. it"4v 'Jj i- A - tL i hi &2Z&ZfZ ZXE'STO ' id 0- w-- . J if? 1 5 . ns tl Ft i! If 11 ll wl ft Hotels, Past and Present, and a Yarn of Pioneer Days ::liritl.iltntlllliHtllilttlMi.tltinit By Earl C. Brownlee UIFTi years ago a rugged pio neer, a modish little straw hat on his curly head, tilted his chair ' against the front of Portland's , leading hotel and scraped a willow : stick in the dust at the feet of the horses that drew the hotel bus an old Concord reclaimed from i a thrifty overland stage line. The pioneer was owner, manager, ; bell boy, chief porter and "Greet- er" at the hotel, rfis guests were mo empire uutiuers wnose sowing the state today is harvesting. But the old hotel is grone. In its place are sundry cliffs of masonry with sundry' thousands of I rooms where the newcomer - and tourist first pauses to assemble his im pressions of the city to which he has been welcomed by one or more of the 110 dapper young men who, as trained hotel clerks and mem- i bers of the Greeters of Oregon, pre- : side behind marble topped hotel desks in luxurious plush chaired lobbies. . j . . .In the new generation the cliff is; owned by a group of capitalists; the furnishings of the elaborate host lery are owned by another, and still 'another, man bears the title of man-1 ager. officiating over the conduct of the hotel by i several , hundred I other men and women from his place at a fine mahogany desk in a private office, with private -. ste nographers to barricade the door- ! ways against interruption, j " " . To the Greeter of 1920, whose business it is to "sell" to the new comer Portland's climate,' com merce and charm, ! "Muckamuck" Smith would be a story-book char acter. Yet "Muckamuck" ( was a very real person in Portland's ho tel colony not many years ago, no torious for his meals or the lack Of thenu - '. s . Could S. N. Arrigoni step from 3out the past to resume the place he held in the '60's as the operator of the finest hotel in the city, the present-day Greeter would stare in amazement. Tet Arrigoni was. known to thousands who had visit ed pioneer Portland and who had enjoyed the hospitality and friend liness of the Pioneer or Arrigon hotels. : TV It was at the Pioneer hotel, said to be the ancestor of Portland's first-class hotels, .that Captain Sta ples and Ferd Patterson met one night in the early '.60'sv j . Staples, a mariner, had tied his little steamer at Portland's - dock and dropped all care as, with two companions, he strode up the. plank walk to the city's foremost stop ping place. . ; ; . The trio had remained overlong at Its cups In the Pioneer barroom when Patterson, gambler, gentle man and Southern states patriot, came into the place for his evening "nip," just before retiring. A misshaped joke formed ir Sta ples befuddled mind. : "Hurrah for Honest Abe!-he shouted toward Patterson, and by . way of adding sting: "Pooh, pooh for Jefferson Dav is!" . Those two exclamations were costly. With Patterson,- "than whom," an historian says, "no finer fellow ever lived," the name of "Jeff" Davis was sacred; - traduc ing the name was a cardinal sin. Patterson, it is attested, "played the game straight" a gambler because gambling was, in a measure, sanc tioned by custom; a gentleman be cause he had been reared as such, and a Confederate patriot because the cause of the Southland was in his heart and blood. The odious salutation from Sta ' pies struck home. Patterson backed to the doorway before in dignation completely overwhelmed him. . Then he shouted out : the glory of the Southern Confeder acy. That was the battle signal. Sta ples and his mates reeled after Pat tersonthe latter mounting the stairs toward liis room to -escape Impending trouble. But trouble was inevitable, spectators declare. Sta ples', companions deserted him for the shelter of the stair casing, but the captaip, screaming hate and avowing an intention to "riddle the rebel hide" of Patterson with, bul lets, followed, brandishing his gun. "Stand your ground!" Patterson cried, "I'll have no more of your insult." r Warned, Staples scorned. A shot ' rang out. The mariner was dead. . 'Young Portland J alarmed by the first shot, was flooding into the Pi oneer lobby. Friends hauled out their shoot ing irons and the walls o that ho tel, to the day it was razed, carried the marks made ' by 20 - crashing bullets fired in the fusillade that failed to imperil Patterson, or the companions who had deserted Sta ples for the protection of the stair case. Witnesses comprised .nearly the entire hamlet. The testimony of some of . them helped to free Pat terson from a charge of murder on a plea of self-defense. ' That is a thriller from the days of the gunmen. The thrills of the tapestried lobbies of the twentieth century hotel are not even akin to those at the days of the frontiers men. , Pompous gentlemen in expensive tweeds and Imported felts sit mildly by as the warp and woof weave to day's narrative, and discuss politely the contest of favorite sons. Twelve cylinder automobiles transport guests to and from the railway sta tion, that half a century ago was t- dream stuff in the minds of Ideal ists imported overland on a lumber ing old stage coach. Highly polished hardwood floors cover the brilliantly lighted dancing space in the glittering hotel grill, in contrast to the fir board floor that ', saw the merry parties at which Graham, : colored barber to the Brummels of Portland in the '60's, shouted his square dance calls In , famous stentorian tone that echoes still in memory. , V And the new order of things is ? largely ; in the keeping of the Greeters of Oregon, of whose 175' members 110 are employed in Port land hotels. The Greeter is a gracious young man, versed in the ways of trav elers, advised as to every possible . point, of interest, conversant with ; hotel conditions tn all parts of the . 1 world and full of the knowledge of the mysteries of train schedules. He is charged with the duty of being an asset to the community through his reception of the day's guests, to whom he can Impart a good or evil impression of the city that ofttimes will overcome' 'all other praise or scorn and bring or, send away a possible citizen. There is no checkered vest be hind Portland hotel desks to shield from soil a purple shirt and green necktie adorned with a blazing dia mond horshoe pin. That type in hotelmen disappeared forever . be- ' fore the Greeters organized an Ore gon chapter in 1911. The new clerk is a man of splendid ideals, if he , is worthy of his organization, . ; mindful that his work is to welcome every guest and make his hotel a -home for the traveler. ; iv The Greeters in 1919 spent $8000 . on a convention at which they en tertained ' fellow workers . from all . parts of the nation. They publish a local, and a national magartne; they have homes and families away from their hotels gardens, friends .. and all.' j , - '. V They are characterized by Mayor Baker, as the greatest group asset the city has. They can make or break the city by , their . reception to guests and thus are a powerful factor in the city's upbuilding. They are organized among . themselves for the inculcation of high stand- ' ' ards of character and efficiency, and to establish the calling in which they are engaged on as high . a plane as possible. . Which, for all its laudation, does not detract one whit from the ho telman of the years now gone." Stephen Coffin, who had an im- . I . II ' ll JT WAS si &a&si?zs& JAOJ?. portant part in a score of the en terprises upon - which ; Portland's present business structure is built, was one of the city's first hotel- ' men. It was - Coffin, "township . proprietor," lessee of the peniten tiary, etc., who owned the Canton house, one of the earliest hotels, if not the first, in Portland. The Can ton house was purchased from Cof fin by S. X. Arrigoni. and his happy Irish wife after they, had made a perilous cross continental trip from New York. .-' : --: , The Canton house became the Pioneer hotel and assumed a great . dignity through the efforts of the Arrigonis. Ransom Clark kept the Columbia hotel, another early day establishment. Clark was one of Fremont's men, who came to the new world in '43. Attest a successful career . in charge of the pioneer, the Arri-. gonis bought the Metropolis, a prominent competitor, and renamed it the "Arrigon." The Arrigon was headquarters for years of the1 over land line to California and its roof sheltered scores of prominent per- t sons of that day. V ' r It was from the balcony, of the Arrigon that Schuyler Colfax, then speaker of the national house of representatives, reviewed the Just . ended Civil war, and where other members of the Colfax party spoke. Colfax and his friends, a trio of Eastern newspapermen, made their way bstage overland to California from St. Joseph, thence up the coast to Portland. : ; ' .The Western hotel, later the Oc- -cidental, was owned and personally operated by "Muckamuck" Smith, a noted pioneer, of '53, about whose hotel experiences many 'amusing stories are handed down. Thomas Guirieah.? first manager of the then sumptuous St. Charles , . hotel, was one of the most widely known hotelmen on the coast and made his house equally famous. But it was the Clarendon house that took all praise in its time. The Clarendon was by far the most gor- " geous thing attempted up to that time and was,-it"has been said, "real ' fashionable." The f dignitaries of that day invariably were -guests at' the Clarendon, which. was operated by C. W. (Charlie)! KnowlesandAI Zieber. The house occupied a site at First and F streets 'at the ter minus of the old one-horse street car system the, city- then boasted ; about.' . ;. 4 The daddy of them' all," though, was the Whatshire house,' prede cessor of the Pioneer and like es- T- vr Vssati v-? ' : -r-t r-'-'TV-";- ,' V IjV ' JVv V..- rx-T j -jtw-. .,, .. ... ... ..... . , ...... .. . ' - ., :: .: ' ... " J. :-... rw-r v.: 'v-v-wyKa. . 1 amaMwwiMiKiaei1" ww ' . .... v, m u - -Trrv n Ui H i-.u 'v:W'iii I i m hul l V I p II I gjEgb&!5i9P& z-- r si, W 0 "I?1 f , f li SJ . .... : n i a j. 7 ; . ; v i , 1 . , , . ,v" , . ;:7r(i ; I r jzTvrc&Aszer. Stein. jKJvCA&ai&&2&, tablishments. The Whatshire first : housed many of the men and. wom en who were coming. here to, make Oregon, history. . It .was conducted by O'Conner and Keagan. . v, . The Esmond hotel deserves Its measure ?of fame ; in more recent ym. wr, t . tCrVnB. . fore its recent destruction, men and women whose - names are written Indelibly in the history of the world,. the nation and the ttate. The fact that S. N. Arrigoni was the pioneer of . pioneer hotelmen ! i 5 -: i sV Zr?-iL . . , jatt&a . 6: -J k uf IPS:" 3 entitles him . to a big, place in the ' of - Italy, 'wedded to - a- delightful Irish lass 'in -Dublin', , educated inj college in his native land, Arrigon J spoke ' six ' languages fluently anttj was a manner or mvcn experience r he arrlved; ln Portland wttnJ 1n Mai,tr . Mr.l his wife -and twin 'daughters. Mrs! Arrigoni, aged 91,-lives in Portland noW'4uid- retains much, of the peri sonality that endeared her to piol neer Portland. -. . ;- - . ; 7 Joseph, Gaston,-Portland hlstori an," says ' of - Arrigoni's hotels, "thf' v,r -' j ' .- v - .Pioneer and the Arrigon: "These ; were the first hotels of any size in Portland." 'Arigonl was an emp're builder, good Samaritan, ' banker through the faith of his friends and a leader . In the community. He first gave , free office room to the telegraph and stage coach . companies that were invading the territory and was a good-roads enthusiast with much action to his credit. He went from Portland to Astoria, and there, for 11 years before his death, ln 1876, operated' hotels. v . r v