I shall take advantage of this pause
in my narrative to describe more closely the “Club”
spoken of in the latter part of the preceding chapter to
describe it as I afterwards came to know it, as an
habitue. I shall do this not only because
of the direct influence it had on my life, but also
because it was at that time the most famous place
of its kind in New York, and was well known to both
white and colored people of certain classes.
I have already stated that in the
basement of the house there was a Chinese restaurant.
The Chinaman who kept it did an exceptionally good
business; for chop-suey was a favorite dish among the
frequenters of the place. It is a food that,
somehow, has the power of absorbing alcoholic liquors
that have been taken into the stomach. I have
heard men claim that they could sober up on chop-suey.
Perhaps that accounted, in some degree, for its popularity.
On the main floor there were two large rooms:
a parlor about thirty feet in length, and a large,
square back room into which the parlor opened.
The floor of the parlor was carpeted; small tables
and chairs were arranged about the room; the windows
were draped with lace curtains, and the walls were
literally covered with photographs or lithographs of
every colored man in America who had ever “done
anything.” There were pictures of Frederick
Douglass and of Peter Jackson, of all the lesser lights
of the prize-fighting ring, of all the famous jockeys
and the stage celebrities, down to the newest song
and dance team. The most of these photographs
were autographed and, in a sense, made a really valuable
collection. In the back room there was a piano,
and tables were placed around the wall. The floor
was bare and the center was left vacant for singers,
dancers, and others who entertained the patrons.
In a closet in this room which jutted out into the
hall the proprietor kept his buffet. There was
no open bar, because the place had no liquor license.
In this back room the tables were sometimes pushed
aside, and the floor given over to general dancing.
The front room on the next floor was a sort of private
party room; a back room on the same floor contained
no furniture and was devoted to the use of new and
ambitious performers. In this room song and dance
teams practiced their steps, acrobatic teams practiced
their tumbles, and many other kinds of “acts”
rehearsed their “turns.” The other
rooms of the house were used as sleeping-apartments.
No gambling was allowed, and the conduct
of the place was surprisingly orderly. It was,
in short, a center of colored Bohemians and sports.
Here the great prize fighters were wont to come, the
famous jockeys, the noted minstrels, whose names and
faces were familiar on every bill-board in the country;
and these drew a multitude of those who love to dwell
in the shadow of greatness. There were then no
organizations giving performances of such order as
are now given by several colored companies; that was
because no manager could imagine that audiences would
pay to see Negro performers in any other rôle than
that of Mississippi River roustabouts; but there was
lots of talent and ambition. I often heard the
younger and brighter men discussing the time when
they would compel the public to recognize that they
could do something more than grin and cut pigeon-wings.
Sometimes one or two of the visiting
stage professionals, after being sufficiently urged,
would go into the back room and take the places of
the regular amateur entertainers, but they were very
sparing with these favors, and the patrons regarded
them as special treats. There was one man, a
minstrel, who, whenever he responded to a request
to “do something,” never essayed anything
below a reading from Shakespeare. How well he
read I do not know, but he greatly impressed me; and
I can say that at least he had a voice which strangely
stirred those who heard it. Here was a man who
made people laugh at the size of his mouth, while
he carried in his heart a burning ambition to be a
tragedian; and so after all he did play a part in a
tragedy.
These notables of the ring, the turf,
and the stage, drew to the place crowds of admirers,
both white and colored. Whenever one of them came
in, there were awe-inspired whispers from those who
knew him by sight, in which they enlightened those
around them as to his identity, and hinted darkly
at their great intimacy with the noted one. Those
who were on terms of approach immediately showed their
privilege over others less fortunate by gathering
around their divinity. I was, at first, among
those who dwelt in darkness. Most of these celebrities
I had never heard of. This made me an object
of pity among many of my new associates. I soon
learned, however, to fake a knowledge for the benefit
of those who were greener than I; and, finally, I became
personally acquainted with the majority of the famous
personages who came to the “Club.”
A great deal of money was spent here,
so many of the patrons were men who earned large sums.
I remember one night a dapper little brown-skin fellow
was pointed out to me and I was told that he was the
most popular jockey of the day, and that he earned
$12,000 a year. This latter statement I couldn’t
doubt, for with my own eyes I saw him spending at
about thirty times that rate. For his friends
and those who were introduced to him he bought nothing
but wine in sporting circles, “wine”
means champagne and paid for it at five
dollars a quart. He sent a quart to every table
in the place with his compliments; and on the table
at which he and his party were seated there were more
than a dozen bottles. It was the custom at the
“Club” for the waiter not to remove the
bottles when champagne was being drunk until the party
had finished. There were reasons for this; it
advertised the brand of wine, it advertised that the
party was drinking wine, and advertised how much they
had bought. This jockey had won a great race
that day, and he was rewarding his admirers for the
homage they paid him, all of which he accepted with
a fine air of condescension.
Besides the people I have just been
describing, there was at the place almost every night
one or two parties of white people, men and women,
who were out sight-seeing, or slumming. They generally
came in cabs; some of them would stay only for a few
minutes, while others sometimes stayed until morning.
There was also another set of white people who came
frequently; it was made up of variety performers and
others who delineated “darky characters”;
they came to get their imitations first hand from
the Negro entertainers they saw there.
There was still another set of white
patrons, composed of women; these were not occasional
visitors, but five or six of them were regular habituees.
When I first saw them, I was not sure that they were
white. In the first place, among the many colored
women who came to the “Club” there were
several just as fair; and, secondly, I always saw
these women in company with colored men. They
were all good-looking and well-dressed, and seemed
to be women of some education. One of these in
particular attracted my attention; she was an exceedingly
beautiful woman of perhaps thirty-five; she had glistening
copper-colored hair, very white skin, and eyes very
much like Du Maurier’s conception of Trilby’s
“twin gray stars.” When I came to
know her, I found that she was a woman of considerable
culture; she had traveled in Europe, spoke French,
and played the piano well. She was always dressed
elegantly, but in absolute good taste. She always
came to the “Club” in a cab, and was soon
joined by a well-set-up, very black young fellow.
He was always faultlessly dressed; one of the most
exclusive tailors in New York made his clothes, and
he wore a number of diamonds in about as good taste
as they could be worn in by a man. I learned
that she paid for his clothes and his diamonds.
I learned, too, that he was not the only one of his
kind. More that I learned would be better suited
to a book on social phenomena than to a narrative
of my life.
This woman was known at the “Club”
as the rich widow. She went by a very aristocratic-sounding
name, which corresponded to her appearance. I
shall never forget how hard it was for me to get over
my feelings of surprise, perhaps more than surprise,
at seeing her with her black companion; somehow I
never exactly enjoyed the sight. I have devoted
so much time to this pair, the “widow”
and her companion, because it was through them that
another decided turn was brought about in my life.