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Showing posts with label hotels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hotels. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 July 2019

“There’s a Fire in the House!” - Arson at the Sovereign Hotel



Sovereign, Sask. prior to the 1915 fire that destroyed the hotel (far right).Source

“Afraid of what?” Inspector A. W. Duffus, RNWMP, asked chambermaid Molly Kelly, a witness at the preliminary hearing of William Shinbane. The former owner of the Sovereign Hotel was charged with setting fire to his own property on March 29, 1915. “I thought there was going to be a fire,” was Molly’s answer, reported by the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix on November 11, 1915. “What made you think that?” queried the inspector. “Oh, it was common talk among the employees that there was going to be a fire at the hotel,” Molly testified. “Mrs Mitchell the cook said that she did not think Mr. Shinbane would set fire to the house until his wife went to Winnipeg where she was expected to make a visit in a few days.” (Mrs. Anna Shinbane was pregnant with her second son, Berel Shinbane, who was born in Winnipeg on June 2nd, several months after the fire.)

Headline in the Saskatoon Daily Star, Nov. 10, 1915

The chambermaid had been so nervous that she went to bed fully clothed on the night that fire destroyed the Sovereign Hotel . She had only been working at the hotel for two weeks but the gossip among the other employees that the hotel was going to burn down made her nervous. Sure enough, in the early morning hours of March 29th she woke up to the smell of smoke coming through the transom window of her third-floor room. She managed to rescue her trunk and escape from her room unharmed. The Shinbane’s 4-year-old son, Edward (Ted), was not so fortunate. The toddler was badly burned on his legs and posterior during the fire. 

The Shinbanes


Source: Sovereign: Mileposts to Memories, 1981
William Shinbane was born to Jacob and Leah Shinbane in Vilna, Russia in 1886. He came to Canada as an infant, settling in Winnipeg, Manitoba where his father ran a general store. He married Anna Schwartz on January 24, 1911 in Winnipeg. After their wedding, the couple planned to settle in Lemberg, Saskatchewan where William’s brother Morris lived. By 1915, they were the owners and operators of the three-story hotel at Sovereign, built in 1912 by Chris Hoeschen, brother of Ben Hoeschen, manager of the Saskatoon brewery. And, by November of the same year, William was charged in incendiarism (arson) for torching his own property. Sovereign is located 26 km southeast of Rosetown on Highway 15.

Insurance Companies Balk


Saskatoon Daily Star, March 23, 1915

On March 29, 1915, the Saskatoon Daily Star reported that there had been “a small epidemic” of hotel fires in Saskatchewan after Premier Walter Scott announced two weeks earlier that Prohibition was coming to the province starting on July 1st. These fires on licensed premises were viewed with great concern by the fire insurance companies operating in the province. “Every insurance company has been dreading a general outbreak of fire among the hotels since Premier Scott made his announcement,” a company representative told the Daily Star. “We saw it coming and most of us believe that this is only the beginning. All we can do is to make the closest investigation possible in every case.”

 
Star-Phoenix, April 22, 1915

By April 22, six hotel fires in the province, including the one at Sovereign, were under investigation by Fire Commissioner R. J. McLean. Several fire insurance companies cancelled all their hotel policies in the province, while others scaled down their risks. “Some [companies] state that under no circumstances will they insure hotels for more than two-thirds of their estimated value,” one insurance company representative told the Star-Phoenix, “while others put the limit at 50 percent. Still others decline in future to carry any insurance of hotels whatever.”

Preliminary Hearing


On November 4, 1915, William Shinbane was arrested in Winnipeg and brought to Saskatoon for trial. His preliminary hearing began on November 10th, and the testimony given at the three-day hearing, such as that from Molly Kelly, provides a revealing glimpse into the operations of a small-town Saskatchewan hotel prior to Prohibition. 

Star-Phoenix, Nov. 11, 1915
Sam Musik, the Sovereign Hotel’s porter and furnace man testified that on the night of the fire, he had made up the furnace fire and tended to two dogs that were kept in the cellar. At about 2:00 a.m., he awoke to sound of his employer calling, “Sam! Sam! Fire!” His room was thick with smoke so he only had time to grab his coat, hat and shoes before exiting the burning building via a rope through the window of his room. When he got to the ground, another hotel employee loaned him a pair of pants. After the fire had done its damage, Musik testified that Shinbane came to him and said, “Sam, you keep quiet, my father has lots of money and you won’t lose a cent.” Shinbane owed Musik over $300 in back pay. The porter also testified that he had presumed the two dogs in the hotel’s cellar had perished in the fire, but that two days later a man named Henry Mitchell told him that he had gone down to the cellar at about 11:30 p.m. and taken out the dogs. When Musik told his employer, Shinbane responded, “Sam, you keep quiet.” Shinbane gave Musik $30 for a train ticket to Winnipeg, but when he asked for the $335 still owed to him in back wages, Shinbane told him he could not pay him until he secured the money that was coming to him from the insurance companies.

Bohemian-American Cook Book., 1915. Source
Mrs. Mitchell, the hotel’s cook, barely escaped the hotel fire with her young daughter. She was awakened by Mr. Shinbane calling to her outside her room. “Mrs. Mitchell, for God’s sake get up, there’s a fire in the house.” The cook had no time to dress as her room was already filled with smoke. She lost all her belongings, including $200 in her trunk. She testified on November 11th that when she got outside to the street, she heard Molly Kelly accuse Shinbane of setting fire to the place, but she didn’t hear his response. Questioned about how business conditions were at the Sovereign Hotel, Mrs. Mitchell stated that Mrs. Shinbane had frequently volunteered that business was “very bad.” She also testified that for about a week prior to the fire, the Shinbanes “had been busy packing up the hotel bed and table linen and the curtains and that these were stored in boxes on the landing” when she went to bed on the night before the fire. The smoke was so thick as she descended to the lower floor that she could not see whether the boxes were still there, but she did not run up against them during her escape.

Sylvester (Sid) Herrick, hotel boarder and handyman, testified that on the night of the fire he had been in Molly Kelly’s room until midnight. “Was there any talk of the possibility of a fire in the hotel while you were up in Miss Kelly’s room,” P. E. Mackenzie, the Crown prosecutor asked. “Yes,” was Herrick’s answer. He also stated that there was a small tank of gasoline at the back of the building which was used for gas-lighting purposes in the hotel. “We were all waiting for it to explode,” he said. All of the witnesses for the prosecution stated that they could smell gasoline as they exited the burning building.

Henry Thomas, representing the eleven insurance companies who held policies on the Sovereign Hotel and its contents, testified on November 11th that the total insurance on the building, furnishings, liquor and cigars was $23,900. “He said that since the fire the accused had submitted schedules of the values of the loss which totaled $34,946.25,” the Daily Star reported. “That while the policies were made out to William Shinbane, the losses were payable to the Hoeschen-Wentzler Brewing Company, Saskatoon, and to Jacob Shinbane to the extent of $13,000 to the former and $10,900 to the father of the accused.”

Saskatoon Daily Star. Nov. 11, 1915

Despite defense lawyer Donald Maclean’s statement that there was not sufficient evidence to connect the accused with the fire, Inspector Duffus bound Shinbane for trial at the Supreme Court of Saskatchewan. Duffus said that while there was no overwhelming presumption of guilt, there was, in his opinion, enough evidence for the case to go to a jury. 

What Happened?


Star-Phoenix, Nov. 12, 1915
And this is where the case goes cold. So far, I have not been able to find any newspaper story or other reference which can tell us what happened as a result of Shinbane’s trial. (Prior to 1918, there was a Supreme Court of Saskatchewan, but 1915 legislation created a new Court of King’s [now Queen’s] Bench to take over the trial functions of the Supreme Court, which was abolished effective March 1, 1918. Thus, I need to do more digging if I am to discover the Shinbane case records.) Based on what I learned (see below), it looks like William Shinbane got off. Maybe his case didn't even go to trial. His brother, A. M. (Mark) Shinbane, fresh out of law school at the University of Manitoba, attended William's preliminary hearing. Mark went on to have an illustrious career as a lawyer in Winnipeg. Click here to learn more. Perhaps the Shinbane family found a way to maneuver through the court system and help William, Anna, Teddie and Berel get back on their feet again.

William's brother, A. M. Shinbane at U of M, 1915. The Manitoban.

Here’s what I do know. By 1916, according to the Canada census, William and Anna Shinbane and their two boys were living in Swan River, Manitoba, where he worked as a general merchant. In the early 1920s, the family moved to Los Angeles, California. The US census for 1930 shows Shinbanes still living in LA where William worked as a building contractor. Two of his brothers, Hyman and Morris, also lived in LA. William Shinbane died on June 29, 1931 and is buried in Los Angeles.

Record of Shinbane's border crossing, 1923. Source: familysearch.org

The hotel at Sovereign was not rebuilt after the 1915 fire.

©Joan Champ, 2019



Friday, 13 May 2011

Murders at Shaunavon’s Grand Hotel


On March 16, 1940, Mah Sai, a Chinese baker in Shaunavon, was playing solitaire in a sheltered corner of the Grand Hotel lobby when he witnessed the fatal shooting of RCMP Sergeant Arthur Julian Barker by Victor Richard Greenlay. As Mah Sai watched, Greenlay fired three shots at Sergeant Barker who was putting on his boots at the foot of the hotel stairs. The policeman crumpled to the floor with a groan, and the baker ran for his life. Mah Hop, the proprietor of the Grand Hotel, was another witness to the murder on that fateful Saturday night. When he heard what sounded like firecrackers, Mah Hop ran to see what was going on. When he reached the second step of the stairs, Greenlay ordered him to get back.  “I went back fast,” Mah Hop said later.

Two months later, on the identical spot in the lobby of the Grand Hotel where Sergeant Barker died, both Mah Hop and Mah Sai were stabbed and killed in a knife fight.

The Grand Hotel, Shaunavon’s third hotel, was built in 1929 under the ownership of Fred Mah and Mah Hop. The two-storey brick hotel with 38 guest rooms was the scene of three brutal murders before it was bought by George Baird and converted into an apartment building. The Grand Hotel received Municipal Heritage Designation in 1999.

The old Grand Hotel, now an apartment block in Shaunavon, 2003. Image source

Officer Down

Victor Richard Greenlay was the 30-year-old son of Colonel and Mrs. G.L. Greenlay, highly respected ranchers in the Climax district. An officer of the non-permanent militia, Victor was formally charged on March 18, 1940 with the murder of his friend, Sergeant Barker, RCMP veteran and cattle country investigator. Barker had been visiting Greenlay in his room at the Grand Hotel just prior to the shooting. 

Shortly after the murder, it became clear that Greenlay was insane, suffering from schizophrenia. Victor Van Allen, another rancher in the south country, testified at the coroner’s inquest on March 18th that he took Greenlay to Shaunavon that Saturday afternoon. On the way into town, some of the things Greenlay said made Van Allen realize he was not “normal.” Greenlay told Van Allen that was going to Shaunavon to see Sergeant Barker because together they would be able to prevent the Canadian government from selling horses to France. Greenlay said he feared trouble was to break out, and that “within a week there will be troops in the saddle,” adding that “Christ will appear in Germany in the form of a woman, and will turn the forces against Germany.” 

Photo of Sergeant Barker from the Leader-Post, March 19, 1940.
When they arrived in town, Greenlay phoned Sergeant Barker at about 7 o’clock and asked him to come to his room at the Grand Hotel. Barker, his wife, Gladys and their son Kenneth walked downtown, and while his family went to the library, Barker visited with Greenlay in his hotel room.  According to his later testimony, during their visit Greenlay apparently asked the RCMP officer to intervene for him with a girlfriend, and Barker demurred. When Barker left Greenlay’s room around 9:00 PM, Greenlay said he “heard a voice tell me to go out and shoot the evil beast.” He headed down the hotel stairs where he saw said he saw that Barker was not a man, but “a devil,” and he pulled the trigger of his .38 revolver three times.
After the funeral service in Shaunavon, Barker’s body was transported by train to Regina, where he was interred in the cemetery of the RCMP barracks. “The body was placed in the baggage car,” the Regina Leader-Post reported on March 19th. “In the day coach was Victor Richard Greenlay, charged with the murder of Sergeant Barker, and in the third coach was Mrs. Barker and her son, Kenneth.”  Greenlay was found not guilty by reason of insanity and confined to a mental institution.

Bloody Night at the Grand Hotel

“Jack” Toy Ying, a young waiter in Shaunavon, was upset. He was so upset that on Friday, May 3, 1940 he called Constable Robert Roycroft of the Shaunavon police force. Toy Ying laid a charge against the Grand Hotel, apparently involving a woman. He asked Roycroft to remove the woman in question from the hotel, and to get her out of town. So, at about 10 PM, Toy Ying, accompanied by a nervous Constable Roycroft, went to the Grand Hotel and searchted all the rooms. The woman was not found. 

With the town policeman still in tow, an angry Toy Ying confronted Mah Hop, the owner of the hotel, in the lobby. Their argument started out quietly, and then Roycroft noticed that the lobby was slowly filling up with other Chinese men. All of a sudden, the crowd of men jumped Toy Ying. Arms and legs were flying. In the melee, Roycroft wrestled some of the men off Toy Ying, who then saw his chance, ran out of the hotel, and headed off down the street. Behind him, Toy Ying left two dead and two injured, all as a result of stab wounds from a weapon he had concealed in his coat pocket. Police arrested Toy Ying the next day in Admiral, 25 miles east of Shaunavon.

Dead were Mah Hop, the 50-year-old hotel owner, and Mah Sai, the 45-year-old town baker. Mah Sai died on the exact spot where he had watched Sergeant Barker die from his bullet wounds just eight weeks earlier.  Both men had wives and children in China; Mah Hop also had a son in Nova Scotia. Mah Sam was in serious condition in the Shaunavon hospital with deep gashes in his leg and arm. Mah Yok had a surface wound.

Funeral services for Mah Sai were held at the United Church in Shaunavon on May 6th. Mah Hop’s son, Mah Tun of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, arrived the following day to take charge of his father’s funeral. Both men were buried in Hillcrest Cemetery near Shaunavon.

On May 16, 1940, Toy Ying was put on trial on two charges of murder. When defense counsel, C.H.J. Burrows, K.C., Regina, asked Mah Sam through an interpreter whether he knew the woman Toy Ying wanted removed from town, Mah Sam said he had seen her in a local café, but not in Mah Hop’s room. Three other Chinese witnesses denied any knowledge of the mystery woman.

© Joan Champ 2011


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Sunday, 8 May 2011

Grenfell: Hoax at the Granite Hotel

Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States (1901-1909). Image source
Robert Copeland

In 1887, Robert A. Copeland and W. H. Fleming bought the hotel in Grenfell with a down payment of two yoke of oxen. Eighteen years later in 1905, David Black bought the Granite Hotel from Copeland with a satchel containing $38,000 in cash. 

Perhaps the value had grown due to the local myth that U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt had spent a night at the Granite Hotel on December 14, 1901. A page on the hotel’s register bore the ‘signatures’ of ‘Theo Roosevelt’ and his travelling companions, James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern Railway; U. S. Grant Jr., son of the Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant; and J. A. Garfield Jr., son of President Garfield.  Roosevelt had just been sworn in as President in September of that year. He delivered his State of the Union address on December 3rd, two weeks before he is alleged to have stayed at the hotel in Grenfell, Saskatchewan. On December 16th -- two days later -- he delivered a message to Congress.

The Granite Hotel, c. 1905
For years, Grenfell boasted that this famous name graced the register of the Granite Hotel. One man even claimed to have carried President Roosevelt’s luggage from the station to the hotel. It was a period of railway promotion, so it was thought that there was an attempt to secure American capital for the building of new railway lines in Canada. Surveys were being made in the vicinity of Grenfell, and it was suggested that perhaps Roosevelt and his friends were sufficiently interested to come and investigate the possibilities for themselves.

Grenfell’s tale of this brush with greatness was perpetuated for another 59 years until, in 1960, a former Grenfell resident touched off a chain of events that finally revealed the hoax. Lionel E. Curran was the “doubting Thomas.” He sent a copy of the register to the Library of Congress in Washington DC to have the signatures of Roosevelt and his companions compared to the real ones. The library found that all but that of James J. Hill were fake signatures. Mr. Curran notified the Grenfell Sun of his findings, and his letter was published on the newspaper’s front page. The Regina Leader-Post picked up the story, and ran a photo of the controversial register page on its front page on February 1, 1960.

Photo of the Granite Hotel's register showing President Roosevelt's "signature," fourth from the bottom. An investigation showed that Roosevelt spent that day in Washington. "The 59-year-old hoax will probably become one of Saskatchewan's most celebrated of all time." Regina Leader-Post, Feb. 1, 1960.

Hon. C. C. Williams, 1963. Image source
The next morning, Saskatchewan’s Minister of Labour, Hon. C. C. Williams,* contacted the Leader-Post, providing a clue to the origins of the hoax. “The signature of ‘Theo Roosevelt’ is in fact,” said Williams, “the identical handwriting of my late father who was a station agent in a small town near Grenfell at that time.” Williams said he had received a copy of the register page four years before and, not wishing to spoil the story, had said nothing. “I think the real explanation was a hockey game or curling tournament at Grenfell that Saturday night which attracted people from surrounding towns” Williams told the newspaper. “Six or seven ‘Morse boys’ [telegraph operators] got together and had some fun with the register.”

In 1980, the Grenfell local history book concluded its account of the Roosevelt myth by saying: “What better place to relax than in an up-to-date and friendly hotel in a beautiful little town like Grenfell. All we can say is that if he didn’t come it was his loss.”

The Granite Hotel in Grenfell,  2010. Image source
*Charles C. Williams born in Moosomin in 1896 and went to school in Wapella. He was the Minister of Labour in CCF government from in 1944 to 1964 – the longest any Saskatchewan Minister has served in one portfolio. Williams retired from politics in 1964 and died in 1975.

© Joan Champ 2011


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Sunday, 1 May 2011

Bradwell Hotel: Two-Storey Outhouse and All

The Bradwell Hotel, c. 1910.  Ben and Sarah Cook on right.  Western Development Museum photo, 6-E-4
In 1907, the colourful Ben Cook built the hotel in Bradwell – complete with a two-storey outhouse. The four-holer (two up, two down) was attached to the building by a catwalk. Cook likely built this unusual structure out of respect for his wife and the hotel guests who occupied the rooms on the second floor.  It saved them the inconvenience and possible embarrassment of going downstairs and walking through the saloon. The male patrons of the bar used the lower level of the two-storey outhouse.

The Bradwell Hotel's two-storey outhouse was likely similar to this one ("Big John") still attached to the Nevada City Hotel in Montana. Image source
Contrary to jokes about two-storey outhouses, the user of the lower level had nothing to fear if the upper level was in use at the same time. The upstairs facilities were offset from the ones below, situated a little further back so that the waste fell behind a false wall on the first floor. 


This unique structure proved popular with more than just the patrons of the Bradwell Hotel. For example, Sig Olson owned the general store next to the hotel. This store did not have an outhouse, so the clerks and others used Ben Cook’s two-storey facility. According to Bradwell’s local history book, Ben was not happy about this arrangement. He said that too many users would fill up the pits under the outhouse at a faster rate. “One day, young Dean Cook [Ben’s son] and a friend were playing in the men's side, when a clerk came into the ladies' side and the young boys made a noise as they were peeking,” Bill Martyn recalls in the town’s history book. “The female panicked, ran out with clothes in disarray hollering and trying to arrange them. I understand it was rather funny for the onlookers.” It wasn’t long before Sig Olson built an outhouse behind his store.

The Bradwell Hotel’s remarkable outhouse was demolished around 1950 by Wendelyn Heisler. He and his wife Theresa owned the hotel from 1948 until 1956.  As their son, Arnie observes in the Bradwell local history book (1986), his father destroyed a piece of history in the process of demolishing the outhouse. It might have become a tourist attraction like the one in Gays, Illinois (see video) or like “Big John” still attached to the Nevada City Hotel – now considered to be the most photographed building in Montana (shown above).

The Ben Cook Family

Ben Cook was born in Ontario in 1861, married Sarah Slack in 1897, and settled in Bradwell in 1906. They had an adopted son, Wilbur. During the Prohibition years (1915 to 1924), Ben made a nightly trip to meet the evening train where he paid the express charge on a brown package, no matter to whom it was addressed.  It was his way of beating Prohibition and having some liquor on hand for his hotel guests.

Ben and Sarah Cook on right, c. 1910. Detail from Western Development Museum photo, 6-E-4
In 1918, Sarah was called to the home of her brother, John Slack in Vanguard, to assist with the care of his family who were ill with the Spanish Flu. Despite her efforts, John and three of his children died. Sarah returned to Bradwell where she became ill, passing away in a Saskatoon hospital in 1919. Two years later, Ben married Beatrice Slack, John’s widow. She and her two surviving children Doris and Harry came to live in Bradwell.  In 1921, a son, Dean, was born to Ben and Beatrice. Dean was killed in a plane crash near Vanscoy in 1942 while training as a pilot for the war. Ben died in 1948.

The Bradwell Hotel in 2008. Joan Champ photo
© Joan Champ 2011
 



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