The Land of Stars and Stripes
The sun had aired the opening day
before I appeared on deck. What a scene!
There was scarce a zephyr to ripple the noble Hudson,
or the glorious bay; the latter, land-locked save
where lost in the distant ocean; the former skirted
by the great Babylon of America on one side, and the
lovely wooded banks of Hoboken on the other. The
lofty western hills formed a sharp yet graceful bend
in the stream, round which a fleet of small craft,
with rakish hulls and snowy sails, were stealing quietly
and softly, like black swans with white wings; the
stillness and repose were only broken by the occasional
trumpet blast of some giant high-pressure steamer,
as she dashed past them with lightning speed.
Suddenly a floating island appeared in the bend of
the river; closer examination proved it to be a steamer,
with from twenty to twenty-five large boats secured
alongside, many of them laden at Buffalo, and coming
by the Erie Canal to the ocean. Around me was
shipping of every kind and clime; enormous ferry-boats
radiating in all directions; forests of masts along
the wharves; flags of every colour and nation flying;
the dingy old storehouses of the wealthy Wall-street
neighbourhood, and the lofty buildings of the newer
parts of the town; everything had something novel
in its character, but all was stamped with go-aheadism.
This glorious panorama, seen through the bright medium
of a rosy morn and a cloudless sky, has left an enjoyable
impression which time can never efface. But although
everything was strange, I could not feel myself abroad,
so strong is the power of language.
Taking leave of our worthy and able
skipper, we landed on the soil of the giant Republic
at Jersey city, where the wharves, &c., of the Cunard
line are established, they not having been able to
procure sufficient space on the New York side.
The first thing we ran our heads against was, of course,
the Custom-house; but you must not imagine, gentle
reader, that a Custom-house officer in America is that
mysterious compound of detective police and high-bred
ferret which you too often meet with in the Old World.
He did not consider it requisite to tumble everything
out on the floor, and put you to every possible inconvenience,
by way of exhibiting his importance; satisfied on that
point himself, he impressed you with it by simple courtesy,
thus gaining respect where the pompous inquisitive
type of the animal would have excited ill-will and
contempt. Thank heaven, the increased inter-communication,
consequent upon steam-power, has very much civilized
that, until lately, barbarian portion of the European
family; nor do I attempt to deny that the contiguity
of the nations, and the far greater number of articles
paying duty, facilitating and increasing smuggling,
render a certain degree of ferretishness a little more
requisite on the part of the operator, and a little
more patience requisite on the part of the victim.
A very few minutes polished our party
off, and found us on board of the ferry-boat; none
of your little fiddling things, where a donkey-cart
and an organ-boy can hardly find standing-room, but
a good clear hundred-feet gangway, twelve or fourteen
feet broad, on each side of the engine, and a covered
cabin outside each gangway, extending half the length
of the vessel; a platform accommodating itself to the
rise and fall of the water, enables you to drive on
board with perfect ease, while the little kind of
basin into which you run on either side, being formed
of strong piles fastened only at the bottom, yields
to the vessel as she strikes, and entirely does away
with any concussion. I may here add, that during
my whole travels in the States, I found nothing more
perfect in construction and arrangement than the ferries
and their boats, the charges for which are most moderate,
varying according to distances, and ranging from one
halfpenny upwards.
It is difficult to say what struck
me most forcibly on landing at New York; barring the
universality of the Saxon tongue, I should have been
puzzled to decide in what part of the world I was.
The forest of masts, and bustle on the quays, reminded
me of the great sea-port of Liverpool: but scarce
had I left the quays, when the placards of business
on the different stories reminded me of Edinburgh.
A few minutes more, and I passed one of their large
streets, justly called “Avenues,” the rows
of trees on each side reminding me of the Alamedas
in the Spanish towns; but the confusion of my ideas
was completed when the hackney coach was brought to
a standstill, to allow a huge railway carriage to cross
our bows, the said carriage being drawn by four horses,
and capable of containing fifty people.
At last, with my brain in a whirl,
I alighted at Putnam’s hotel, where my kind
friend, Mr. W. Duncan, had prepared rooms for our party;
nor did his zeal in our behalf stop here, for he claimed
the privilege of being the first to offer hospitality,
and had already prepared a most excellent spread for
us at the far-famed Cafe Delmonico, where we
found everything of the best: oysters, varying
from the “native” size up to the large
American oyster, the size of a small leg of Welsh
mutton mind, I say a small leg the
latter wonderful to look at, and pleasant to the taste,
though far inferior to the sweet little “native.”
Here I saw for the first time a fish
called “the sheep’s head,” which
is unknown, I believe, on our side of the Atlantic.
It derives its name from having teeth exactly like
those of a sheep, and is a most excellent fish wherewith
to console themselves for the want of the turbot, which
is never seen in the American waters. Reader,
I am not going to inflict upon you a bill of fare;
I merely mention the giant oyster and the sheep’s
head, because they are peculiar to the country; and
if nearly my first observations on America are gastronomic,
it is not because I idolize my little interior, though
I confess to having a strong predilection in favour
of its being well supplied; but it is because during
the whole time I was in the United States, from
my friend D., who thus welcomed me on my arrival,
to Mr. R. Phelps, in whose house I lived like a tame
cat previous to re-embarking for old England, wherever
I went I found hospitality a prominent feature in the
American character.
Having enjoyed a very pleasant evening,
and employed the night in sleeping off the fumes of
sociability, I awoke, for the first time, in one of
the splendid American hotels; and here, perhaps, it
may be as well to say a few words about them, as their
enormous size makes them almost a national peculiarity.
The largest hotel in New York, when
I arrived, was the Metropolitan, in the centre of
which is a theatre; since then, the St. Nicholas has
been built, which is about a hundred yards square,
five stories high, and will accommodate, when completed,
about a thousand people. Generally speaking,
a large hotel has a ladies’ entrance on one side,
which is quite indispensable, as the hall entrance
is invariably filled with smokers; all the ground
floor front, except this hall and a reading-room,
is let out as shops: there are two dining-saloons,
one of which is set apart for ladies and their friends,
and to this the vagrant bachelor is not admitted,
except he be acquainted with some of the ladies, or
receive permission from the master of the house.
The great entrance is liberally supplied with an abundance
of chairs, benches, &c., and decorated with capacious
spittoons, and a stove which glows red-hot in the
winter. Newspapers, of the thinnest substance
and the most microscopic type, and from every part
of the Union, are scattered about in profusion; the
human species of every kind may be seen variously
occupied groups talking, others roasting
over the stove, many cracking peanuts, many more smoking,
and making the pavement, by their united labours,
an uncouth mosaic of expectoration and nutshells, varied
occasionally with cigar ashes and discarded stumps.
Here and there you see a pair of Wellington-booted
legs dangling over the back of one chair, while the
owner thereof is supporting his centre of gravity on
another. One feature is common to them all busy-ness;
whether they are talking, or reading, or cracking
nuts, a peculiar energy shows the mind is working.
Further inside is the counter for the clerks who appoint
the rooms to the travellers, as they enter their names
in a book; on long stools close by is the corps of
servants, while in full sight of all stands the “Annunciator,”
that invaluable specimen of American mechanical ingenuity,
by which, if any bell is pulled in any room, one loud
stroke is heard, and the number of the room disclosed,
in which state it remains until replaced; so that
if everybody had left the hall, the first person returning
would see at once what bells had been rung during
his absence, and the numbers of the rooms they belonged
to. Why this admirable contrivance has not been
introduced into this country, I cannot conceive.
The bar is one of the most if
not the most important departments in the
hotel; comparatively nothing is drunk at dinner, but
the moment the meal is over, the bar becomes assailed
by applicants; moreover, from morning to midnight,
there is a continuous succession of customers; not
merely the lodgers and their friends, but any parties
passing along the street, who feel disposed, walk
into the bar of any hotel, and get “a drink.”
The money taken at a popular bar in the course of a
day is, I believe, perfectly fabulous.
Scarcely less important than the bar
is the barber’s shop. Nothing struck me
more forcibly than an American under the razor or brush:
in any and every other circumstance of life full of
activity and energy, under the razor or brush he is
the picture of indolence and helplessness. Indifferent
usually to luxury, he here exhausts his ingenuity
to obtain it; shrinking usually from the touch of a
nigger as from the venomed tooth of a serpent, he
here is seen resigning his nose to the digital custody
of that sable operator, and placing his throat at
his mercy, or revelling in titillary ecstasy from his
manipulations with the hog’s bristles; all
this he enjoys in a semi-recumbent position, obtained
from an easy chair and a high stool, wherein he lies
with a steadiness which courts prolongation life-like,
yet immoveable suggesting the idea of an
Egyptian corpse newly embalmed. Never shaving
myself more than once a fortnight, and then requiring
no soap and water, and having cut my own hair for
nearly twenty years, I never thought of going through
the experiment, which I have since regretted; for,
many a time and oft have I stood, in wonder, gazing
at this strange anomaly of character, and searching
in vain for a first cause. The barber’s
shop at the St. Nicholas is the most luxurious in
New York, and I believe every room has its own brush,
glass, &c., similarly numbered in the shop.
The crowning peculiarity of the new
hotels is “The Bridal Chamber;” the want
of delicacy that suggested the idea is only equalled
by the want of taste with which it is carried out.
Fancy a modest girl, having said “Yes,”
and sealed the assertion in the solemn services of
the Church, retiring to the bridal chamber of the
St. Nicholas! In the first place, retiring to
an hotel would appear to her a contradiction in terms;
but what would be her feelings when she found the
walls of her apartment furnished with fluted white
silk and satin, and in the centre of the room a matrimonial
couch, hung with white silk curtains, and blazing
with a bright jet of gas from each bed-post! The
doors of the sleeping-rooms are often fitted with
a very ingenious lock, having a separate bolt and
keyhole on each side, totally disconnected, and consequently,
as they can only be opened from the same side they
are fastened, no person, though possessed of a skeleton
key, is able to enter. The ominous warning, “Lock
your door at night,” which is usually hung up,
coupled with the promiscuous society frequently met
in large hotels, renders it most advisable to use
every precaution.
Many hotels have a Bible in each bed-room,
the gift of some religious community in the city;
those that I saw during my travels were most frequently
from the Presbyterians.
Having given you some details of an
American first-class hotel in a large city, you will
perhaps be better able to realize the gigantic nature
of these establishments when I tell you that in some
of them, during the season, they consume, in one way
and another, DAILY, from fifteen hundred to two thousand
pounds of meats, and from forty-five to fifty pounds
of tea, coffee, &c., and ice by the ton, and have a
corps of one hundred and fifty servants of all kinds.
Washing is done in the hotel with a rapidity little
short of marvellous. You can get a shirt well
washed, and ready to put on, in nearly the same space
of time as an American usually passes under the barber’s
hands. The living at these hotels is profuse
to a degree, but, generally speaking, most disagreeable:
first, because the meal is devoured with a rapidity
which a pack of fox-hounds, after a week’s fast,
might in vain attempt to rival; and, secondly, because
it is impossible to serve up dinners for hundreds
without nine-tenths thereof being cold. The best
of the large hotels I dined at in New York, as regards
cuisine, &c., was decidedly the New York Hotel;
but by far the most comfortable was the one I lived
in Putnam’s, Union-square which
was much smaller and quite new, besides being removed
from the racket of Broadway.
The increased intercourse with this
country is evidently producing a most improving effect
in many of the necessary and unmentionable comforts
of this civilized age, which you find to predominate
chiefly in those cities that have most direct intercourse
with us; but as you go further west, these comforts
are most disagreeably deficient. One point in
which the hotels fail universally is attendance; it
is their misfortune, not their fault; for the moment
a little money is realized by a servant, he sets up
in some business, or migrates westward. The consequence
is, that the field of service is left almost entirely
to the Irish and the negro, and between the two after
nearly a year’s experience thereof I
am puzzled to say in whose favour the balance is.
I remember poor Paddy, one morning,
having answered the Household Brigade man’s
bell, was told to get some warm water. He went
away, and forgot all about it. Of course, the
bell rang again; and, on Paddy answering it, he was
asked
“Did I not tell you to get me some warm water?”
“You did, your honour.”
“Then, why have you not brought it?”
“Can’t tell, your honour.”
“Well, go and get it at once.”
Paddy left the room, and waited outside
the door scratching his head. In about a quarter
of an hour a knock was heard:
“Come in!”
Paddy’s head appeared, and, with a most inquiring
voice, he said
“Is it warm water to dhrink you want, your honour?”
Ex uno, &c.
Another inconvenience in their hotels
is the necessity of either living at the public table,
or going to the enormous expense of private rooms;
the comfort of a quiet table to yourself in a coffee-room
is quite unknown. There is no doubt that sitting
down at a table-d’hote is a ready way to ascertain
the manners, tone of conversation, and, partly, the
habits of thought, of a nation, especially when, as
in the United States, it is the habitual resort of
everybody; but truth obliges me to confess that, after
a very short experience of it, I found the old adage
applicable, “A little of it goes a great way;”
and I longed for the cleanliness, noiselessness, and
comfort of an English coffee-room, though its table
be not loaded with equal variety and profusion.
The American system is doubtless the
best for the hotelkeeper, as there are manifest advantages
in feeding masses at once, over feeding the same number
in detail. A mess of twenty officers, on board
a man-of-war, will live better on two pounds each
a month than one individual could on three times that
sum. It is the want of giving this difference
due consideration which raises, from time to time,
a crusade against the hotels at home, by instituting
comparisons with those of the United States.
If people want to have hotels as cheap as they are
in America, they must use them as much, and submit
to fixed hours and a mixture of every variety of cultivation
of mind and cleanliness of person which
change is not likely, I trust, to take place in my
day. It is a curious fact, that when the proprietor
of the Adelphi, at Liverpool in consequence
of a remonstrance made by some American, gentlemen
as to his charges suggested to them that
they should name their own hour and dine together,
in which case his charges would be greatly diminished,
they would not hear of such a thing, and wanted to
know why they should be forced to dine either all
together, or at one particular hour. An American
gentleman, with whom I am acquainted, told me that,
when he first came over to England, the feeling of
solitude, while breakfasting alone, at his table in
Morley’s coffee-room, was quite overpowering.
“Now,” he added, “I look forward
to my quiet breakfast and the paper every morning
with the greatest pleasure, and only wonder how I can
have lived so long, and been so utterly ignorant of
such simple enjoyment.” I have thought
it better to make these observations thus early, although
it must be obvious they are the results of my subsequent
experience, and I feel I ought to apologize for their
lengthiness.
There is comparatively little difficulty
in finding your way about New York, or, indeed, most
American towns, except it be in the old parts thereof,
which are as full of twists, creeks, and names as our
own. The newer part of the town is divided into
avenues running nearly parallel with the Hudson; the
streets cross them at right angles, and both are simply
numbered; the masses of buildings which these sections
form are very nearly uniform in area, and are termed
blocks. The great place for lounging, or loafing,
as they term it is Broadway, which may be
said to bisect New York longitudinally; the shops
are very good, but, generally speaking, painfully
alike, wearying the eye with sameness, when the novelty
has worn off: the rivalry which exists as to the
luxe of fitting up some of these shops is inconceivable.
I remember going into an ice-saloon,
just before I embarked for England; the room on the
ground-floor was one hundred and fifty feet long by
forty broad; rows of pillars on each side were loaded
to the most outrageous extent with carving and gilding,
and the ceiling was to match; below that was another
room, a little smaller, and rather less gaudy; both
were crowded with the most tag-rag and bob-tail mixture
of people.
The houses are built of brick, and
generally have steps up to them, by which arrangement
the area receives much more light; and many people
with very fine large houses live almost exclusively
in these basements, only using the other apartments
for some swell party: the better class of houses,
large hotels, and some of the shops, have their fronts
faced with stone of a reddish brown, which has a warm
and pleasant appearance. The famous “Astor
House” is faced with granite, and the basement
is of solid granite. The most remarkable among
the new buildings is the magnificent store of Mr.
Stewart one of the largest, I believe, in
the world: it has upwards of one hundred and
fifty feet frontage on Broadway, and runs back nearly
the same distance: is five stories high, besides
the basement; its front is faced with white marble,
and it contains nearly every marketable commodity
except eatables. If you want anything, in New
York, except a dinner, go to Stewart’s, and it
is ten to one you find it, and always of the newest
kind and pattern; for this huge establishment clears
out every year, and refills with everything of the
newest and best. Goods are annually sold here
to the amount of upwards of a million sterling a
sum which I should imagine was hardly exceeded by
any establishment of a similar nature except Morison’s
in London, which, I believe, averages one and a half
million. Some idea of the size of this store
may be formed, from the fact that four hundred gas
burners are required to light it up. Mr. Stewart,
I was informed, was educated for a more intellectual
career than the keeper of a store, on however grand
a scale; but circumstances induced him to change his
pursuits, and as he started with scarce any capital,
the success which has attended him in business cannot
but make one regret that the world has lost the benefit
which might have been anticipated from the same energy
and ability, if it had been applied to subjects of
a higher class.
I will now offer a few observations
on the state of the streets. The assertion has
been made by some writer I really know not
who that New York is one of the dirtiest
places in the world. To this I must give a most
unqualified denial. No person conversant with
many of the large provincial towns in England and
Scotland, can conscientiously “throw a very
large stone” at New York; for though much is
doing among us to improve and sweeten chiefly,
thanks to the scourge of epidemics I fear
that in too many places we are still on this point
“living in glass houses.” Doubtless,
New York is infinitely dirtier than London, as London
at present is far less clean than Paris has become
under the rule of the Third Napoleon. I fully
admit that it is not so clean as it should be, considering
that the sum nominally spent on cleansing the streets
amounts to very nearly sixty thousand pounds a year,
a sum equal to one pound for every ten inhabitants;
but the solution of this problem must be looked for
in the system of election to the corporation offices,
on which topic I propose to make a few observations
in some future portion of these pages. While
on the subject of streets, I cannot help remarking
that it always struck me as very curious that so intelligent
a people as the Americans never adopted the simple
plan of using sweeping carts, which many of their
countrymen must have seen working in London.
If not thoroughly efficient, their ingenuity might
have made them so; and, at all events, they effect
a great saving of human labour. But there is
a nuisance in the streets of New York, especially in
the lower and business part of the town, which must
be palpable to every visitor I mean the
obstructions on the pavement; and that, be it observed,
in spite of laws passed for the prevention thereof,
but rendered nugatory from maladministration.
In many places, you will see a man occupying the whole
pavement opposite his store with leviathan boxes and
bales, for apparently an indefinite period, inasmuch
as I have seen the same things occupying the same
place day after day, and forcing every passer-by off
the pavement. This information may console some
of our own communities who are labouring under the
gnawing and painful disease of a similar corrupt and
inefficient administration.
Amid the variety of shops, the stranger
cannot fail to be struck with the wonderful number
of oyster-saloons stuck down on the basement, and
daguerreotypists perched in the sky-line: their
name is legion; everybody eats oysters, and everybody
seems to take everybody else’s portrait.
To such an extent is this mania for delineating the
’human face divine’ carried, that a hatter
in Chatham-street has made no small profit by advertising
that, in addition to supplying hats at the same price
as his rivals, he will take the portrait of the purchaser,
and fix it inside thereof gratis. This was too
irresistible; so off I went, and, selecting my two
dollar beaver on the ground-floor, walked up to a six
foot square garret room, where the sun did its work
as quick as light, after which the liberal artist,
with that flattering propensity which belongs to the
profession, threw in the roseate hues of youth by the
aid of a little brick-dust. I handed him my dust
in return, and walked away with myself on my head,
where myself may still be daily seen, a travelled
and travelling advertisement of Chatham-street enterprise.
Our American friends deal largely
in newspaper puffs, and as some of them are amusing
enough, I select the following as specimens of their
“Moses and Son” style:
ANOTHER DREADFUL ACCIDENT. OH,
MA! I MET WITH A DREADFUL ACCIDENT! The
other night, while dancing with cousin Frank, I dropped
my Breastpin and Ear-Ring on the floor and broke
them all to pieces Never mind, my dear.
Just take them to Jewellery Store.
You can get them made as good as new again!
GRATIFYING NEWS. We have just
learned, with real pleasure, that the seedy
young man who sprained his back whilst trying to “raise
the wind” is fast recovering, in consequence
of judiciously applying the Mustang Liniment.
It is to be hoped he will soon be entirely cured,
and that the next time he undertakes it, he will
take an upright position, and not adopt the
stooping posture. This precaution, we
have no doubt, will ensure success.
This Liniment can be had of .
Even, marriage and death are not exempt
from the fantastic advertising style.
On Friday, June 10, by the Rev. Mr. ,
after a severe and long-protracted courtship, which
they bore with Christian fortitude and resignation,
solely sustained and comforted, under all misgivings,
by their sincere and confiding belief in the promise
of a rich, and living inheritance in another state,
Mr. to Miss ,
all of this city.
On April 4, of congestion of the brain,
F E , son of
J and
M C. D ,
aged fourteen months.
His remains were taken to G
for interment yesterday.
List! heard you that angel say,
As he waved his little wing,
“Come, Freddy, come away,
Learn of me a song to sing!”
The most gigantic advertiser if
the New York Daily Sun is to be trusted for
information is Professor Holloway, so well
known in this country. According to that paper,
he advertises in thirteen hundred papers in the United
States, and has expended, in different parts of the
world, the enormous sum of nearly half a million sterling,
solely for that purpose.
But, reader, there are more interesting
objects to dwell upon than these. If you will
only “loaf” up and down Broadway on a fine
afternoon, you will see some of the neatest feet,
some of the prettiest hands, some of the brightest
eyes, and some of the sweetest smiles the wildest
beauty-dreamer ever beheld in his most rapturous visions;
had they but good figures, they would excite envy
on the Alamedas of Andalusia; in short, they
are the veriest little ducks in the world, and dress
with Parisian perfection. No wonder, then, reader,
when I tell you that “loafing” up and
down Broadway is a favourite occupation with the young
men who have leisure hours to spare. So attractive
did my young friend of the Household Brigade find
it, that it was with difficulty he was ever induced
to forego his daily pilgrimage. Alas! poor fellow,
those days are gone he has since been “caught,”
and another now claims his undivided adoration.