Wah Mee - Todd Matthews
Transcription
Wah Mee - Todd Matthews
Wah Mee Copyright © 2011 by Todd Matthews All Rights Reserved ISBN 978-0-615-53375-9 This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or other unauthorized use of the material or artwork herein is prohibited without the expressed written permission of the author. Cover design by John Hubbard/EMKS, Finland Copyediting and Proofreading by Carrie Wicks First Edition, August 2011 Second Edition, October 2012 (new e-book cover, additional photographs, formatting changes) wahmee.com WAH MEE 2 TODD MATTHEWS ONE If you want to know the whereabouts of the worst mass murder in the history of Seattle, visit the city’s Chinatown and listen for the frantic squawks of exotic birds from the pet store popular with the area’s children. Look for the old Chinese bakery on South King Street, where pineapple buns, moon cakes, and sponge rolls are arranged in neat, glistening rows behind a storefront window. Walk along South King Street — past totems of pagoda-shaped pay phones and exhausted cooks dressed in greasy chef whites smoking cigarettes during all-too-brief breaks and surveying the neighborhood; through spacious Hing Hay Park, where seniors practice Tai Chi most mornings — and turn down Maynard Alley South, where a bright wind sock stretches high overhead, and seagulls caw at pigeons in a battle over scraps in the garbage-strewn alley. Oddly enough, nestled among these seemingly quaint and urban points of interest is the entrance to the Wah Mee Club — a historic Chinatown gambling club, and site of a dark piece of Pacific Northwest history. The Wah Mee Club was tucked away in a ground-floor space of the Nelson, Tagholm & Jensen Tenement, a hotel built in 1909 by three Scandinavian men who fled the economic turmoil in their homeland and wound up in Seattle. The hotel, with its 120 tiny rooms, was a hub for young men (and their prostitutes) en route to Alaska to seek their fortunes in the Gold Rush. WAH MEE 3 TODD MATTHEWS For thirty years, between the 1920s and 1950, the Wah Mee was classy, cinematically noir, and very popular. “The Wah Mee Club was famous in Seattle,” writer Frank Chin observed. “You don’t speak with any real authority about Seattle of the ’30s, ’40s, or ’50s, if you can’t say when you first stepped into the electric, smoky — Wah Mee.” Indeed, the club thrived, as did most clubs in Chinatown and along nearby South Jackson Street. Historian and writer Paul de Barros, in his book on Seattle’s speakeasies, Jackson Street After Hours, writes, “Imagine a time when Seattle, which now rolls up its streets at 10 o’clock, was full of people walking up and down the sidewalk after midnight. When you could buy a newspaper at the corner of 14th and Yesler from a man called Neversleep — at three in the morning. When limousines pulled up to the 908 Club all night, disgorging celebrities and wealthy women wearing diamonds and furs. When ‘Cabdaddy’ stood in front of the Rocking Chair, ready to hail you a cab — that is, if he knew who you were.” According to de Barros, the more popular bottle clubs in and around Chinatown were the New Chinatown, Congo Club, Blue Rose, 411 Club, Ubangi, and the Wah Mee. All were hot spots for dancing, music, gambling, and booze. Many of these clubs dated back to the early 1920s. De Barros profiles many of these clubs in his book. The New Chinatown was located a few blocks from the Wah Mee, on Sixth Avenue South and South Main Street. According to de Barros, the club attracted and promoted much bootlegging. The outside featured a replica neon bowl with two “chopsticks” poking out from the bowl. Frequented by sailors and prostitutes, the New Chinatown was known as a place for the occasional brawl. Five bucks bought a bottle of home brew and an evening of some of the best live music being played in Seattle during the 1930s. Jazz music was indeed a hit at the New Chinatown; even the club’s bouncer, a burly and morbidly obese guy named “Big Dave” Henderson, sat down at the piano most nights. In 1940, the Congo Club opened in Chinatown, at Maynard and Sixth Avenues. In the front, the Congo Grill; tucked away past a swinging door, the actual club WAH MEE 4 TODD MATTHEWS itself — complete with a ballroom and a circular bar. The Ubangi Club was a black-owned nightclub hosting some of the nation’s best jazz performers. The Ubangi — located on the east side of the building where the Wah Mee was housed — was a huge and beautiful cabaret, where Cab Calloway was known to perform when in town. The state liquor control board occasionally targeted the Ubangi. During raids, the club’s manager, Bruce Rowell, would sneak through the “secret doors” and stairways in the building and exit in the alley near the Wah Mee. “That’s how I got away from the Washington State liquor board, three times,” Rowell told de Barros. “Heh-heh-heh! When they came in, I’d go to the office, see, and say, ‘Let me get my overcoat.’ Then I’d zip down that little deal, you know, near the floor, and Sheeoop! I’m downstairs in the basement. Next thing I know, I’m coming out, go down to the Mar Hotel, get a room, take a bath, and go to bed! They’re all up there lookin’ for me and I’m in the shower!” Another Chinatown club — formally named the Hong Kong Chinese Society Club — was located on Seventh Avenue South. Locals aptly nicknamed the club the “Bucket of Blood” because it was a raucous joint where fights were common. It earned its nickname after someone was murdered following a police raid. In many of these Chinatown clubs, guests drank booze, listened to live jazz, danced, sought prostitutes, and threw down their bets at illicit casinos and on the daily lottery. The club scene during the 1930s was carefree. As jazzman Marshal Royal told de Barros, “They were different type of people . . . in Seattle. You had a lot of fun. They were nice, they were cordial. I’m not just speaking of black people. I’m talking about the Chinese guys that owned the cab companies and things. They were our buddies. Everybody was just in it for a family. Like the Mar boys, big-time tong people out of Fresno, we had a ball. After we finished our job, they would have a midnight picture at the Atlas Theatre, open all night long. You could go in there and tell the owner what picture you wanted and he’d have it for you two or three days later.” The Wah Mee Club fit nicely into this festive environment. In its earliest years, during the late 1920s, the Wah Mee Club was called the WAH MEE 5 TODD MATTHEWS Blue Heaven. As its name implied, it was a decadent place for dancing, drinking, gambling, and partying. Its regulars had always been a “who’s who” of the Asian American community. The late John Okada, a Japanese American writer who wrote the novel No-No Boy, frequented the club. In his novel, Okada describes the atmosphere inside gambling clubs throughout Seattle’s Chinatown: Inside the door are the tables and the stacks of silver dollars and . . . no one is smiling or laughing, for one does not do those things when the twenty has dwindled to a five or the twenty is up to a hundred and the hunger has been whetted into a mild frenzy by greed. Okada based his novel’s key gambling club on the Wah Mee — a place he frequented during the 1940s. In No-No Boy, the Wah Mee is renamed “Club Oriental”; here is Okada’s description of the club: Halfway down an alley, among the forlorn stairways and innumerable trash cans, was the entrance to the Club Oriental. It was a bottle club, supposedly for members only, but its membership consisted of an evergrowing clientele. Under the guise of a private, licensed club, it opened its door to almost everyone and rang up hefty profits nightly. Up the corridor, flanked on both sides by walls of glass brick, they approached the polished mahogany door. Kenji poked the buzzer and, momentarily, the electric catch buzzed in return. They stepped from the filthy alley and the cool night into the Club Oriental with its soft, dim lights, its long curving bar, its deep carpets, its intimate tables, and its small dance floor. Another Wah Mee notable was restaurateur Ruby Chow, who would later become a King County Council member. Chow was easy to recognize at the Wah Mee Club, at barely five feet tall with a towering French roll. Writer Frank Chin rather humorously described her trademark hairdo as “the well-gardened and cultivated WAH MEE 6 TODD MATTHEWS creation of hair that rises and rises in the shape of a huge popover over her head. [It] is the largest French roll ever to survive wind and snow, rain and the rest of the weather.” During the 1930s, the Wah Mee was open to people of all races. That changed somewhat a decade later, when Fay Chin and his friend Danny Woo were driving across the Ballard Bridge en route to the Ballard Elk’s Club to inquire about chartering an Elk’s Club in Chinatown. The two men instead decided to charter their own club and Chin ran with the idea. He sold fifty-dollar shares all over Chinatown, assumed the rent, paid a fee to the city, and took over the Wah Mee. When Chin and Woo took over, Chinese entered the Wah Mee through an entrance on South King Street; Caucasians and other races entered the club by way of the alley. A red sign with the club’s name (in English and Chinese characters) in neon once hung outside the alley-side entrance. A photograph by Elmer Ogawa, a freelance photographer and journalist who documented much of Chinatown’s festive street scene during the period, shows seven young Asian American men gathered at the Wah Mee’s curvy bar. Everyone is smiling, a drink in front of each patron. A pack of Lucky Strike cigarettes sits upright among an array of ashtrays. Ornamental lanterns glow overhead. One young man wears a fedora, while a few others don leather bomber jackets. At the end of the bar, a waiter dressed in a white suit and black tie smiles with the customers. One Wah Mee regular, Windsor Olson, had fond memories of the club. “Back in the 1940s, my wife and I went to the Wah Mee,” Olson told me one evening not too long ago. We were sitting in his red minivan, parked in the alley and listening to the rain tap against the metal roof of the van. We stared through streaked windows at the club’s dark entryway: two sturdy double doors covered in fresh graffiti and laced closed with a heavy chain and a padlock. Olson — an older, well-dressed man who was still dapper in his mid-seventies and wore a pressed shirt, dark blazer, and slacks — was a retired private investigator who had snooped around hotels, bottle clubs, and brothels since the late 1940s. Over the years, he was hired to spy on crooks, keep tabs on unfaithful WAH MEE 7 TODD MATTHEWS husbands, and generally tail the city’s undesirables. “I’ll tell you,” Olson commented, earlier that evening, “I’ll bet I drilled a hole in the wall of every room at the Edgewater Hotel at one time or another, for cameras and listening devices.” When I met Olson, he had the clean presence of a distinguished gentleman who had heard all of Seattle’s dirty secrets — twice — and walked away from them with a sense of mild interest. Corrupt cops and speakeasies and brothels didn’t shock Olson; rather, they helped shape Seattle’s history — as had the 1962 World’s Fair or early Pioneer Square. “I remember,” Olson continued, “there was only one set of security doors back then. Once someone buzzed you in, there was a three-foot Buddha on a pedestal just inside the entrance.” He paused to chuckle. “That Buddha’s belly had been rubbed so many times for good luck.” There was, of course, gambling when Olson and his wife, Dorie, would visit the club. “But that was upstairs,” Olson insisted. “Not out in the open on the lower floor.” Indeed, one researcher reports the hotel rooms above the Wah Mee Club were demolished around 1940 to make room for a large casino. “There were bagmen at the Wah Mee,” Olson continued. He was referring to police officers who looked the other way as long as they received a cut from club owners. “When I went to the club, the bagman was a cop named Tommy Smith. He was a drunk. One night, he comes into the Wah Mee, drunk as can be, and sits up at the bar. For some reason or another, he draws his weapon and he’s so drunk and clumsy, it flies across the floor of the club. The whole place is silent. That thing could have gone off and killed someone! He was crazy!” For Olson, though, the Wah Mee Club recalls dancing the night away with Dorie. He was then a young private investigator, just back from the war, and I imagine him swaggering into the place with his wife on his arm, a gun tucked safely away in his holster, and feeling for all the world as if he was a larger, but lesser known, part of Seattle. It’s likely that Olson sidled up to the bar next to the parents of Seattle photographer and journalist Ti Locke. On her blog, “Western Women,” Locke posted a scanned, creased, black-and-white photograph of her Chinese parents and four of WAH MEE 8 TODD MATTHEWS their friends (one Chinese man, two Caucasian men, and a Caucasian woman) gathered around a small, round table covered in cocktail napkins and highball glasses. Locke’s parents and the woman are toasting the photographer. The group is dressed impeccably: the men wear crisp suits and silk ties, handkerchiefs poking out from the breast pockets on their blazers; one woman wears a white designer hat similar to something worn during a day at the horse races; Locke’s mother has pinned a corsage to the right breast of her blouse. On the wall behind this happy group you can see the hand-painted belly, feet, and flowing robe of a Chinese Buddha. “My parents and their friends regularly tied one on when we came to Seattle — twice a year, to stock up on Chinese groceries,” writes Locke on her blog. “They’d leave me in the Milwaukee Hotel and go drinking and gambling at the Wah Mee Club. I was quite safe at the Milwaukee — the elders would check on me, leave peppermint Life Savers under my pillow. My parents would roll back to the hotel at dawn, giggling, smelling of cigarette smoke and booze. They’d check on me and have a nightcap.” Despite cooperation from “bagmen” cops, the Wah Mee experienced several crackdowns over several decades. The club’s operators grew paranoid of its members and began to lean more toward Chinese-only clientele who knew the management. As the Wah Mee Club went underground, Caucasian people like Olson were no longer welcome. Clubgoers, most of whom were semiaffluent restaurant owners and businessmen and -women in Seattle’s Chinese American community, danced to music played on a nickelodeon. It was a place where hardworking Chinese Americans spent their off-hours drinking and sharing stories. And it was undoubtedly a place where money changed hands. Lots of money. The Wah Mee was host to some of the highest-stakes gambling in Seattle. Winners went home with tens of thousands of dollars after a single night of gambling. Indeed, gambling was so popular at one point that, according to Jerry F. Schimmel, an authority on coin collecting and author of Chinese-American Tokens from the Pacific Coast, the Wah Mee Club issued its own brass tokens for gamblers — a 39-millimeter-wide gem with the club’s name written in raised Chinese characters. A coin collector in WAH MEE 9 TODD MATTHEWS California posted a photograph of two of these Wah Mee Club tokens. Both appeared well worn and had cancellation punch marks and splotchy black stains. Both coins were auctioned off in April 2011 for $58. And the Wing Luke Museum in Seattle’s Chinatown includes two aluminum Wah Mee Club tokens in its collection of artifacts. The club was last raided in the early 1970s and then fell on hard times. Mark D. Simpson, a Seattle architect whose great-grandfather, Otto John Nelson, was one of the three original Scandinavian men to construct the building more than a century ago, told me his grandmother, Minnie Nelson Harris, and her brother, William “Billie” Nelson, sold the building to Paul Woo “in the early 1970s — but it might have been earlier.” Simpson has fond memories of the building. “I have a bunch of artifacts from the building, mostly related to gambling,” Simpson recalled. “I was under the impression that my grandmother from time to time tried to clean things up and kicked out the seedier folks, keeping some of the gambling stuff I now have. My grandmother was rather embarrassed about the stuff going on in a building she owned and managed, but was also proud that her father had built it, so she did not talk about it in detail. I, on the other hand, would love to know more about it and our family involvement in it.” Despite changes in ownership, the Wah Mee Club never moved. What did change was the name of the building that housed the club — from the “Nelson, Tagholm, Jensen Tenement” to the “Hudson Hotel” to the “Louisa Hotel.” In the early 1980s, the club’s space was leased by building owner Woo, who was a former president of the Chong Wa Benevolent Association, for $350 a month to Don Mar. Mar rented the space under a sublease to the Suey Sing Association, a fraternal group. At one point, a group of four business owners each contributed $15,000 to remodel the club. Most of the money was spent on security, not aesthetics. Up until the end of the club’s run in 1983, it seemed to have restored its character as a high-stakes gambling club — though, as one patron described it, the club was “comfortable, but not opulent.” Indeed, the Wah Mee — which opened Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings and stayed open until six in the morning — was one of Seattle’s best clubs WAH MEE 10 TODD MATTHEWS for high-stakes gambling in the early 1980s. Gamblers could wager up to $1,000 at a time, and up to $10,000 moved through the club nightly; the house collected 5 percent. Entire paychecks were laid down in a single night. From the outside, the club was unassuming and unobtrusive. If you didn’t know it was there, you wouldn’t likely find the door by accident. Like most after-hours gambling clubs in Chinatown, security at the Wah Mee was tight. Four rows of glass bricks fronted the club entrance. Each glass brick was opaque except one — which served as a peephole for a club guard to identify a guest and decide whether or not to permit entrance. Admittance was limited strictly to members of the club and membership consisted mostly of restaurant owners, restaurant workers, affluent members of the Chinese community, and members of the Bing Kung Tong. Club members had to be admitted past two steel doors before entering the gaming and bar areas. The club’s office was equipped with a warning buzzer and a “panic bar” that would set off an alarm. Once inside, the club was spacious, divided by a low railing. A long, curved bar was on the north side of the room. The south part of the room served as the gaming area, with four mah-jongg and Pai Gow tables. In the eyes of some Chinatown residents, the Wah Mee Club of the early 1980s was like a B-grade cocktail lounge. Its history in the neighborhood bestowed it some level of respect, but it was also a dive. Its decor was functional, not flashy: guests could lounge on old couches flanked by throw pillows, plastic detergent drums served as trash cans, cheap plastic ashtrays sat on nearly every flat surface, and a few photos were tacked to the walls (a map of mainland China, a framed portrait of a racing horse, a Chinese lunar calendar). Ruby Chow and John Okada were early members of the club. But in the early 1980s, the club’s clientele changed, though it still consisted of hardworking, financially comfortable members of Seattle’s Asian community. There was John Loui, a onetime restaurant owner who had recently sold the Golden Crown restaurant and was looking to change careers and enter the import/export business. And there were Moo Min Mar and his wife, Jean, who owned the Kwangtung Country restaurant in Redmond. They were a wealthy couple, WAH MEE 11 TODD MATTHEWS philanthropists who were planning to build a school in their native Chinese village. Chinn Lee Law owned a repair garage in Chinatown and was a regular at the Wah Mee, even working sometimes as a dealer and security guard. Dewey Mar was famous for having brought Chinese films to Seattle’s Chinatown, and he operated the only such theater in the entire city. The Wah Mee Club closed for good in 1983. The rows of opaque glass blocks that front the entrance are now covered in a thick layer of dirt and grime — as well as the cryptic tag names of a range of graffiti artists: AJAR, DEAMS, UH UH UH, BACE. A large chunk of the club’s stucco facade has been gouged in two places, presumably by the many delivery trucks that park in the alley having accidentally backed into the front of the club. Decades passed without the building receiving a fresh coat of paint: the facade, once painted a rich forest green, turned to a bruised and weathered reptilian crust; the red trim that boldly framed the glass blocks, heavy double doors, and lattice above the entrance faded to the pink color of dying coral. Any other property in such a sorry state of decay would be deemed derelict by neighbors and would draw the attention of city officials: Clean up your building or else! The Wah Mee Club is different. It helps that the empty club is tucked halfway down a narrow alley, out of sight. More than that, however, one horrific event nearly thirty years ago ensures it goes unbothered. Indeed, outsiders who visit Chinatown for dim sum or shopping at Uwajimaya pass the club without caution or notice. Chinatown old-timers, however, can’t help but glance down Maynard Alley as they shuffle along South King Street. The building that once housed the Wah Mee Club remains active. A small number of businesses lease retail space along the building’s South King Street, South Seventh Street, and Maynard Alley South sides: Palace Decor and Gifts, whose shiny gold Chinese fan taped to the store window draws your attention; Mon Hei Chinese bakery; the Chinese Christian Mission Seattle Gospel Center Bookroom; the Chinese Chamber of Commerce; Sea Garden Chinese restaurant; and the mysteriously named Pacific International Corporation, whose shades seem to always be drawn. Liem’s Aquarium and Bird Shop, located in the alley right next WAH MEE 12 TODD MATTHEWS door to the club, is still open for business. I once mailed a postcard to the Wah Mee Club, 507-A Maynard Alley South, only to have it returned with a United States Postal Service stamp reading “return to writer — address unknown.” No one has lived in the two floors of rooms above the street-level storefronts since they were condemned in the 1970s. Some windows are covered in plywood; other windows are coated in filth. Rusty fire escapes appear brittle; they hang off the side of the building like old bones. The City of Seattle’s Department of Planning and Development shows the building, which is technically sited at 665 South King Street, was “yellow-tagged” as hazardous after the 2001 Nisqually Earthquake. Repairs were made to the parapets and six chimneys, and the issue was resolved. Despite the century-old building’s sorry state, the King County Assessor valued it at $1.89 million in 2010. Property tax bills, which average close to $20,000 annually, are mailed to Jack N. Woo (whose parents owned the Moon Temple restaurant in the Seattle neighborhood of Wallingford for more than thirty years; Woo’s father, Yuen Gam Woo, cofounded the Luck Ngi Musical Society, a Chinatown hub for Cantonese Opera) of Transpacific Corporation to a post office box in Bellevue, just across Lake Washington from Seattle. The club’s doors, padlocked for nearly three decades, hang slightly ajar. One person was curious enough to tie a rope to a camera, dangle it over the tops of the doors, snap a grainy photo inside the club, and post it to Flickr.com. It’s a photo that reveals a tangle of red-vinyltopped barstools and overturned wooden chairs amassed in a messy pyre in front of the curving bar. A wide, heavy table blocks the entrance. A gambling tolerance policy kept the Wah Mee Club alive for years. When the club officially closed, it was at the hands of three young men who left thirteen dead bodies on the floor, and one lucky survivor to recount the horror. For more information and to purchase the complete e-book, visit wahmee.com. WAH MEE 13 TODD MATTHEWS Todd Matthews is a journalist who has worked for a variety of newspapers and magazines in the Pacific Northwest. As a freelance writer for Seattle magazine, he received third-place honors (2007) from the Society of Professional Journalists for his feature article about the University of Washington’s Innocence Project and its work in helping to exonerate a Yakima man through DNA testing after he spent ten years in prison, and first-place honors (2007) for his feature article about Seattle’s bike messengers. As a freelance writer at Washington Law & Politics magazine, he received thirdplace honors (2001) from the Society of Professional Journalists for his prison interview with Prison Legal News founder Paul Wright, and second-place honors (2003) for his article about whistle-blowers in Washington State. In 2007, he received the award for Outstanding Achievement in Media from the Washington State Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation for his work covering historic preservation in Tacoma for the Tacoma Daily Index, where he is the editor. His work has also appeared in All About Jazz, City Arts Tacoma, Earshot Jazz, Homeland Security Today, Jazz Steps, Journal of the San Juans, LynnwoodMountlake Terrace Enterprise, Prison Legal News, Rain Taxi, Real Change, Seattle Business Monthly, Tablet, Washington CEO, and Washington Free Press. He is a graduate of the University of Washington and holds a bachelor’s degree in communications. WAH MEE 14 TODD MATTHEWS