As we have said before, the
majority of the better classes
of New York prefer to board
rather than keep house. Of
these, a large number board at
the hotels, the rest in private
boarding-houses.
The principal hotels of the City
are the Astor, St. Nicholas,
Metropolitan, New York, Fifth
Avenue, and the Hoffman,
Albemarle, Clarendon, Everett,
and Coleman Houses. These head
the list, but there are scores
of first class houses, some of
which are elegant in every
respect. The transient custom of
the hotels of the City is
enormous, but the permanent
boarders of these establishments
are very profitable. The rates
are high, and the majority of
these houses pay their
proprietors well. There are two
classes known in the City--those
which are conducted on the old
American style, or those known
as "European houses." The former
provide the guests with lodgings
and full board at so much per
day, or week, while the others
furnish merely the room and
attendance, and are either
without the means of supplying
meals to their guests, or charge
for each article of food
separately. It is hard to say
which system is the more
popular, though it would seem
that the European is growing in
favor.
The proprietors of the city
hotels are very active in their
efforts to exclude improper
characters from their houses,
but with all their vigilance do
not succeed in doing so. One is
ever certain as to the
respectability of his neighbor
at the table, and it is well
never to be in a hurry to form
acquaintanceships at such
places. Fallen women of the
higher classes, and gamblers,
abound at the hotels. The
proprietor cannot turn them out
until they commit some overt
act, for fear of getting himself
into trouble. As soon, however,
as his attention is called to
any improper conduct on their
part, they are turned into the
street, no matter at what hour
of the day or night, and left to
shift for themselves.
Hotel Swindlers
Quite a number of persons in
this city make a regular
business of staying at hotels,
and absconding without paying
their board. This class consists
of both males and females, and
is much larger than most people
suppose. We take the following
descriptions of some of the best
known from the daily journals of
the City. They will show also
their mode of operations:
A man by the name of D----, or
R----, purporting to hail from
St. Louis, has enjoyed many
years' experience as a hotel
'beat.' He is a tall, not
ill-looking fellow, of tolerable
address, and generally travels
accompanied by his wife and
three children, and by a large
trunk; his wife sometimes
contrives to smuggle in the
third child secretly, and to
hide it in the room allotted to
them, so that only two children
appear on the bill. At any rate
the bill is never paid whenever
settlement is demanded. Mr. D--,
or R--, is always found in his
apartment seated at the table,
busy with an elaborate
assortment of manuscripts, and
so busy that really at present
he cannot be disturbed.
To-morrow he will attend to
every thing. But to-morrow the
birds have flown, or walked out,
one by one, from the hotel, and
when the trunk, is opened, there
is a beggarly array of
brickbats, old boxes, old rags,
and carpets, the former having
served to render the trunk
weighty, the latter to prevent
any noise or rolling that might
excite suspicion.
Another adventurer, a bachelor,
by the name of M----, affects
the eccentric, and, as the day
approaches for the handing in of
his bill, his eccentricity
verges upon madness, till at
last, when the document is
really tendered, he becomes
absolutely crazy--shouts, sings,
performs in an antic manner, and
declares himself to be the king
of the Jews, the President of
the United States, or something
of that sort. He has sufficient
method in his madness, however,
to gain the advantage of the
hotel proprietors, having on one
occasion beaten the Fifth Avenue
Hotel out of one hundred and
seventy-one dollars in board and
lodging. He sometimes is to be
seen on Broadway in the guise of
a military officer.
One of the most cunning and
successful of adventurers is
known by the name of W----,
alias Jones, alias several other
titles. This fellow is an
undersized man, blind of one
eye, but of very genteel and
prepossessing address, and is
generally accompanied by his
wife. The two practice the
bundle game, which is a very
adroit performance. Their modus
operandi is as follows: They
travel with a large Saratoga
trunk, which is really well
stocked with linen and clothing.
Of this fact they contrive to
render the detective and
officials of the house aware, so
as to quiet any suspicion.
Having thus tolerably opened the
ball they keep it rolling as
long as possible, till within
two days or so of the period of
final settlement. Suddenly Mrs.
W----, or Jones, appears to be
seized with a mania for going up
and down stairs, and in and out
of the hotel, carrying little
parcels in her hand to and fro
to the milliners and
dressmakers, etc. Her husband
also discovers that his clothes
need revision, and sends them to
tailors.
Messengers also
come to their rooms for bundles,
etc., and at last Mr. Jones, or
W----, announces at the office
that he is about to leave the
next day, and would like his
bill made out up 'till to-morrow
night.' Meanwhile he goes on to
state as his trunk requires some
repairs he has removed his
wardrobe into the bureau
drawers, etc., and has sent for
a trunkman to convey it to the
nearest establishment, will they
allow him a servant to assist
the trunkman with it down
stairs. The servant is sent to
the room, sees that nothing is
taken away but the empty trunk,
and all is well. The adventurer
and his female confederate eat
with gusto, walk out arm in arm
from the hotel, and are seen no
more, neither their trunk,
neither their wardrobe, which
examination shows has not been
removed into the bureau drawers;
in short, the clothes of the
worthy pair have been taken away
bundle by bundle, parcel by
parcel, and left at convenient
places in the neighborhood, to
be called for, while the trunk
has been deposited at a friend's
till further notice.
By this system of operations the
St. Nicholas, Lafarge New York,
and Howard Hotels were
victimized. Their triumphant
career was checked, however, at
the Fifth Avenue Hotel, by
efforts of the special detective
of the house, who discovered one
day a piece of paper containing
W---- Jones' private memorandum
of the places at which he and
his wife had left their
different bundles. By
confronting Jones, accusing him
of his dishonesty, presenting
the paper and accompanying him
nolens volens to these various
places, the detective contrived
to recover the bill due to his
hotel.
There are many adventurers
hanging round a hotel, who are
not enrolled, however, among its
regular lodgers. There are
numerous 'beats' who merely
direct their energies to
obtaining meals gratis, taking
advantage of the rush to the
tables during meal hours. As
many as thirty-four of this
class were detected at the Fifth
Avenue Hotel in a single month.
These adventurers often practice
the hat game, depositing, when
they enter the dining-room, a
worthless chapeau, and taking
up, when they pass out, a
valuable one--by inadvertence,
of course. The Metropolitan
Hotel has a colored man in its
employ stationed at the door of
the dining-rooms, who has proved
thus far too much for the
efforts of any of these gentry,
consequently this hotel has
been, in this respect,
peculiarly fortunate.
A man named W----, lately gained
the advantage of a hotel
detective in a rather amusing
manner. He was in the habit of
stealing his meals, and was
detected so doing, but as he was
one day also seen to draw from
his pocket a gold watch,
attached to a heavy chain, it
was determined to give him a
little longer indulgence. At
last his time was up, and the
officer, advancing to him, told
him that he had been waited for;
that he had taken just so many
meals, and must just pay so much
money. "But I have no money."
"Then I will seize your watch."
When, lo! the watch had
disappeared, and all the
detective could find, in its
place was but a bunch of
keys--the watch itself having
been originally borrowed for a
purpose which it had fulfilled.
Hotel Thieves
All the first-class hotels
employ private detectives and
watchmen. The business of these
men is to keep a watch over the
upper part of the house, to
prevent thieves from entering
and robbing the rooms of the
guests. Suspicious persons are
at once apprehended, and
required to give account of
themselves.
A friend of the writer once
called on an acquaintance at the
St. Nicholas, and, being on
intimate terms with the
gentleman, went immediately to
his room, without making the
customary inquiries at the
office. Although he knew the
house very well, he missed his
way in the long corridor, and
failed to find the stairway.
While endeavoring to "get his
bearing," he was accosted by a
quiet-looking individual, who
told him he must go with him to
the office and give an account
of himself. The man was the
private detective of the house,
and seeing that the gentleman
had lost his way, supposed at
once that he was a hotel thief
who had become bewildered in
trying to make off from the
house. Fortunately, the
gentleman was well known at the
office, where the mistake was at
once discovered and apologized
for.
An Agile Thief
Some time ago, a man entered the
St. Nicholas and robbed the
occupant of one of the rooms,
during his sleep, of a gold
watch and chain, worth about one
hundred and fifty dollars, a
small amount of money, and a
gold shirt-stud, with which he
escaped to the hall-way.
Succeeding so well, he concluded
to try again, and proceeded to
room 175, occupied by the
cashier of the hotel, lifted
that gentleman's clothing from a
table, and stole some money from
the pockets. As the thief was in
the act of leaving the room, the
cashier awoke, and, seeing a
stranger, asked, "Who's there?"
To which the robber replied, "I
beg your pardon, sir; I have
made a slight mistake." Upon
which he hastily left, followed
by the cashier, who cried, "Stop
thief!" At that moment,
detective Golden, employed in
the hotel, appeared on the scene
of action, and pursued the
fugitive. The latter, in his
haste, leaped down a whole
flight of stairs, when detective
Golden cried out to the men
below to stop him; and
accordingly he was seized and
held till the detective ran down
and took charge of the prisoner.
On searching him, the gold watch
and chain were found in his
possession; also five different
parcels of moneys, doubtless
stolen from as many different
rooms.