Some of the "filibusters" ended up settling for a lousy 15 bucks.
New York Sun, March 12, 1886, Page 1, Column 3
OUR FILIBUSTERS ARE BACK.
Ten of the Fourth Warders Here
With Not a Cent Among Them
Wouldn't Sail on the Fram to Fight for Soto
and they had to Live on Poorhouse Fare
at Turk's Island--The Band of 21 Split
Ten of the Fourth ward filibusters, very
dilapidated, and without the price of a drink
among them, but in perfect health, are aboard
the steamship San Domingo, which dropped
anchor at Quarantine last night. They have
been no further than Turk's Island, in the
West Indies. They and others shipped from
New York in the San Domingo on Feb. 4 "to
pick rubber and survey a canal in Guatemala,"
but they soon found out that the real object of
their mission was to upset the Government of
Honduras. James F. Halliday. Marlon Ray's
brother, and David H. Wallace, her lover, were
leaders of the expedition. There was a split in
the band on Turk's Island. Halliday returned
to this city on the Fram on Monday. Wallace is
at Kingston, and all the Fourth warders with
one or two exceptions came back on tha San
Domingo.
The reporter of THE SUN, who was rowed out
to the San Domingo in a lantern-lighted boat
last night, heard negro melodies being sung in
the Fourth ward version on the steerage deck.
The filibusters rushed to the rail when they
beard that there was a SUN reporter climbing
up the ship's ladder. Every face was brown
with exposure, and every man's clothes had
seen hard usage. They were a jolly, noisy lot,
though, and all talked to the reporter at once.
First thing they gave their names and addresses
as follows:
James Bogan of 7 East Broadway, or Howard House,
as you please; Christopher Dunigan [sic], 33 James street,
used to be assistant undertaker for Mr. Moran; James
Gleason, called "Dutchy," 96 Monroe street; William
Doran, called the "Kid," Franklin House, 450 Pearl
street; John Connors, Franklin House; Thomas O'Connor,
134 Cherry street; Wm. Williams, English, fireman,
boarded wllh David Jones, 147 Cherry street; John
Whittle of Boston was looking for a job as a cooK when
he Was roped in; Joseph Miller, the Dutchman, boarder
with Jones & Williams, 147 cherry street; Alexander
Dix ("Sandy"), printer and variety actor, Howard
House.
Their eleven fellow passengers from whom
they cut loose on Turk's Island, they said,
were:
James F. Halliday, David H. Wallace, Thomas Connors
of Orange, N, J., Charles Perry of Brooklyn, Tommy
Loftus of 141 Cherry street; Jones & Williams's right-hand
man, ---- Alexander of Brooklyn; Harry Ball of
Orange, a friend of Connors, and who told the party he
was a reporter; Dennis Mahoney, 147 Cherry street,
another of Jones & Williams's men; Andrew van Schafflen.
Bangor, Me; Daniel H. Austin, and a boarder in Dago
White's Sailors' Home In Oliver street.
Whittle talked for the rest last night, with
the others chipping in occasionally. He said:
W. E. Gould engaged us in Jones & Williams's office in
Cherry street. We were to go and survey in British
Honduras, and collect rubber, and work on a railroad in
Guatemala. Gould promised us $30 a month aud found[?].
We were told that we would get $5 in advance when we
arrived on Turk's Island. Holliday [sic] was introduced to
us as our overseer, and Wallace, we were told, was
Halliday's best man. After signing we had only half an
hour to get our duds, say good by, and be on the ship.
You can bet we didn't nave time to ask questions.
After we were twenty-four hours out of New York
Halliday, Wallace, Perry, Alexander, Ball and Connors
approached us, and told us in whispers that we were not
to do work on Turk'e Island, but would find out our
duties when we got there. Halliday said that there
were arms and ammunition in the hold of the San
Domingo. When we got off at Turk's Island, Halliday told
us that a steamer would be along soon to take us away.
He didn't say what steamer it was until the Fram
arrived, floating the Norwegian flag. He told us then
that we were to go on the Fram and be transferred by
her to the City ot Mexico on which we were to do fighting
for Mr. Soto of Fifth Avenue, New York. We ten
and three more refused to go on the Fram. H. Jackson,
Commissioner for the island, tried to persuade us to go,
because he wanted to get rid of us, but we wouldn't
board the Fram. Halliday, Wallace, Ball, Connors, Alexander.
and two others went. About this time Austin,
Mahoney and Van Schafflen shipped on different vessels
that stopped at Turk s Island.
We would have been without food after the Fram
sailed with Halliday if Mr Stanley Jones, the Clyde line
agent, and his family had not taken care of us. They
were very good to us. So was C. F. Myers, the American
boarding house keeper, who cared for us three days.
Ihe American Consul, Mr. Sawyer, helped us all he
could. He had to do it out ot his own purse. We were
living on Commissioner Jackson, who fed us jail fare,
until one of us thought of getting up a minstrel
performance.
Christy Dunegan unfolded a huge banner,
which was a programme ot the American Minstrels'
final performance at the Court House.
Admission was 9 pence, and reserved seats
were 1 shilling. "Dr. Brown's Office" was the
title of one of the numbers on the piogramme.
"The show," Whittle said, "netted us $40,
and we were able to buy our own grub for
a while, but we got out of funds again by the
time the San Domingo came along und picked
us up."
The Fourth warders were in trepidation lest
they might not be able to get over Fulton Ferry
or the bridge from Harbeck's Stores, Brooklyn,
this morning, because they could not scare up
a copper among them.
The thirteen men who refused to go on the
Fram made affidavit to the facts before the
United States Consul, N. K. Sawyer, on Feb. 12,
the day tbe Fram touched there. They declared
that they were told when the Fram
came in that "we had to go and fight for
a man by the name of De Soto and
we declined to go on those conditions, so were
left here destitute. without any place to stay.
We all think it was a fraudulent piece of business
from beginning to end." They have
brought back a certificate from the Consul and
from local authorities that they were maintained
on Turk's Island at the public expanse.
KEY WEST, March 11.--Of tbe twenty-nine
alleged filibusters made prisoners on the City
of Mexico, these are from New York:
Charles B. Jackson, George G. Watson. Francis W.
Tryon, Jr., Peter L. Dani and Albert Larradore, all citizens
of the United states, Rosendo Tewara, Central
American; Carlos H. Arvelo, Venezuelan; Jaime Arien[?],
Catalonian; Francisco Ortega, Spaniard; Alejandro
Dumas, Spaniard; M. Soto, Spaniard, aud J. K. Hermann,
servant.
The others are:
Gen. Emilio Delgado of Santo Rosa, F Ramon Soto of
Comayegua, Juan H. Rivan of Porto Rico, Vincenti Ayesto
of Tegucigalpa, R. J. Herradora of Tegucigalpa. Prospero
Weylelaba of Belize, Manuel Morri of Costa Rica, Ram
Aleman of Belize, Fradoro[?] Calderon of Belize, Francisco
Garcia of Belize, Isabel Alvarez of Belize, Jeronimo
Echeverria of Belize, Teodora Baliadar of Belize,
Federico Maradiaga of Belize, Lorenzo Fucisco[?] of Progreso,
Nomedio Luna of Progreso, Luiz M Urbina of Belize.
The probabilities are that all will be set free
except such as are held as witnesses against
the ship.
----end
New York Sun, March 13, 1886, Page 2, Column 4
They Will Call on Soto
The Filibustering Fourth Warders Expect him to Come Down with the Cash
The ten filibusters from the steamship
Santo Domingo split yesterday morning into
two factions, the ragged and the more ragged,
and came from the steamship's pier in Brooklyn
to the Fourth ward by different ferries.
The ragged refused to be seen in the streets
with the more ragged. All hands were to
rendezvous at Alderman Pat Divver's saloon in
Chatham street. Sandy Dix and Kid Doran,
however, had conspired to get possession
of the Consul's certificate brought from
Turks Island. It had been in the
possession of John Whipple of Boston.
The conspirators think they can raise some
money on the strength of the certificate that
they were abandoned at Turks Island because
they would not go and filibuster for Marco
Aurelio Soto, and they don't want the money
to go to Boston.
After Dix and the Kid had got possession of
the paper yesterday, they dodged Whipple all
day. Doran. Connors, and O'Conner went with
the paper to the Mills' building, where they
heard that W. E. Gould had his office. Gould
is the man who engaged them to "pick
rubber," and they wanted him to settle with
them. They couldn't find him there or anywhere
else.
Everybody in the Fourth ward seemed to be
glad to set them up for the boys yesterday.
Before the shades of night fell over Case's
liquor store at James and Madison streets,
some of the filibusters did not know whether
they were on Turks Island or on Cherry Hill.
They had planned early in the day to have a
meeting at 4 P. M., and then go to Soto's
palace in Fifth avenue, and see if he were
wiling to pay them for the trouble they had
been put to, Soto is the ex-President of Honduras,
and is at the bottom of the City of Mexico
filibustering project. The boys were to meet
in Widow Dunegan's kitchen at 33 James
street, but there wasn't a quorum able to come
to time. The pilgrimage to Soto's residence
was put off until this morning, when it will be
made without fail by Whippler, Gleason and
Chris Dunegan.
"It's no use of de hull crowd goln' along,"
explained Gleason, "der make-up of some of
der fellers would give Soto de grand scare."
It leaked out yesterday from the filibusters
that Marion Ray was to follow Wallace South
as soon as Wallace located, and they were to be
married.
----end
New York Sun, March 14, 1886, Page 7, Column 4
Filibusters Sign a Release
Six of Them Get $15 Apiece by Promising
Not to Bother Soto for Pay
Six of the filibustering party of ten from
Turk's Island got $15 apiece yesterday from
Jones & Williams of 23 Old slip, the agents who
shipped them. To get it they had to sign this
agreement:
New York, March 13, 1886.
We, the undersigned, hereby agree, in confirmation of
the money now to be paid, that we will give up all
proceedings against the agents of the parties who sent us
out and everybody else.
The six signers were Dutchy Gleason, John
Connors, Tom O'Connor, Dutchman Miller,
Kid Doran, Fourth warders, and John Whipple,
the Boston cook, who took part in the expedition.
As tbe men were away thirty-five days, and
had been promised $30 a month, and their
board and clothing found, they wanted more
than they got. but Jones and Wlllliams said that
they had forfeited the rest by stopping at Turk's
lsland, when they shipped for Guatemala, and
they had to take the $15 or nothlng. The shipping
agents intimated that they were paying
them out of their own pocket, with little prospect
of being reimbursed. But W, E. Gould, in
behalf of Marco Amelio [sic] Soto, ex-President of
Honduras, will, it is expected, square matters
with the shipping firm.
Fourth warders Christy Dunegan. Jim Bogan,
and Sandy Dlx were not present at the
meeting, and have not got their money yet,
William Williams, Jones's man, did not sign
the agreement. Jones will pay him more than
$15 or get him a good job as a fireman.
----end
New York Sun, March 12, 1886, Page 1, Column 3
OUR FILIBUSTERS ARE BACK.
Ten of the Fourth Warders Here
With Not a Cent Among Them
Wouldn't Sail on the Fram to Fight for Soto
and they had to Live on Poorhouse Fare
at Turk's Island--The Band of 21 Split
Ten of the Fourth ward filibusters, very
dilapidated, and without the price of a drink
among them, but in perfect health, are aboard
the steamship San Domingo, which dropped
anchor at Quarantine last night. They have
been no further than Turk's Island, in the
West Indies. They and others shipped from
New York in the San Domingo on Feb. 4 "to
pick rubber and survey a canal in Guatemala,"
but they soon found out that the real object of
their mission was to upset the Government of
Honduras. James F. Halliday. Marlon Ray's
brother, and David H. Wallace, her lover, were
leaders of the expedition. There was a split in
the band on Turk's Island. Halliday returned
to this city on the Fram on Monday. Wallace is
at Kingston, and all the Fourth warders with
one or two exceptions came back on tha San
Domingo.
The reporter of THE SUN, who was rowed out
to the San Domingo in a lantern-lighted boat
last night, heard negro melodies being sung in
the Fourth ward version on the steerage deck.
The filibusters rushed to the rail when they
beard that there was a SUN reporter climbing
up the ship's ladder. Every face was brown
with exposure, and every man's clothes had
seen hard usage. They were a jolly, noisy lot,
though, and all talked to the reporter at once.
First thing they gave their names and addresses
as follows:
James Bogan of 7 East Broadway, or Howard House,
as you please; Christopher Dunigan [sic], 33 James street,
used to be assistant undertaker for Mr. Moran; James
Gleason, called "Dutchy," 96 Monroe street; William
Doran, called the "Kid," Franklin House, 450 Pearl
street; John Connors, Franklin House; Thomas O'Connor,
134 Cherry street; Wm. Williams, English, fireman,
boarded wllh David Jones, 147 Cherry street; John
Whittle of Boston was looking for a job as a cooK when
he Was roped in; Joseph Miller, the Dutchman, boarder
with Jones & Williams, 147 cherry street; Alexander
Dix ("Sandy"), printer and variety actor, Howard
House.
Their eleven fellow passengers from whom
they cut loose on Turk's Island, they said,
were:
James F. Halliday, David H. Wallace, Thomas Connors
of Orange, N, J., Charles Perry of Brooklyn, Tommy
Loftus of 141 Cherry street; Jones & Williams's right-hand
man, ---- Alexander of Brooklyn; Harry Ball of
Orange, a friend of Connors, and who told the party he
was a reporter; Dennis Mahoney, 147 Cherry street,
another of Jones & Williams's men; Andrew van Schafflen.
Bangor, Me; Daniel H. Austin, and a boarder in Dago
White's Sailors' Home In Oliver street.
Whittle talked for the rest last night, with
the others chipping in occasionally. He said:
W. E. Gould engaged us in Jones & Williams's office in
Cherry street. We were to go and survey in British
Honduras, and collect rubber, and work on a railroad in
Guatemala. Gould promised us $30 a month aud found[?].
We were told that we would get $5 in advance when we
arrived on Turk's Island. Holliday [sic] was introduced to
us as our overseer, and Wallace, we were told, was
Halliday's best man. After signing we had only half an
hour to get our duds, say good by, and be on the ship.
You can bet we didn't nave time to ask questions.
After we were twenty-four hours out of New York
Halliday, Wallace, Perry, Alexander, Ball and Connors
approached us, and told us in whispers that we were not
to do work on Turk'e Island, but would find out our
duties when we got there. Halliday said that there
were arms and ammunition in the hold of the San
Domingo. When we got off at Turk's Island, Halliday told
us that a steamer would be along soon to take us away.
He didn't say what steamer it was until the Fram
arrived, floating the Norwegian flag. He told us then
that we were to go on the Fram and be transferred by
her to the City ot Mexico on which we were to do fighting
for Mr. Soto of Fifth Avenue, New York. We ten
and three more refused to go on the Fram. H. Jackson,
Commissioner for the island, tried to persuade us to go,
because he wanted to get rid of us, but we wouldn't
board the Fram. Halliday, Wallace, Ball, Connors, Alexander.
and two others went. About this time Austin,
Mahoney and Van Schafflen shipped on different vessels
that stopped at Turk s Island.
We would have been without food after the Fram
sailed with Halliday if Mr Stanley Jones, the Clyde line
agent, and his family had not taken care of us. They
were very good to us. So was C. F. Myers, the American
boarding house keeper, who cared for us three days.
Ihe American Consul, Mr. Sawyer, helped us all he
could. He had to do it out ot his own purse. We were
living on Commissioner Jackson, who fed us jail fare,
until one of us thought of getting up a minstrel
performance.
Christy Dunegan unfolded a huge banner,
which was a programme ot the American Minstrels'
final performance at the Court House.
Admission was 9 pence, and reserved seats
were 1 shilling. "Dr. Brown's Office" was the
title of one of the numbers on the piogramme.
"The show," Whittle said, "netted us $40,
and we were able to buy our own grub for
a while, but we got out of funds again by the
time the San Domingo came along und picked
us up."
The Fourth warders were in trepidation lest
they might not be able to get over Fulton Ferry
or the bridge from Harbeck's Stores, Brooklyn,
this morning, because they could not scare up
a copper among them.
The thirteen men who refused to go on the
Fram made affidavit to the facts before the
United States Consul, N. K. Sawyer, on Feb. 12,
the day tbe Fram touched there. They declared
that they were told when the Fram
came in that "we had to go and fight for
a man by the name of De Soto and
we declined to go on those conditions, so were
left here destitute. without any place to stay.
We all think it was a fraudulent piece of business
from beginning to end." They have
brought back a certificate from the Consul and
from local authorities that they were maintained
on Turk's Island at the public expanse.
KEY WEST, March 11.--Of tbe twenty-nine
alleged filibusters made prisoners on the City
of Mexico, these are from New York:
Charles B. Jackson, George G. Watson. Francis W.
Tryon, Jr., Peter L. Dani and Albert Larradore, all citizens
of the United states, Rosendo Tewara, Central
American; Carlos H. Arvelo, Venezuelan; Jaime Arien[?],
Catalonian; Francisco Ortega, Spaniard; Alejandro
Dumas, Spaniard; M. Soto, Spaniard, aud J. K. Hermann,
servant.
The others are:
Gen. Emilio Delgado of Santo Rosa, F Ramon Soto of
Comayegua, Juan H. Rivan of Porto Rico, Vincenti Ayesto
of Tegucigalpa, R. J. Herradora of Tegucigalpa. Prospero
Weylelaba of Belize, Manuel Morri of Costa Rica, Ram
Aleman of Belize, Fradoro[?] Calderon of Belize, Francisco
Garcia of Belize, Isabel Alvarez of Belize, Jeronimo
Echeverria of Belize, Teodora Baliadar of Belize,
Federico Maradiaga of Belize, Lorenzo Fucisco[?] of Progreso,
Nomedio Luna of Progreso, Luiz M Urbina of Belize.
The probabilities are that all will be set free
except such as are held as witnesses against
the ship.
----end
New York Sun, March 13, 1886, Page 2, Column 4
They Will Call on Soto
The Filibustering Fourth Warders Expect him to Come Down with the Cash
The ten filibusters from the steamship
Santo Domingo split yesterday morning into
two factions, the ragged and the more ragged,
and came from the steamship's pier in Brooklyn
to the Fourth ward by different ferries.
The ragged refused to be seen in the streets
with the more ragged. All hands were to
rendezvous at Alderman Pat Divver's saloon in
Chatham street. Sandy Dix and Kid Doran,
however, had conspired to get possession
of the Consul's certificate brought from
Turks Island. It had been in the
possession of John Whipple of Boston.
The conspirators think they can raise some
money on the strength of the certificate that
they were abandoned at Turks Island because
they would not go and filibuster for Marco
Aurelio Soto, and they don't want the money
to go to Boston.
After Dix and the Kid had got possession of
the paper yesterday, they dodged Whipple all
day. Doran. Connors, and O'Conner went with
the paper to the Mills' building, where they
heard that W. E. Gould had his office. Gould
is the man who engaged them to "pick
rubber," and they wanted him to settle with
them. They couldn't find him there or anywhere
else.
Everybody in the Fourth ward seemed to be
glad to set them up for the boys yesterday.
Before the shades of night fell over Case's
liquor store at James and Madison streets,
some of the filibusters did not know whether
they were on Turks Island or on Cherry Hill.
They had planned early in the day to have a
meeting at 4 P. M., and then go to Soto's
palace in Fifth avenue, and see if he were
wiling to pay them for the trouble they had
been put to, Soto is the ex-President of Honduras,
and is at the bottom of the City of Mexico
filibustering project. The boys were to meet
in Widow Dunegan's kitchen at 33 James
street, but there wasn't a quorum able to come
to time. The pilgrimage to Soto's residence
was put off until this morning, when it will be
made without fail by Whippler, Gleason and
Chris Dunegan.
"It's no use of de hull crowd goln' along,"
explained Gleason, "der make-up of some of
der fellers would give Soto de grand scare."
It leaked out yesterday from the filibusters
that Marion Ray was to follow Wallace South
as soon as Wallace located, and they were to be
married.
----end
New York Sun, March 14, 1886, Page 7, Column 4
Filibusters Sign a Release
Six of Them Get $15 Apiece by Promising
Not to Bother Soto for Pay
Six of the filibustering party of ten from
Turk's Island got $15 apiece yesterday from
Jones & Williams of 23 Old slip, the agents who
shipped them. To get it they had to sign this
agreement:
New York, March 13, 1886.
We, the undersigned, hereby agree, in confirmation of
the money now to be paid, that we will give up all
proceedings against the agents of the parties who sent us
out and everybody else.
The six signers were Dutchy Gleason, John
Connors, Tom O'Connor, Dutchman Miller,
Kid Doran, Fourth warders, and John Whipple,
the Boston cook, who took part in the expedition.
As tbe men were away thirty-five days, and
had been promised $30 a month, and their
board and clothing found, they wanted more
than they got. but Jones and Wlllliams said that
they had forfeited the rest by stopping at Turk's
lsland, when they shipped for Guatemala, and
they had to take the $15 or nothlng. The shipping
agents intimated that they were paying
them out of their own pocket, with little prospect
of being reimbursed. But W, E. Gould, in
behalf of Marco Amelio [sic] Soto, ex-President of
Honduras, will, it is expected, square matters
with the shipping firm.
Fourth warders Christy Dunegan. Jim Bogan,
and Sandy Dlx were not present at the
meeting, and have not got their money yet,
William Williams, Jones's man, did not sign
the agreement. Jones will pay him more than
$15 or get him a good job as a fireman.
----end
Comment