Murray's People: A collection of essays about fthe fascinating people who settled and developed the Pacific Northwest

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Murray C. Morgan
Mercer's Maidens
Skid Road
The Viking Press, 1960
P. 58-66

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Copyright, 1960, Murray Morgan
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Mercer's Maidens

spacerThe bulk of the white population on Puget Sound was young and unmarried and masculine. Only one adult out of ten was a woman, and rare indeed, was the girl over fifteen not spoken for. At least three-fourths of the men in town had to be chaste or sinful and even the latter course led to the question of whom to be sinful with. With a population of less than two hundred in 1860, the community was too small for adultery to be inconspicuous. That left the lusty with the choice of marrying Indian girls, a solution frowned on although practiced, or of taking Indian wives.
spacer The Indian girls were not unwilling, either way. The Salish culture had a different sexual ethic from the white; men who wanted relations with Indian maidens had little difficulty persuading the girls or their parents. But there were other problems. The whites had brought venereal disease, and it was ravaging the tribes. Nor did the Indian habits of sanitation lend enchantment; some tribes piled excrement around the house walls to add warmth in winter; even the more fastidious girls reeked of smoked fish and washed their hair with urine.
spacer Although there is little reason to think that the bearded and unwashed Anglos were much less noxious than the girls, the men believed that they smelled better. In spite of smells there was considerable intercourse between the settlers and the tribeswomen, but much of it was desperate and impromptu.
spacer The plight of the Puget Sound male was indeed sad. The Herald, upSound at Steilacoom, came out with periodic editorials bemoaning the impossibility of adequate sexual activity. Where demand was so sustained and so obvious, somebody was certain to try to hustle up an adequate supply. That somebody was a Barbary Coast gentleman named John Pennell.
spacer How Pennell came to desert San Francisco for Seattle is uncertain. Probably some seaman from one of the lumber ships told him of the yearnings of Puget Sound males; and with the supply in Pennell's line almost exceeding demand along the Barbary Coast, he may have decided to prospect the virgin territory to the north.
spacer In the summer of 1861 Pennell debarked from a lumber schooner on the sand spit beside Yeslers Mill. A single glance at the pedestrians on the dusty reach of Front Street, who were as predominantly male as the crew of a ship, must have confirmed the reports he had heard in San Francisco. An examination of Seattle's economic base could only have made business prospects seem bright. Here was a town of bachelors, a town with no commercial entertainment, a town with an established payroll. Here was a town just waiting for the likes of John Pennell.
spacer Within a month of his arrival there stood on the shore of the bay, not far south of the point where the logging road reached the mill, a pleasure palace of rough-sawed boards, the pioneer of a long line of establishments which were to give this part of town a distinctive character. The lot on which this bawdy-house was built was "made land," a fill created on the tide flats by pouring in the sawdust from Yeslers Mill. It was not desirable land, for the flats stank when the tide was out; but Pennell could not be too particular, and the site had the advantage of being only a few minutes, walk from the mill and in clear view of the ships entering the harbor.
spacer The Ilahee, as Pennell named his house, was in the great tradition of the Old West. The oblong building of unpainted boards housed a large dance floor, which was flanked by a long bar. Along one side of the floor was a hall leading to a number of small rooms. Pennell imported three musicians (a fiddler, a drummer, and an accordion player) from San Francisco; the rest of his help was native. He traded Hudson's Bay blankets to local chiefs for a supply of Indian girls. These recruits were vigorously scoured, their long hair was combed and cut, they were doused with perfume and decked out in calico.
spacer A girl would dance with anyone without cost, but her escort was expected to buy a drink for himself and his companion after each dance. (The bartender usually substituted cold tea for whiskey in the girl's glass, though the charge was for whisky.) When a man tired of purely social intercourse, he could always buy a couple more and lead his partner down the hall to one of the little rooms.
spacer There was no attempt to conceal what was going on at the water's edge. One historian has argued that it was the establishment of Pennell's place that led straight to Seattle's present-day dominance of the Northwest, the scholar's thesis being that word swiftly spread throughout the timberland about the "entertainment offered at the foot of the skid road in Seattle. The town had," in that historian's words, "the best mouse trap in the woods; hob nails and calks were deepening all the paths to its door."
spacer While this economic argument gives more importance to sex than even Freud would be likely to admit, there can be little doubt that Pennell drew his clientele from all over the Sound country, and that the men who came to town to enjoy the girls also spent money on more legitimate trade. Some respectable members of the Seattle community accepted Pennell's establishment as a non evil; others deplored it but failed to convince Sheriff Wyckoff that he should close the place as a nuisance.
spacer Somehow the name Illahee - which meant homeland in Chinook didn't catch on. It may have been among the strait laced that the establishment then came to be known as the Mad House, but the nickname stuck and was later applied to other houses whose stock-in-trade was of Indian origin. Those who did not call the brothel the Mad House sometimes referred to it as the Sawdust Pile or Down on the Sawdust The inhabitants were known as Sawdust Women.
spacer During a depression period in San Francisco at the end of the Civil War, Pennell rounded up a handful of out-of-work Barbary Coast girls and shipped them north. They were the first white women north of the Columbia to ply the oldest profession. Though it is doubtful that prostitutes unable to prosper in San Francisco were unduly attractive, their presence in the Illahee, according to a chronicler of the period, "had a powerful imaginative effect on the whole nude population of the Puget Sound country, and old-timers still relate fabulous legends from those happy days."
spacer The legends were the standard ones of the red-light district. There was the tale of the ladylike whore who murdered the men she learned were carrying large mounts of money. There was the legend of the girl who fell in love and demurely denied her swain the favors she still sold, albeit unwillingly, to everyone else. And, Of course, there was the story of the girl who married a client and moved into one of the white clapboard houses on the hill.
spacer That some Seattle families grew out of love affairs in the Mad House is not inconceivable. Women were few and a man could not be choosy, especially a man who patronized the establishment. There were, however, many who considered such marriages undesirable, and among them was a righteous and energetic youngster named Asa Mercer, fresh from the midwest.
spacer Young Mercer was the brother of Judge Tom Mercer, a solid citizen who had arrived in 1852 with a team of horses and had prospered as Seattle's first teamster. Asa worked as a carpenter on the new Territorial University building, which was going up on the hill northeast of the skid road, and when the building was completed he moved inside as president and faculty of the institution.
spacer One day during a conversation on the territory's topic of shortage of maidens worthy to become the wives of pioneers Judge Tom remarked that in the name of posterity the territorial government should appropriate public funds to bring west a party of acceptable young ladies. The idea had an understandable appeal to the twenty-two-year-old university president, who was unmarried and moral; he took it up with the governor. William Pickering, Washington's fourth governor," was a husky, spade bearded man in his mid-sixties; he agreed as to the need but sadly called Mercer's attention to the lack of public money. Asa decided to carry off his venture as a private enterprise.
spacer He talked to a number of Seattle's frustrated young men and, after pocketing an unspecified amount of contributions, caught a ship for Boston. The daughters of that sedate community were not to be talked into venturing west but in Lowell the young proselyter found more attentive listeners. Lowell was a textile town, racked with depression since the Civil War had cut off Southern cotton from its looms, and there Mercer found eleven virgins willing to forsake the land of the cod.
spacer They traveled from New York, crossed the Panama Isthmus, rested briefly in San Francisco (where some enterprising Californians tried to talk the maidens into easing that region's shortage of pure females) and went by schooner to the Sound. They debarked at Yeslers wharf about midnight, May 16, 1864, and were welcomed by a delegation headed by Doc Maynard.
spacer With the exception of one girl who took sick and died unwed, all the girls soon found husbands. The details of the courtships am unknown, and it is uncertain whether the maidens married the men who had financed Mercer's trip. As for Asa, his grateful contemporaries elected him unanimously to the upper house of the Territorial Legislature.
spacer The young legislator thought less of laws than lasses. He wanted to import young women not by the short dozen but by the hundred. Soon he was circulating through the territory, talking confidentially to lonesome bachelors. His proposition was simple. For three hundred down paid in advance, he would bring a suitable wife.
spacer There were several takers, how many only Mercer knew, but enough so that he started east in high spirits and with great confidence. He talked of bringing back enough girls to provide mates for every single man west of the Cascades.
spacer Everything went wrong. Lincoln was shot, and Asa, who had known him slightly, lost a potential ally. Mercer didn't know President Johnson, but General Grant, who knew from personal experience how lonely a man could get among the rain forests, promised to lend Mercer a transport, but the Quartermaster General quickly pointed out that such use of federal property was illegal.
spacer Then, out of nowhere, appeared an angel, a wartime speculator named Ben Holladay, who offered to buy the surplus transport and carry Mercer's five hundred charges around the Horn to Seattle "for a minimum price."
spacer Mercer quickly signed a Contract. The trouble was he didn't have five hundred passengers; he didn't have half that many; he didn't even have a hundred. For this Mercer blamed the New York Herald and its cross-eyed editor, James Gordon Bennett. The drive had been going well, Asa wrote his backers, until it attracted the attention of the Herald, which ran an "exposed" of the project.
spacer The expose implied that most of the girls were destined for waterfront dives on Puget Sound and if anyone did gain a legal mate, she must steel herself to the fact that he would probably be ugly, unnumbered, illiterate, and probably diseased.
spacer Massachusetts authorities investigated too, though hardly thoroughly. Since no politician is likely to admit that young women would do better to leave his state, the report implied that Mercer's girls might be headed for a fate worse than Mormonism.
spacer Besides getting a bad press, Mercer was up against the fact that it was easier for his prospects to say they'd make the voyage than it was for them to walk up the gangplank leaving behind them all that was home.
spacer When the day came to sail, January 6, 1866, fewer than a hundred nubile passengers appeared. Mercer sold passages reserved for girls to men and married women, but he was far short of filling his five hundred reservations. Holladay demanded payment in full. He didn't get it, but he got every cent Mercer had. Once at sea, Asa figured his financial worries were over.
spacer Three months later the ship docked at San Francisco. The captain ordered everyone ashore. This, he said, was as far as he was going.
spacer Mercer argued and lost. When they put him ashore he rushed to the telegraph office and wired Governor Pickering: "Send two thousand dollars quick to get party to Seattle. Pickering wired back his best wishes, collect. In desperation Mercer appealed to the skippers of the lumber schooners that plied between Seattle and San Francisco; these gentlemen, pleased at the prospect of feminine companionship on what was usually a dull voyage, took them fare free.
spacer A few of the girls decided to stay in California and who can blame them? Mercer must have been tempted to stay. He had spent every cent that had been given to him; he had brought back fewer girls than he had promised, and those not on schedule. He must have known the home folks weren't going to elect him to the legislature for this performance.
spacer A Seattle woman who has been working on the Mercer expedition for some years tells me that she has been unable to find the Herald story.
spacer On Mercers return to Seattle rumors spread, wild and ugly. On May 23 the Puget Sound Daily had a front-page story saying that "Honorable A.S. Mercer will address the citizens of Seattle and vicinity, at Yeslers Hall this evening, for the purpose of refuting the numerous stories that have been circulated in regard to himself, in connection with his immigration enterprise. The editor urged, "Turn out, everybody, and hear the other side of the question."
spacer The report of the meeting is irritatingly incomplete. Rev. Daniel Bagley was called to the chair, who briefly stated the object of the meeting, which was to hear an address by Mr. A.S. Mercer in regard to his experience while in the East conducting the famous immigration enterprise. Mr. Mercer then addressed the audience, to which a marked attention was paid, the speaker being frequently applauded.
spacer The audience was composed, in part of the fair immigrants who had so recently arrived, and it is a fact that has no little weight in the vindication of Mr. Mercer's reputation against the assaults that have been made upon it, that those immigrants place the utmost confidence in him. At the close the immigrants made a few very appropriate remarks, after which the meeting adjourned, apparently with the best of good will towards Mr. Mercer and all concerned."
spacer The night after Mercer's speech a "Marvelous Magical Entertainment" was held at Yeslers. No matter how impressive the legerdemain and the paper also gave it a rave notice - it could hardly have been as remarkable as Mercer's feat of pacifying with words the angry men who, after waiting almost a year for delivery of the women they had ordered, found themselves without brides and minus a hundred down.
spacer Mercer himself married one of his imports, Annie Stephens, a few weeks later. They soon removed to the Rocky Mountains area, where Asa lived out his days as a rancher, as far from ships as he could go.
spacer John Pennell faded from the Seattle scene at almost the same time as Asa. He left for parts unknown. But the type of institution that he had founded on the sawdust fill south of Yesler Way did not vanish with him. Other entrepreneurs built bigger and better houses. The honky-tonk was there to stay.
spacer The Skid Road had been born.

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