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03 October 2003, 12:10 AM
THE FINAL FORTRESS
By Samuel Hudson - FW Weekly
http://www.fwweekly.com/issues/2003-10-01/feature.html/page1.html
If there is any fort left in Fort Worth, it is downtown, in a building that occupies an entire city block defined by West Seventh, Throckmorton, West Sixth, and Taylor streets. The large brass plaque at 306 W. 7th St. says "Fort Worth Club." The club was established in 1885 by the white men who were already busy inventing Fort Worth as a city.
The old Fort Worth Establishment has social intercourse with itself here: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, drinks with the fellows, business meetings, card games with the fellows, wedding receptions for daughters and the fellows they marry, basketball games with the fellows, parties for friends, casual get-togethers with some of the fellows you're doing business with (or want to), sentimental reunions, political strategy meetings with the fellows, business conferences, a fight night with the fellows cheering on young black and Latino boxers, anniversary celebrations, working out with the fellows, business conferences, dinners with the fellows and their wives, a romantic private dinner for a fellow and his girl ...
And when someone a fellow does business with comes to town, why, what better place to take him than to the club? He'll see what a friendly place Fort Worth is and what a fine city for business Fort Worth is. He'll see what a comfortable and accommodating city Fort Worth is for the right people. He can spend the night in a suite in the club's hotel.
Club general manager Walter Littlejohn says that women make up about 10 percent of the membership and that there are people of color who are members, although he won't say how many.
So 90 percent of club members are white fellows, and the populist clichés still apply: The Fort Worth Club remains a bastion of white, male, prevailing-class privilege. Inside their club, men with real clout are making plans for Fort Worth, not to mention Texas and the United States of America. The legislation that welded the FW onto the D in DFW International Airport, for instance, was initiated at meetings in the Fort Worth Club.
The Fort Worth Club is a private world. Do not try to spend your cash or use your credit cards here. The member who brought you will sign the check. The club is for members and their guests. Period. It doesn't matter who you are. Don Peters, who was the club's general manager in the 1960s, gave an example: When Jeane Dixon, prophetess and best-selling author of Astrology for Dogs, was staying at the hotel in the club, H.L. Hunt, the Dallas millionaire oilman most charitably described as eccentric, demanded to be taken to her. No. Mr. Hunt was not a member of the club, and no member would bring him as a guest. For once in his adult life, H.L. Hunt could not buy or bully his way in. (Jeane Dixon had foreseen it.)
The Fort Worth Club owns the building it occupies, and except for the plaque by the front door, it looks like any other downtown commercial office space. Most of the building is commercial office space, both in the 1926 building and in the high-rise annex completed in 1976, and in good times it is a steady source of income for the club -- and the reason the club is not a tax-exempt organization. The Club has dealt with the problem of taxes by operating at a loss.
The parts of the Fort Worth Club that are open to members and their guests have an atmosphere of unfussy luxury, of conventional good taste. The décor is straight out of a 1982 issue of Architectural Digest. There are no sharp edges or overtly modern motifs. Nor is there the blithe, old-money scruffiness of the Yale Club in New York City, where oil portraits of Yale alumni who were U.S. presidents hang on walls that haven't been painted for 20 years.
Like similar city clubs, the Fort Worth Club sells and sustains an illusion. Sociologist Peter Martin Phillips describes the phenomenon in his study of the super-elite Bohemian Club in San Francisco:
"A man is an aristocrat within the confines of his club. He has supportive staff to wait on him and other aristocrats with similar interests for stimulating interaction. An elite men's club is a system of ordered civility in what is perceived as an otherwise chaotic and disorderly world."
Phillips says that there are no more than 200 elite men's clubs in the United States, with a total membership of about 200,000. These clubs are not at all like service clubs -- Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions -- which are made up of middle-class people who work to build up community in small increments. Elite men's clubs are introspective, inward-looking. Phillips says, "Major activities and interactions tend to occur within club boundaries primarily for their members and their guests' own self-gratification. Elite men's clubs tend to establish traditions and maintain an internal club culture to which new members receive some form of indoctrination before or after joining."
Like all men's clubs, the Fort Worth Club is a sacred space of continual male bonding -- in the bars, in the dining room, in every meeting place in the club, but most especially in the club's athletic facilities. Fellows who sweat together stick together. Swatting a freshly showered bare butt with a twisted wet towel is a playful greeting among comrades. Playing a game in the club's basketball league makes teammates of passing acquaintances, especially when a fellow is on a winning team. When feminists denounce "the old boy network," they are talking about men who stand unzipped, side-by-side at adjacent urinals, discussing business deals while taking a brotherly piss.
The Fort Worth Club's athletic facilities for women consist of privileges at the Larry North Fitness branch on Commerce Street, three blocks east of the club.
The Fort Worth Club was not begun as a retreat for the elite. In 1885, Fort Worth was 36 years old, a raw cowtown on the prairie with maybe 35,000 inhabitants, and most of Texas was still a third-world country. A group of local white men, go-getters, civic boosters, promoters, and improvers -- most of them young and eager to make their fortunes -- formed the Commercial Club of Fort Worth. The club was to serve "as a medium for advancing the business interests of the city" and to "support any literary or scientific undertaking and the maintenance of a library." When the club's first building was completed in 1887, the Fort Worth Gazette proudly reported that "the club's library now numbers 1,700 standard works, and is second to no select library in the state." (Nowadays, if you want to read a book in the room of the Fort Worth Club called the Library, bring it in with you.)
Like other nineteenth-century boosters of ambitious towns, members of the Commercial Club went east where most of the money was and talked up Fort Worth, a great city in the making. They were enthusiastic. They were eloquent. Sometimes they told stretchers. Sometimes they just plain lied. In the fall of 1888, club charter member T.J. Hurley addressed members of the Merchant's Club of Boston. The Fort Worth Gazette of October 18, 1888, printed his remarks, six columns of them.
"Now let me say a word about our own city, Fort Worth, called by all Western People, 'The Queen City of the Plains,'" Hurley began. His facts and figures attesting to the growing wealth and civic resources of Fort Worth were lengthy and impressive, although without named sources. "Fort Worth has 17 churches, 40 miles of graded streets, 40 miles of water mains," Hurley said. He wound up his speech by describing Fort Worth as having "the most progressive citizenship of any city in the state; the most attractive suburban additions of any city in Texas; and the brightest prospects and most prominent future of any city in the state." Hurley also mentioned in passing "a social club with the finest library rooms in the state and a $40,000 club building."
It wasn't all striving and hype. A year after the founding of the Commercial Club of Fort Worth, 14 young members and the small snowman they had made stood for their photograph in the middle of a muddy street. They look jaunty, a bit ornery, small-town cornball, and not for a moment worried about which salad fork to use. John Burke, a cigar stuck in his grin, mirrors the snowman's pose. These are not the kind of young men who are likely to be invited to join the Fort Worth Club nowadays.
The Commercial Club was renamed the Fort Worth Club in 1906. As Fort Worth grew and prospered, club members prospered with it. These were the men after whom large objects were named , among them Captain B.B. Paddock (the Paddock Viaduct, the bridge between downtown and the North Side), E.M. Daggett (the elementary school), T.J. Hurley (the street), and in the 20th century, Brigadier General John A. Hulen (the street and the shopping mall on it), Ed Landreth (the auditorium at TCU) -- and most exalted of all, the man for whom a high school, a street, a lake, a YMCA camp, a city park, an art museum, a Pullman sleeping car, and a grand but now defunct airport were named, Amon G. Carter, Mr. Fort Worth.
Amon Carter was a force of nature. The founder of the Star-Telegram and its editor and publisher from 1906 until 1955, he loved Fort Worth entirely. Amon -- everybody in Fort Worth called him Amon, along with Dallas leaders who hated him -- was absolutely determined that his Fort Worth would become a grand and gleaming city and that Dallas would not eat it alive. He was the president of the Fort Worth Club for nearly 35 years and maintained a large suite of rooms there. By a wonderful coincidence, Amon's Star-Telegram building is directly across Taylor Street from the club, 99 paces from front door to front door.
Amon saw to it that the 1926 club building was designed not only for the use and comfort of its members but also as a staging area for the promotion and management of Fort Worth. Its meeting rooms are of such varying sizes that four people or 320 can meet there behind closed doors. In these rooms, Amon and his cohorts romanced executives who could bring their companies to Fort Worth. They cajoled or commanded politicians who could direct tax money for the city's infrastructure and pass legislation that would promote Fort Worth's growth and keep Dallas at bay. Amon brought an unending parade of movie stars, millionaires, captains of industry, and people who were famous for being famous to the club. Photos showing them smiling at Amon ran on the front pages of the Star-Telegram. People in Fort Worth who did not think that he was as wonderful as the Star-Telegram did said that he would not be content until the city was renamed Amon, Texas.
Amon and his cronies were called the Seventh Street Gang because their banks, law firms, and business offices were within easy walking distance from the corner of Seventh and Main -- as were city hall, the Tarrant County courthouse, and the Star-Telegram. At a time when democracy was legal in Texas, the Seventh Street Gang selected and elected the mayor, city council, and county commissioners, whose political appointees were also members of the gang. U.S. congressmen and the Tarrant County members of the Texas Legislature served at the gang's pleasure. At the height of Amon's power, it was commonly said that there should be a sign over the entrance to city hall that said, "Clear It With Amon First."
It turned out that Amon was mortal after all, and he did finally grow older and weaker and his influence waned. Jim Wright, who rose through the ranks of the U.S. House of Representatives to become speaker of the House and who did almost as much for Fort Worth as Amon did, won his first election by running, not against his opponent, but against Amon. "You have at last met a man, Mr. Carter, who is not afraid of you," Wright said in a newspaper ad that ran just before election day, "... who will not bow his knee to you ... and come running like a simpering pup at your beck and call." Wright's ad ran in the Star-Telegram.
By Samuel Hudson - FW Weekly
http://www.fwweekly.com/issues/2003-10-01/feature.html/page1.html
If there is any fort left in Fort Worth, it is downtown, in a building that occupies an entire city block defined by West Seventh, Throckmorton, West Sixth, and Taylor streets. The large brass plaque at 306 W. 7th St. says "Fort Worth Club." The club was established in 1885 by the white men who were already busy inventing Fort Worth as a city.
The old Fort Worth Establishment has social intercourse with itself here: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, drinks with the fellows, business meetings, card games with the fellows, wedding receptions for daughters and the fellows they marry, basketball games with the fellows, parties for friends, casual get-togethers with some of the fellows you're doing business with (or want to), sentimental reunions, political strategy meetings with the fellows, business conferences, a fight night with the fellows cheering on young black and Latino boxers, anniversary celebrations, working out with the fellows, business conferences, dinners with the fellows and their wives, a romantic private dinner for a fellow and his girl ...
And when someone a fellow does business with comes to town, why, what better place to take him than to the club? He'll see what a friendly place Fort Worth is and what a fine city for business Fort Worth is. He'll see what a comfortable and accommodating city Fort Worth is for the right people. He can spend the night in a suite in the club's hotel.
Club general manager Walter Littlejohn says that women make up about 10 percent of the membership and that there are people of color who are members, although he won't say how many.
So 90 percent of club members are white fellows, and the populist clichés still apply: The Fort Worth Club remains a bastion of white, male, prevailing-class privilege. Inside their club, men with real clout are making plans for Fort Worth, not to mention Texas and the United States of America. The legislation that welded the FW onto the D in DFW International Airport, for instance, was initiated at meetings in the Fort Worth Club.
The Fort Worth Club is a private world. Do not try to spend your cash or use your credit cards here. The member who brought you will sign the check. The club is for members and their guests. Period. It doesn't matter who you are. Don Peters, who was the club's general manager in the 1960s, gave an example: When Jeane Dixon, prophetess and best-selling author of Astrology for Dogs, was staying at the hotel in the club, H.L. Hunt, the Dallas millionaire oilman most charitably described as eccentric, demanded to be taken to her. No. Mr. Hunt was not a member of the club, and no member would bring him as a guest. For once in his adult life, H.L. Hunt could not buy or bully his way in. (Jeane Dixon had foreseen it.)
The Fort Worth Club owns the building it occupies, and except for the plaque by the front door, it looks like any other downtown commercial office space. Most of the building is commercial office space, both in the 1926 building and in the high-rise annex completed in 1976, and in good times it is a steady source of income for the club -- and the reason the club is not a tax-exempt organization. The Club has dealt with the problem of taxes by operating at a loss.
The parts of the Fort Worth Club that are open to members and their guests have an atmosphere of unfussy luxury, of conventional good taste. The décor is straight out of a 1982 issue of Architectural Digest. There are no sharp edges or overtly modern motifs. Nor is there the blithe, old-money scruffiness of the Yale Club in New York City, where oil portraits of Yale alumni who were U.S. presidents hang on walls that haven't been painted for 20 years.
Like similar city clubs, the Fort Worth Club sells and sustains an illusion. Sociologist Peter Martin Phillips describes the phenomenon in his study of the super-elite Bohemian Club in San Francisco:
"A man is an aristocrat within the confines of his club. He has supportive staff to wait on him and other aristocrats with similar interests for stimulating interaction. An elite men's club is a system of ordered civility in what is perceived as an otherwise chaotic and disorderly world."
Phillips says that there are no more than 200 elite men's clubs in the United States, with a total membership of about 200,000. These clubs are not at all like service clubs -- Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions -- which are made up of middle-class people who work to build up community in small increments. Elite men's clubs are introspective, inward-looking. Phillips says, "Major activities and interactions tend to occur within club boundaries primarily for their members and their guests' own self-gratification. Elite men's clubs tend to establish traditions and maintain an internal club culture to which new members receive some form of indoctrination before or after joining."
Like all men's clubs, the Fort Worth Club is a sacred space of continual male bonding -- in the bars, in the dining room, in every meeting place in the club, but most especially in the club's athletic facilities. Fellows who sweat together stick together. Swatting a freshly showered bare butt with a twisted wet towel is a playful greeting among comrades. Playing a game in the club's basketball league makes teammates of passing acquaintances, especially when a fellow is on a winning team. When feminists denounce "the old boy network," they are talking about men who stand unzipped, side-by-side at adjacent urinals, discussing business deals while taking a brotherly piss.
The Fort Worth Club's athletic facilities for women consist of privileges at the Larry North Fitness branch on Commerce Street, three blocks east of the club.
The Fort Worth Club was not begun as a retreat for the elite. In 1885, Fort Worth was 36 years old, a raw cowtown on the prairie with maybe 35,000 inhabitants, and most of Texas was still a third-world country. A group of local white men, go-getters, civic boosters, promoters, and improvers -- most of them young and eager to make their fortunes -- formed the Commercial Club of Fort Worth. The club was to serve "as a medium for advancing the business interests of the city" and to "support any literary or scientific undertaking and the maintenance of a library." When the club's first building was completed in 1887, the Fort Worth Gazette proudly reported that "the club's library now numbers 1,700 standard works, and is second to no select library in the state." (Nowadays, if you want to read a book in the room of the Fort Worth Club called the Library, bring it in with you.)
Like other nineteenth-century boosters of ambitious towns, members of the Commercial Club went east where most of the money was and talked up Fort Worth, a great city in the making. They were enthusiastic. They were eloquent. Sometimes they told stretchers. Sometimes they just plain lied. In the fall of 1888, club charter member T.J. Hurley addressed members of the Merchant's Club of Boston. The Fort Worth Gazette of October 18, 1888, printed his remarks, six columns of them.
"Now let me say a word about our own city, Fort Worth, called by all Western People, 'The Queen City of the Plains,'" Hurley began. His facts and figures attesting to the growing wealth and civic resources of Fort Worth were lengthy and impressive, although without named sources. "Fort Worth has 17 churches, 40 miles of graded streets, 40 miles of water mains," Hurley said. He wound up his speech by describing Fort Worth as having "the most progressive citizenship of any city in the state; the most attractive suburban additions of any city in Texas; and the brightest prospects and most prominent future of any city in the state." Hurley also mentioned in passing "a social club with the finest library rooms in the state and a $40,000 club building."
It wasn't all striving and hype. A year after the founding of the Commercial Club of Fort Worth, 14 young members and the small snowman they had made stood for their photograph in the middle of a muddy street. They look jaunty, a bit ornery, small-town cornball, and not for a moment worried about which salad fork to use. John Burke, a cigar stuck in his grin, mirrors the snowman's pose. These are not the kind of young men who are likely to be invited to join the Fort Worth Club nowadays.
The Commercial Club was renamed the Fort Worth Club in 1906. As Fort Worth grew and prospered, club members prospered with it. These were the men after whom large objects were named , among them Captain B.B. Paddock (the Paddock Viaduct, the bridge between downtown and the North Side), E.M. Daggett (the elementary school), T.J. Hurley (the street), and in the 20th century, Brigadier General John A. Hulen (the street and the shopping mall on it), Ed Landreth (the auditorium at TCU) -- and most exalted of all, the man for whom a high school, a street, a lake, a YMCA camp, a city park, an art museum, a Pullman sleeping car, and a grand but now defunct airport were named, Amon G. Carter, Mr. Fort Worth.
Amon Carter was a force of nature. The founder of the Star-Telegram and its editor and publisher from 1906 until 1955, he loved Fort Worth entirely. Amon -- everybody in Fort Worth called him Amon, along with Dallas leaders who hated him -- was absolutely determined that his Fort Worth would become a grand and gleaming city and that Dallas would not eat it alive. He was the president of the Fort Worth Club for nearly 35 years and maintained a large suite of rooms there. By a wonderful coincidence, Amon's Star-Telegram building is directly across Taylor Street from the club, 99 paces from front door to front door.
Amon saw to it that the 1926 club building was designed not only for the use and comfort of its members but also as a staging area for the promotion and management of Fort Worth. Its meeting rooms are of such varying sizes that four people or 320 can meet there behind closed doors. In these rooms, Amon and his cohorts romanced executives who could bring their companies to Fort Worth. They cajoled or commanded politicians who could direct tax money for the city's infrastructure and pass legislation that would promote Fort Worth's growth and keep Dallas at bay. Amon brought an unending parade of movie stars, millionaires, captains of industry, and people who were famous for being famous to the club. Photos showing them smiling at Amon ran on the front pages of the Star-Telegram. People in Fort Worth who did not think that he was as wonderful as the Star-Telegram did said that he would not be content until the city was renamed Amon, Texas.
Amon and his cronies were called the Seventh Street Gang because their banks, law firms, and business offices were within easy walking distance from the corner of Seventh and Main -- as were city hall, the Tarrant County courthouse, and the Star-Telegram. At a time when democracy was legal in Texas, the Seventh Street Gang selected and elected the mayor, city council, and county commissioners, whose political appointees were also members of the gang. U.S. congressmen and the Tarrant County members of the Texas Legislature served at the gang's pleasure. At the height of Amon's power, it was commonly said that there should be a sign over the entrance to city hall that said, "Clear It With Amon First."
It turned out that Amon was mortal after all, and he did finally grow older and weaker and his influence waned. Jim Wright, who rose through the ranks of the U.S. House of Representatives to become speaker of the House and who did almost as much for Fort Worth as Amon did, won his first election by running, not against his opponent, but against Amon. "You have at last met a man, Mr. Carter, who is not afraid of you," Wright said in a newspaper ad that ran just before election day, "... who will not bow his knee to you ... and come running like a simpering pup at your beck and call." Wright's ad ran in the Star-Telegram.