
several well known and temporary
causes, it would be unjust to
the city to fix the rent at
present rates for so long a
period; secondly, he had been
himself to see the building, had
taken pains to inform himself as
to its value, and was prepared
to prove that twelve hundred
dollars a year was a proper rent
for it even at the inflated
rates. He made this statement
with excellent brevity,
moderation, and good temper, and
concluded by moving that the
term be two instead of ten
years. A robust young man, with
a bull neck and of ungrammatical
habits, said, in a tone of
impatient disdain, that the
landlord of the building had
'refused' fifteen hundred
dollars a year for it.
'Question!' 'Question!' shouted
half a dozen angry voices, the
question was instantly put, when
a perfect war of noes voted down
Mr. Pullman's amendment. Another
hearty chorus of ayes
consummated the iniquity. In all
such affairs, the visitor
notices a kind of 'ungovernable
propensity to vote for spending
money, and a prompt disgust at
any obstacle raised or objection
made. The bull-necked Councilman
of uncertain grammar evidently
felt that Mr. Pullman's modest
interference on behalf of the
tax-payer was a most gross
impertinence. He felt himself an
injured being, and his
companions shared his
indignation.
We proceed to another and
better specimen. A resolution
was introduced, appropriating
four thousand dollars for the
purpose of presenting stands of
colors to five regiments of city
militia, which were named, each
stand to cost eight hundred
dollars. Mr. Pullman, as usual,
objected, and we beg the reader
to mark his objections. He said
that he was a member of the
committee which had reported the
resolution, but he had never
heard of it till that moment;
the scheme had been 'sprung'
upon him. The chairman of the
committee replied to this, that,
since the other regiments had
had colors given them by the
city, he did not suppose that
any one could object to these
remaining five receiving the
same compliment, and therefore
he had not thought it worth
while to summon the gentleman.
'Besides,' said he, 'it is a
small matter anyhow';--by which
he evidently meant to intimate
that the objector was a very
small person. To this last
remark, a member replied, that
he did not consider four
thousand dollars so very small a
matter. 'Anyhow,' he added, 'we
oughter save the city every
dollar we kin.' Mr. Pullman
resumed.
He stated that the Legislature
of the State, several months
before, had voted a stand of
colors to each infantry regiment
in the State; that the
distribution of these colors had
already begun; that the five
regiments would soon receive
them; and that, consequently,
there was no need of their
having the colors which it was
now proposed to give them. A
member roughly replied, that the
colors voted by the State
Legislature were mere painted
banners, 'of no account.' Mr.
Pullman denied this. 'I am,'
said he, 'captain in one of our
city regiments. Two weeks ago we
received our colors. I have
seen, felt, examined, and
marched under them; and I can
testify that they are of great
beauty, and excellent quality,
made by Tiffany and Company, a
firm of the first standing in
the city.' He proceeded to
describe the colors as being
made of the best silk, and
decorated in the most elegant
manner. He further objected to
the price proposed to be given
for the colors. He declared
that, from his connection with
the militia, he had become
acquainted with the value of
such articles, and he could
procure colors of the best kind
ever used in the service for
three hundred and seventy five
dollars.
The price named in
the resolution was, therefore,
most excessive. Upon this,
another member rose and said, in
a peculiarly offensive manner,
that it would be two years
before Tiffany and Company had
made all the colors, and some of
the regiments would have to wait
all that time. 'The other
regiments,' said he, 'have had
colors presented by the City,
and I don't see why we should
show partiality.' Whereupon Mr.
Pullman informed the board that
the City regiments would all be
supplied in a few weeks; and,
even if they did have to wait
awhile, it was of no
consequence, for they all had
very good colors already. Honest
Stephen Roberts then rose, and
said that this was a subject
with which he was not
acquainted, but that if no one
could refute what Mr. Pullman
had said, he should be obliged
to vote against the resolution.
Then there was a pause. The cry
of 'Question!' was heard. The
ayes and noes were called. The
resolution was carried by
eighteen to five. The learned
suppose that one half of this
stolen four thousand dollars was
expended upon the colors, and
the other half divided among
about forty persons. It is
conjectured that each member of
the Councilmen's Ring, which
consists of thirteen, received
about forty dollars for his vote
on this occasion. This sum,
added to his pay, which is
twenty dollars per session, made
a tolerable afternoon's work.
Any
one witnessing this scene would
certainly have supposed that now
the militia regiments of the
City of New York were provided
with colors. What was our
surprise to hear, a few days
after, a member gravely propose
to appropriate eight hundred
dollars for the purpose of
presenting the Ninth Regiment of
New York Infantry with a stand
of colors. Mr. Pullman repeated
his objections, and recounted
anew the generosity of the State
Legislature. The eighteen,
without a word of reply, voted
for the grant as before. It so
chanced that, on our way up
Broadway, an hour after, we met
that very regiment marching down
with its colors flying; and we
observed that those colors were
nearly new. Indeed, there is
such a propensity in the public
to present colors to popular
regiments, that some of them
have as many as five stands, of
various degrees of splendor.
There is nothing about which
Councilmen need feel so little
anxiety as a deficiency in the
supply of regimental colors.
When, at last, these extravagant
banners voted by the Corporation
are presented to the regiments,
a new scene of plunder is
exhibited. The officers of the
favored regiment are invited to
a room in the basement of the
City Hall, where City officials
assist them to consume three
hundred dollars' worth of
champagne, sandwiches, and cold
chicken--paid for out of the
City treasury--while the
privates of the regiment await
the return of their officers in
the unshaded portion of the
adjacent park.
It is a favorite trick with
these Councilmen, as of all
politicians, to devise measures,
the passage of which will
gratify large bodies of voters.
This is one of the advantages
proposed to be gained by the
presentation of colors to
regiments; and the same system
is pursued with regard to
churches and societies. At every
one of the six sessions of the
Councilmen which we attended;
resolutions were introduced to
give away the people's money to
wealthy organizations. A church,
for example, is assessed a
thousand dollars for the
construction of a sewer, which
enhances the value of the church
property by at least the amount
of the assessment. Straightway,
a member from that neighborhood
proposes to console the stricken
church with a "donation" of a
thousand dollars, to enable it
to pay the assessment; and as
this is a proposition to vote
money, it is carried as a matter
of course. We select from our
notes only one of these donating
scenes.
A member proposed to
give two thousand dollars to a
certain industrial school,-- the
favorite charity of the present
time, to which all the
benevolent most willingly
subscribe. Vigilant Christopher
Pullman reminded the board that
it was now unlawful for the
Corporation to vote money for
any object not specified in the
tax levy as finally sanctioned
by the Legislature. He read the
section of the Act which forbade
it. He further showed, from a
statement by the Comptroller,
that there was no money left at
their disposal for any
miscellaneous objects, since the
appropriation for 'City
contingencies' was exhausted.
The only reply to his remarks,
was the instant passage of the
resolution by eighteen to five.
By what artifice the law is
likely to be evaded in such
cases, we may show further on.
In all probability, the
industrial school, in the course
of the year, will receive a
fraction of this money--perhaps
even so large, a fraction as one
half. It may be that, ere now,
some obliging person about the
City Hall has offered to buy the
claim for a thousand dollars,
and take the risk of the
hocus-pocus necessary for
getting it--which to him is no
risk at all.
It was proposed, on another
occasion, to raise the fees of
the Inspectors of weights and
measures--who received fifty
cents for inspecting a pair of
platform scales, and smaller
sums for scales and measures of
less importance. Here was a
subject upon which honest
Stephen Roberts, whose shop is
in a street where scales and
measures abound, was entirely at
home. He showed, in his sturdy
and strenuous manner, that, at
the rates then established, an
active man could make two
hundred dollars a day. 'Why,'
said he, 'a man can inspect, and
does inspect, fifty platform
scales in an hour,' The cry of
'Question!' arose. The question
was put, and the usual loud
chorus of ayes followed.
As it requires a
three-fourths vote to grant
money--that is, eighteen
members--it is sometimes
impossible for the King to get
that number together. There is a
mode of preventing the absence,
or the opposition of members,
from defeating favorite schemes.
It is by way of
"reconsideration." The time was,
when a measure distinctly voted
down by a lawful majority, was
dead. But, by this expedient,
the voting down of a measure is
only equivalent to its
postponement to a more favorable
occasion. The moment the
chairman pronounces a resolution
lost, the member who has it in
charge moves a reconsideration;
and, as a reconsideration only
requires the vote of a majority,
this is invariably carried. By a
rule of the Board, a
reconsideration carries a
measure over to a future
meeting--to any future meeting
which may afford a prospect of
its passage.
The member who is
engineering it watches his
chance, labors with faltering
members out of doors, and, as
often as he thinks he can carry
it, calls it up again--until, at
last, the requisite eighteen are
obtained. It has frequently
happened, that a member has kept
a measure in a state of
reconsideration for months at a
time, waiting for the happy
moment to arrive. There was a
robust young Councilman, who had
a benevolent project in charge
of paying nine hundred dollars
for a hackney-coach and two
horses, which a drunken driver
drove over the dock into the
river, one cold night last
winter. There was some
disagreement in the Ring on this
measure, and the robust youth
was compelled to move for many
reconsiderations. So, also, it
was long before the wires could
be all arranged to admit of the
appointment of a 'messenger' to
the City Librarian, who has
perhaps less to do than any man
in New York who is paid eighteen
hundred dollars a year; but
perseverance meets its reward.
We hear that this messenger is
now smoking in the City Hall at
a salary of fifteen hundred
dollars.
There is a maneuver, also, for
preventing the attendance of
obnoxious, obstructive members,
like the honest six, which is
ingenious and effective. A
'special meeting' is called. The
law declares that notice of a
special meeting must be left at
the residence or the place of
business of every member. Mr.
Roberts's residence and Mr.
Roberts's place of business are
eight miles apart, and he leaves
his home for the day before nine
in the morning. If Mr. Roberts's
presence at a special meeting,
at 2 P. M., is desired, the
notice is left at his shop in
the morning. If it is not
desired, the notice is sent to
his house in Harlem, after he
has left it. Mr. Pullman,
cabinet-maker, leaves his shop
at noon, goes home to dinner,
and returns soon after one. If
his presence at the special
meeting at 2 P. M. is desired,
the notice is left at his house
the evening before, or at his
shop in the morning. If his
presence is not desired, the
notice is left at his shop a few
minutes after twelve, or at his
house a few minutes past one.
In either case, he receives the
notice too late to reach the
City Hall in time. We were
present in the Councilman's
Chamber when Mr. Pullman stated
this inconvenience, assuming
that it was accidental, and
offered an amendment to the
rule, requiring notice to be
left five hours before the time
named for the meeting. Mr.
Roberts also gave his experience
in the matter of notices, and
both gentlemen spoke with
perfect moderation and good
temper. We wish we could convey
to our readers an idea of the
brutal insolence with which Mr.
Pullman, on this occasion, was
snubbed and defrauded by a young
bar-keeper who chanced to be in
the chair. But this would be
impossible without relating the
scene at very great length. The
amendment proposed was voted
down, with that peculiar roar of
noes which is always heard in
that chamber when some honest
man attempts to put an obstacle
in the way of the free plunder
of his fellow-citizens.
These half-fledged
legislators are acquainted with
the device known by the name of
the 'previous question.' We
witnessed a striking proof of
this. One of the most audacious
and insolent of the Ring
introduced a resolution, vaguely
worded, the object of which was
to annul an old paving contract,
that would not pay at the
present cost of labor and
materials, and to authorize a
new contract at higher rates.
Before the clerk had finished
reading the resolution, honest
Stephen Roberts sprang to his
feet, and, unrolling a
remonstrance with several yards
of signatures appended to it,
stood, with his eye upon the
chairman, ready to present it
the moment the reading was
concluded. This remonstrance, be
it observed, was signed by a
majority of the property-owners
interested, the men who would be
assessed to pay for one half of
the proposed pavement. Fancy the
impetuous Roberts, with the
document held aloft, the yards
of signatures streaming down to
his feet and flowing far under
his desk, awaiting the time when
it would be in order for him to
cry out, 'Mr. President.' The
reading ceased. Two voices were
heard, shouting 'Mr. President.'
It was not to Mr. Roberts that
an impartial chairman could
assign the floor.
The member 'who introduced the
resolution was the one who
'caught the speaker's eye,' and
that member, forewarned of Mr.
Roberts's intention, moved the
previous question. It was in
vain that Mr. Roberts shouted
'Mr. President.' It was in vain
that he fluttered and rattled
his streaming ribbon of blotted
paper. The President could not
hear a word of any kind until a
vote had been taken upon the
question whether the main
question should be now put. That
question was carried in the
affirmative, by a chorus of
ayes, so exactly timed that it
was like the voice of one man.
Then the main question was put,
and it was carried by another
emphatic and simultaneous shout.
Political Black Mail
Mr. Parton thus briefly exposes
the system of political black
mail practiced in the City
government:
The plunder of the persons who
are so unfortunate as to serve
the public, and of those who
aspire to serve the public, is
systematic, and nearly
universal. Our inquiries into
this branch of the subject lead
us to conclude that there are
very few salaries paid from the
city or county treasury which do
not yield an annual per centage
to some one of the
'head-centers' of corruption.
The manner in which this kind of
spoliation is sometimes effected
may be gathered from a narrative
which we received from the lips
of one of the few learned and
estimable men whom the system of
electing judges by the people
has left upon the bench in the
City of New York. Four years
ago, when the inflation of the
currency had so enhanced the
price of all commodities that
there was, of necessity, a
general increase of salaries,
public and private, there was
talk of raising the salaries of
the fourteen judges, who were
most absurdly underpaid even
when a dollar in paper and a
dollar in gold were the same
thing.
Some of the judges were severely
pinched in attempting to make
six thousand half-dollars do the
work which six thousand whole
ones had accomplished with
difficulty; and none, perhaps,
more severely than the excellent
and hospitable judge whose
experience we are about to
relate. A person known by him to
be in the confidence of leading
men about the City Hall called,
upon him one day, and informed
him that it was in contemplation
to raise the salaries of all the
judges $2,000 per annum. The
judge observed that he was much
relieved to hear it, for he had
gone so deeply into the Sanitary
Commission and other projects
for promoting the war, and had
made so many expensive journeys
to Washington in furtherance of
such projects, that he did not
see how he could get through the
year if the inflation continued.
'Well, judge,' said the person,
'if the judges are disposed to
be reasonable, the thing can be
done.' 'What do you mean by
reasonable?' asked the judge.
The reply was brief and to the
point: 'Twenty-five per cent, of
the increase for one year.' The
judge said No. If his salary
could not be raised without
that, he must rub on, as best he
could, on his present income.
The person was evidently much
surprised, and said: 'I am sorry
you have such old-fashioned
notions. Why, judge, everybody
does it here.' Nothing more was
heard of increasing the judges'
salaries for a whole year,
during which the inflation
itself had become inflated, and
every door-keeper and copyist
had had his stipend increased.
At length, the spoilers deemed
it best, for purposes of their
own, to consent the salaries of
the judges should be increased
$1,000; and, a year after that,
the other $1,000 was permitted
to be added.
It was recently proved, in the
presence of the Governor of the
State, that the appointment of
the office of Corporation
Attorney was sold to one
incumbent for the round sum of
$10,000. This is bad enough, but
worse remains to be told Sworn
testimony, from thirty-six
witnesses, taken by a committee
of investigation, establishes
the appalling fact, that
appointments to places in the
public schools are
systematically sold in some of
the wards--the wards where the
public schools are almost the
sole civilizing power, and where
it is of unspeakable importance
that the schools should be in
the hands of the best men and
women. One young lady; who had
just buried her father and had a
helpless mother to support,
applied for a situation as
teacher, and was told, as usual,
that she must pay for it. She
replied that she could not raise
the sum demanded, the funeral
expenses having exhausted the
family store. She was then
informed that she could pay 'the
tax' in installments.
Another
poor girl came on the
witness-stand on crutches, and
testified that she had paid $75
for a situation of $300 a year.
Another lady went to a member of
the Ring, and told him, with
tears, that she saw no way of
procuring the sum required, nor
even of saving it from the
slender salary of the place. The
man was moved by her anguish,
took compassion upon her, and
said he would remit his share of
'the tax.' It was shown, too,
that the agent of all this foul
iniquity was no other than the
principal of one of the schools.
It was he who received and paid
over the money wrung from the
terror and necessities of
underpaid and overworked
teachers. We learn from the
report of the committee that the
Ring in this ward was originally
formed for the express purpose
of giving the situations in a
new and handsome school 'to the
highest bidder'; and, as the
opening of the new school
involved the discharge of a
small number of teachers
employed in the old schools, the
Ring had both, the fear and the
ambition of the teachers to work
upon. 'There was a perfect reign
of terror in the ward,' says the
report of the investigating
committee. 'The agent performed
his duty with alacrity and with
a heartlessness worthy of the
employers. It appears that he
not only summoned the teachers
to come to him, but that he
called on their parents and
friends as to the amount they
should pay for their
appointments--the sums varying
from $50 to $600, according to
the position sought.'
And who were the Ring that
perpetrated this infamy? They
were a majority of the trustees
elected by the people, and the
School Commissioner elected by
the people--six poor creatures,
selected from the grog-shop and
the wharf, and entrusted with
the most sacred interest of a
republic, the education of its
children.
The Result
"The result of all this
plunder," continues Mr. Parton,
"is, that in thirty-six years
the rate of taxation in the city
and county of New York has
increased from two dollars and a
half to forty dollars per
inhabitant! In 1830, the city
was governed for half a million
dollars. In 1865, the entire
government of the island,
including assessments on private
property for public
improvements, cost more than
forty millions of dollars. In
1830, the population of the city
was a little more than two
hundred thousand. It is now
about one million. Thus, while
the population of the county is
five times greater than it was
in 1830, the cost of governing
it is sixteen times greater. And
yet such is the value of the
productive property owned by the
city,--so numerous are the
sources of revenue from that
property,--that able men of
business are of the deliberate
opinion that a private company
could govern, clean, sprinkle,
and teach the City by contract,
taking as compensation only the
fair revenue to be derived from
its property. Take one item as
an illustration: under the old
excise system, the liquor
licenses yielded twelve thousand
dollars per annum; under the
new, they yield one million and
a quarter. Take another: the
corporation own more than twenty
miles of wharves and
water-front, the revenue from
which does not keep the wharves
in repair; under a proper
system, they would yield a
million dollars above the cost
of repairs."