By this term we refer to the
street vendors of the city, who
hawk their wares through the
public thoroughfares. A recent
number of the Cornhill Magazine,
of London, contains the
following interesting
description of this class:
As New York is the largest city
in America, we naturally find
more of this class there than
anywhere else. It takes a long
residence in the city to become
familiar with them, for they
vary with the season, and their
occupations change according to
circumstances. In many respects
New York city resembles London
or Paris. And so would any other
town with a million of
inhabitants, surrounded by a
cluster of cities, which swell
the united population to almost
two millions.
It may
well be doubted if there is a
city in Europe which presents so
many strong characteristics as
the American metropolis. The
population of Manhattan Island
is a mixture of all the peoples
under the sun, fearfully and
wonderfully jumbled together.
About one thousand foreigners a
day arrive in New York from all
parts of the world the year
round. The resident American is
always coming in contact with
Spaniards, Germans, Irishmen,
Frenchmen, Africans, Chinese,
Japanese, Indians, Mexicans,
Scotchmen, Canadians,
Englishmen, Arabs, Prussians,
Swedes, and Italians. The
Frenchman is as much at home as
in his native Paris; the
Scotchman hears the bagpipes in
the City Hall Park, and sees the
shepherd's dog at the Central
Park; the Chinaman can find a
whole street devoted to the
selling of his teas, his native
idols stare him in the face as
advertisements before a Yankee
shop door, and all the ladies on
Broadway are toying with his
fans; the Irishman rules the
city, and hoists his green flag
upon the public buildings; the
African is the most important
man in the crowd, and expects
soon to colonize the whites in
British America, or somewhere
else, while the German has his
sangerbunds and his
schutzenfests and lager bier,
and runs a halle and a boarding
haus. Great is the mystery of
New York.
But to the patterers. These are
that large class of people who
hawk their wares upon the
street, or get a living at a
stand. Some of them do a
thriving trade, others barely
eke out a miserable existence.
Take them all in all, and they
are a very curious class of
people, interesting to study. A
large number of them are women,
from the oldest gray-haired
grandmother, tottering on her
cane, down to the young woman of
sixteen. There are numerous
little girls struggling to get a
living, too, from three years
old upwards. The women always
excite our pity, and we
patronize them in preference to
the men.
The women patterers are usually
a very ugly-looking set. That
is, they are not handsome. Most
of them are Irishwomen, although
we now and then see an Italian
or German woman. We never saw
more than two American women
patterers in New York, and have
no recollection of ever seeing a
Jewess, a Scotch woman, or a
Spanish woman. The women and
girls sell flowers, newspapers,
candy, toothpicks, fruit,
various kinds of food, turn
hand-organs, sell songs, and
beg. A woman never sells cigars
or tobacco, and we have never
seen one crying gentlemen's
neckties. There is an old woman
on Nassau street, not far from
the General Post-office, who
sits behind a stocking stall,
covered with ladies' hose and
gentlemen's socks, suspenders,
mittens (the women always were
fond of dealing in mittens) list
slippers, yarns, and such stuff.
So far as we know, this woman is
an exception to her sex.
Very few women patterers in New
York cry their wares. There is
one ancient dame in the vicinity
of St. John's Park, who
screeches ' straw- ab-berries'
in the spring time, following it
up in the summer with 'blackberrie-e-e-s.'
She seldom gets above Canal
street, and always stays upon
the west side of Broadway. Her
voice has been familiar in that
section of the city for the past
five years, at least, and would
be sadly missed if some day she
should happen to get choked with
one of her own berries, and,
turning black in the face, be
laid out on a bier of straw
ready for burial.
There is a very stout old lady
who always sits by the City
Hospital gate, on Broadway. She
has been in that selfsame spot,
ever since before 'the late
war,' and how much longer we
know not. She is immensely
stout, and must weigh at least
two hundred pounds. Rain or
shine, hot or cold, there she
sits, with a little stand of
newspapers before her--the
Tribune, World, Herald, Times,
and Sun. She only sells morning
papers, and leaves when they are
all sold. She always has her
knitting-work, or sewing with
her, and can often be seen
making her own garments. Now and
then she grows weary, the eyes
close, the head falls forward,
the mouth opens, the fingers
stop, (still holding on to the
knitting work,) and she dreams!
What are her dreams? Possibly of
a happy home in a distant land,
a long time ago, when she was a
little girl, and had a father to
bless her, and a mother to love.
A brace of omnibuses come
thundering down the pavement,
and she awakes. If people
purchase papers of her while she
is asleep they drop the pennies
upon her stand, and pass on.
This old body has a daughter who
sells newspapers at a stand
directly opposite, upon the
other side of the street. The
daughter is not as dutiful as
she ought to be, and sometimes
there is a family jar upon the
street, not at all to the
edification of those who witness
it.
One of the saddest sights in New
York is that of a pale-faced,
light- haired woman,
middle-aged, who can frequently
be seen sitting on a Broadway
curbstone behind a small
hand-organ, from which she
grinds a plaintive tune, the
notes of which are seldom heard
above the thunder of the street.
She always appears bareheaded,
and with a small child in her
lap. The little straw hat of the
babe is put upon the top of the
organ to catch the pennies and
bits of scrip. We are glad to
notice that many men remember
her in passing.
City Hall Park, Printing-House
Square, Bowery, and Nassau
street, are the great centers
for all kinds of patterers. Here
women sell ice cream, lemonade,
doughnuts, buns, tropical
fruits, and sweetmeats. Bananas
and pineapples are favorite
fruits and all forms of
chocolate candies are in great
demand. Most of the women who
attend stalls grow very stout,
as they get little or no
exercise. It is noticed that
very few of them ever partake of
the fruits or other edibles
which they deal in. They always
bring a lunch with them of bread
and butter, cold soups, and cold
tea or coffee, with occasionally
a bit of meat. One evening,
opposite the Fifth Avenue Hotel,
we saw a young woman, evidently
nineteen or twenty, playing upon
a violin. She was blind, and, as
it was a warm, bright moonlight
night, her head was bare. The
countenance had a very sad,
sweet expression, and the air
she played was a far-away dreamy
romance. We never saw her but
once.
The poor little girls of New
York do a wonderful number of
things to get a living. They
sell matches, toothpicks,
cigars, songs, newspapers,
flowers, etc. There is a good
deal of romance published in the
newspapers, about the
flower-girls, which does not
exist. The Evening Post once
said they were as handsome as
the flower-girls of Paris. If
they are, the Paris flower-girls
must be frightful little
wretches. The flower-girls of
New York cluster about St.
Paul's churchyard and the Astor
House, and can be found
scattered up Broadway as high as
Twenty- third street. They sell
magnolias, hand bouquets and
button-hole bouquets for
gentlemen's coats. They appear
on the streets with the earliest
spring violets, and only
disappear with 'the last rose of
summer.' A rainy day is a very
good one for the flowers, and
they sell better than in fair
weather. When the skies are
lowering, man wants something to
cheer him, and so he takes a
tuberose and a geranium leaf,
and puts it in the button-hole
of his coat. The girls buy their
flowers of the gardeners out in
the suburbs of the city, and
then manufacture their own
bouquets.
Some of the little girls who
patter upon the street make a
tolerably good living, if they
are industrious and stick to
their business. Oranges and
sponges sell well, and often
from two to four dollars' worth
are disposed of between the
rising and the setting of the
sun. Pattering is only
profitable during business
hours, which, in New York, do
not commence much before 9
o'clock, and close by 5 P. M. So
the patterer is a gentleman with
the rest of them, and shuts up
shop at the same time A. T.
Stewart and H. B. Claflin do
their marble and sandstone
palaces. There are exceptions to
this rule, as there are to all
rules. Those who patter at the
Battery, and in the vicinity of
South Ferry, where a constant
stream of people is passing back
and forth far into the night,
stick by their stands as long as
there is any one upon the
street. At midnight, when the
thunder of the streets is
hushed, and the moon is rolling
beneath a dark cloud, the heads
of old men and women can be seen
nid, nid, nodding, from Bowling
Green to the Battery wall. Where
they go to when they close up
their stalls and crawl away in
the darkness, it is impossible
to say.
The most interesting sights in
connection with pattering may be
seen in the vicinity of Castle
Garden, and on the east side of
City Hall Park, opposite Park
Row. At Castle Garden the
patterers meet with a constant
stream of freshly arrived
emigrants. They have just landed
in 'free America,' and the first
thing which greets their eyes
after they have left the
officials, and passed the
portals of the Garden, is a long
row of patterers behind stalls
filled with ginger-cakes,
lemonade, tropical fruits,
apples, etc. Many of the poor
peasants from the interior of
Europe never saw a bunch of red
or golden bananas, they know
nothing of the mysteries of a
pineapple, and are unacquainted
with cocoa-nuts. They look with
no little astonishment upon
these products of the soil, but
hesitate to purchase them. They
are shy of the new-fangled
American drinks, but being very
thirsty, occasionally indulge in
a glass of lemonade. How their
eyes sparkle as the delicious
nectar runs down their throats.
Such wasser is unknown to the
springs of Germany. Bread, cakes
and apples are readily bought by
them, but as they deal in hard
cash, and talk German, and as
the old woman they are trading
with speaks Irish-English, and
has nothing but scrip, it takes
some little time to conclude a
bargain. A great deal of talking
is done on the fingers, and the
emigrant goes away satisfied,
nay, pleased, at the great
amount of something to eat he is
able to buy in America with a
small lot of silver. Besides
this, the old woman behind the
stall gives him a variety of
paper money, curiously printed.
He looks at it, then doubles it
up, and puts it carefully away.
The men patterers are a much
larger class in New York than
the women. They are engaged in
all imaginable occupations and
dog your steps at every corner.
Some of these men are
middle-aged, able-bodied
fellows, quite strong and
healthy enough to be clearing up
land in the West or laying
bricks at five dollars a day.
For some unaccountable reason
they prefer to remain in New
York, living from hand to mouth,
and doing nothing to improve
themselves, mentally, worldly,
or financially. We have one of
these in mind now. Sitting on
the west side of Broadway, not
far from White street, a young
man of about thirty-two or
three, healthy, stout, and quite
intelligent looking, employs his
time in tending a small stand,
upon which a few gum-drops and
chocolates are displayed for
sale. Here is enterprise and
ambition for you. We have passed
his stand several times a day
for the last year, and we never
saw him selling anything to a
man. They are ashamed of his
presence on the street in such
an occupation. A girl, or a poor
woman, would get some sympathy,
but for an able-bodied man in
America, none! The fellow has a
wife, and sometimes she takes
place. There is a sad,
disconsolate look upon her face,
and well there may be, since she
is united to such a lazy dolt of
a husband.
It has been noticed that dwarfs
and deformed people often resort
to pattering. Like Gloster, in
King Richard III., they are
---'curtailed thus of fair
proportion,
Cheated of feature by
dissembling nature,
Deform'd, unfinished, sent
before their time
Into this breathing world,
scarce half made up,
And that so lamely and
unfashionable,
That dogs bark at them.'
Through these misfortunes they
hope to tell upon the feelings
of the public, and thereby
secure a larger share of
patronage. One of these 4
unfashionable human beings
stands on Broadway, with a bunch
of carpet dusters in his
hand-leather thongs fastened to
a handle. Another poor fellow in
front of the Times office has no
arms, and therefore supports
himself by whittling
kindling-wood for the benefit of
the public. A dwarf on the
sidewalk, not far from the St.
Nicholas Hotel, has an immense
head, with ugly and snubbish
features, a short body, and
ungainly limbs. He peddles
apples.
The other men and boy patterers
of New York sell cigars, whips,
neckties, sleeve-buttons, dogs,
young bears, watch-chains,
resurrection plants,
sponge-cakes, and all the
articles sold by women. A man
does a thriving business at the
foot of one of the large marble
columns of the Sub-Treasury on
Wall street. He keeps fresh
home-made sponge cakes, which
sell for five or ten cents each.
One of these is enough for a
man's lunch.
The dog and bear men lurk in the
vicinity of the Astor House.
They always have a basket in
which they carry their animals,
and during business hours spend
the most of their time
scratching their backs with a
comb. These men seem to be a
little unsound in the upper
regions. They wear long hair,
loose fitting clothes,
broad-brimmed hats, and are
perfectly happy whether they
sell a dog or not. No one has
yet been seen offering cats for
sale. Maps, pictures, and songs
are frequently indulged in by
the street patterers. Most of
them are horrible prints, highly
colored, representing favorite
priests, the Presidents, naval
conflicts, battles, and fires.
The maps have the Irish harp in
one corner and the United States
flag in the other. The favorite
maps are those of Ireland and
New York City.
Since the police have banished
the banner-men from the
side-walks, the various trades
have taken to representing
themselves in odd costumes on
the backs of ambitious patterers.
Just now walking awnings,
barber's poles, whalebones,
etc., are the rage. Like
everything else in a city, this
will be tolerated until it
becomes a nuisance, when the
police will take them off to the
station-house and they will be
among the things that were.
"The patterers of New York could
well be dispensed with. Most of
them deserve none of our
sympathy, and should be taken in
charge by the government, and
set to work at some useful
occupation. This would clear the
streets of a great many
disgusting sights, and give the
town an air of thrift and
respectability, which it is not
likely to have as long as such a
horde of spendthrifts hang about
all the corners."