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  • Texas | Columns | "Texas Tales"

    Jamming at the Rice Hotel
    Crowd Control Circa 1928

    by Mike Cox
    Mike Cox
    Anyone who has ever attended a conference at a large highrise hotel knows about waiting on elevators. Seemingly a lifetime goes by before one gets to your floor, and when it does, it’s often too packed to enter and you have to keep waiting.

    But imagine some 3,000 people crowded into a hotel lobby on a sultry summer afternoon waiting to use the elevators in the days before air conditioning and the widespread passage of no-smoking ordinances. That’s what happened at Houston’s 17-story Rice Hotel on June 28, 1928 when the Bayou City hosted the National Democratic Houston. The situation grew so ugly the Houston Chronicle ended up publishing a lengthy story about it the following day, “Crowd Jams Rice Hotel Lobby and Elevators Are Blocked Off Behind Ropes and Police.”
    Houston Tx - Rice Hotel
    Rice Hotel
    Postcard courtesy rootsweb.com/ %7Etxpstcrd/

    Interestingly enough, the 1928 convention, the Rice Hotel and even the Houston Chronicle all had something in common – Jesse H. Jones.

    Practically broke, Jones hit Houston in 1908 to take over manager of his late uncle’s lumber company. In one of Texas’ best almost-rags-to-big-time-riches stories, Jones made a fortune in the lumber business and real estate. By the time the 1928 presidential election drew near, Jones owned the Rice Hotel and the city’s afternoon daily, the Chronicle.

    Figuring he might as well have a national political convention to go along with everything else, legend has Jones traveling to Washington with a suitcase containing $200,000 in cash. When he alighted from the train back in Houston, he no longer had the money, but Houston had been selected as the venue of that year’s Democratic nominating convention. Not since before the Civil War had a presidential convention been held in the south, and never in Texas.

    A frame convention building called Sam Houston Hall, the construction of which was overseen by Jones, rose in only 64 days. Soon after its completion, thousands of delegates, party officials and functionaries, journalists, conmen, hookers and other politically minded people converged on Houston. All who could booked rooms at either the Rice or the Lamar Hotel. (Jones owned that, too.)

    When the convention concluded its work about noon on June 28 with the nomination of anti-prohibtion New York Gov. Alfred E. Smith for president and Sen. Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas as vice-president, several thousand people headed for the Rice.

    “Before long,” the Chronicle reported, “the lobby was packed tightly. The entrances were jammed. As the crowds grew, the heat grew.”

    The hotel’s management had planned ahead to some extent, roping off the elevators to allow for orderly access. Two men, presumably with hotel security, stood before the crush of humanity and said, in effect, “Six at a time, please.” A few police officers also were on hand.

    But the delegates and other visitors were tired, hot and hungry. Many had trains to catch as soon as they could freshen up, pack and check out. A good many probably needed to go to the bathroom. For whatever their reasons, they choose – en masse – not to quietly stand in line to get to their room.

    The local newspaper did not report how many elevators the hotel had, but whatever the number, it was not sufficient on this day. And the cars were operated by people and traveled slower than they do today. Shoot, elevator music hadn’t even been invented.

    “At each call of the elevator man the crowd pushed forward – then rebounded,” the newspaper continued.

    Someone suggested using the stairs, but someone else in the crowd pointed out that all the people had blocked the entrance. “You can’t ride and you can’t walk,” someone yelled.

    Meanwhile, bodies continued to jam the lobby. Fortunately, the only injuries were to sensibilities.

    “Many odors mingled there,” the unnamed journalist on the scene reported. “As the crowd grew the heat grew. As the heat grew the odors grew. There was Listerine, Nuit de Noel perfume, cigarette smoke, perspiration, onions, Black Narcissus perfume, Speatmint gum, Beechnut gum, black cigar smoke – and what not.”

    Extra police officers began arriving to prevent a mass assault on the ropes intended to block access to the elevators. Meanwhile, the younger, more able visitors began taking the stairs and the human logjam began to loosen. By 2 p.m., the noisy mob scene had abated and demand for elevator room finally equally supply again.

    Surely it has nothing to do with the elevator problems at the Rice – long since closed -- but the Democratic Party has not staged its national convention in Texas since then. The Republicans met in Dallas in 1984 and in Houston in 1992, but with many more hotels and more and faster automatic elevators, delegates concluded their work with no major elevator incidents.


    © Mike Cox - August 16, 2012 column
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    1910 Postcard courtesy .rootsweb.com/ %7Etxpstcrd/
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