From the Richmond Sentinel, 7/1/1864, p. 1
Mayor’s Court. - Not
for a long time has the Mayor’s Court been so crowded with prisoners as on
yesterday morning; still amongst them all there was no case of importance or
even of ordinary interest. Most of the prisoners were either women or negroes.
Fourteen white women, of
different ages, whose names we omit as of no earthly interest to our readers,
were charged with keeping a house of ill-fame to the great annoyance of the
people of their neighborhood. The women occupy the house on Wall street, near
Franklin, known as Ruskell’s stable. It is a large new brick house, containing
at least a dozen rooms, which are rented out separately. Some how, probably from
the lower part being once used as a livery stable, it has always been tenanted
either by persons of the lowest character or of the most destitute description.
More thieves and burglars have had their local habitation in it and been
captured under its roof than in any other house of its age in the city. Several
times all its tenants have been committed to jail as disorderly characters, but
they either soon got at liberty and returned to it, like the sow to the more, or
it was filled by persons of equally bad character. Recently its inmates having
become particularly disagreeable to the neighbors, complaint was made to the
Mayor, who issued a warrant for the arrest of every person found in it. The
warrant was executed by the police at a late hour Wednesday night, when the
police found there fourteen women and three men. Ten of the women were under
thirty and were of the vilest character, the dirtiest person and the most brazen
face. - The other four were between forty-five and sixty and it was clear hat
only extreme poverty had driven them into such disreputable associations. Among
the captive females we noticed Amanda Logan, who is now under indictment for
receiving a quantity of goods stolen last spring by burglars from Major William
Allen.
The young women were impudent,
but the old folks were much distressed at their situation. - The whole party
having been called to the bar, Mr. Bradford and a number of other persons
residing in the neighborhood were examined as witnesses. It appeared that this
was the most disorderly house in town. The women, during the day, exposed their
persons in the windows, and halloed at, threw at and spit upon all passers by.
But when the sun went down arrived the time for the exercise of their most
disagreeable practices. They got drunk and made night hideous with their maudlin
revelry, which was varied by fights and shrieks and cries of murder. This sport
was kept up throughout the greater part of every night, and persons living on
Franklin street, a square off, could not sleep for the wild hurly-burly.
The Mayor committed the whole
crew to jail, in default of security to keep the peace and be of good behavior.
[Other case not
transcribed.]
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