A Shooting At Birdlegs'
Before his death in 1929 James H. “Birdlegs” Reed became
one of Portland’s most legendary bootleggers.
He wasn’t a “moonshiner” – who made illegal liquor – and he wasn’t a “rum
runner” – who smuggled it in – he was a nightclub proprietor who sold liquor
and helped people have a good time. Most
of the time he was in business – at the Union Social Club on N. Park Ave and
later at Birdlegs’ Roadhouse on the Baseline Rd (now Stark St.) – he was
supplied with liquor by the Pullman Porter Bootleg Ring, which brought bonded
liquor into Portland on the Southern Pacific Railroad. The steady supply of high quality liquor and
the protection provided by “fixers” such as Al Wohlers and later Tom Johnson
allowed Birdlegs to operate without interruption for nearly two decades.
Birdlegs, a blind man and an African American, opened the
Union Social Club sometime before 1912.
Soon the Union was known as Portland’s highest-class “negro resort” that
provided an elegant environment for drinking, gambling and interaction between
the sexes. Although Portland’s first
jazz performance most likely took place at the Golden West Hotel, a few blocks
away, music was popular at the Union and after 1914 it was not unusual to hear
jazz there.
The Union Social Club attracted a diverse crowd, although
the majority of its customers were black, and it became a favorite hangout for
African American prostitutes. The old
North End pastime of “trick rolling” – stealing money from drunks and
prostitution customers – brought the heat down in 1912. After several reports of men being robbed at
the club, Police Chief Enoch Slover “declared war” on the club and staged
several harassing raids there.
Ex-policeman, saloonkeeper and pimp Al Wohlers, the most powerful North
End “fixer” of that time, provided protection, so Birdlegs never faced serious
punishment, but the raids weren’t good for business and sometimes they seemed
personal. Like the time the Union was
raided while Birdlegs was away. The next
day he bragged that it wouldn’t have happened if he had been there. Within days the place was raided again and the
police arrested more than a dozen people, including Birdlegs, who was there
this time.
Police Chief Enoch Slover seemed to take a personal interest in Birdlegs Reed and staged several harassing raids on his Union Social Club in 1912. Portland Police Historical Society. |
After Birdlegs moved outside the city limits in 1919 his
roadhouse became a focal point for violent crime. Its prosperity attracted robbers and rivalry
with other bootleggers caused several violent incidents, but the Union Social
Club kept a low profile, with only one known incident of violence there. The violence occurred in 1913, three years
before Prohibition began, and it was the result of rivalry over a woman.
Lena Smith, an attractive African American woman and
part-time prostitute, was the cause of the rivalry between Allen Clarke and
William “Mack” McPorter. Smith would
achieve greater notoriety in 1914 when she had cocaine smuggled to her in the
city jail inside hollowed-out walnut shells.
She was not only a cocaine addict; she was a promiscuous woman who was
loyal to no man. Her simultaneous
relationship with Mack McPorter and Allen Clarke created bad blood between the
two men and they fought over her on more than one occasion.
Mack McPorter, a bootblack at the Multnomah Hotel,
confronted Clarke, a barber with a reputation for violence, over his
relationship with Lena Smith in June 1913.
The argument became heated and McPorter brandished a knife. Clarke, who was known as a “bad man,” pulled
a gun and shot McPorter three times.
McPorter was hospitalized and Clarke was arrested for attempted
murder. McPorter didn’t appear in court
to testify, probably because he was recovering from severe wounds, and Clarke
was acquitted on a plea of self defense.
McPorter slowly recovered from his wounds and nursed
fantasies of revenge. When he was
released from the hospital in August, 1913, one of the first things Mack did
was get a gun. Late in the evening of
August 18, 1913 Mack walked into the Union Social Club looking for Clarke. Mack must have known where to find his rival
as he made his way through the crowded nightclub to a back room where he was
gambling. McPorter didn’t say anything,
but he fired his pistol several times, hitting Clarke and killing him
instantly. Bartender Johnny Patton tried
to keep McPorter from leaving, but Mack pressed his gun into Patton’s stomach
and pulled the trigger several times. The revolver clicked on empty chambers,
but it was enough to make Patton let go of him and McPorter ran from the club.
The murder of African Americans in 1913 was not a high
priority for the Portland Police Bureau and they followed different rules than
they did in investigating murders of Euro-American victims. When Captain Joseph Keller and Patrolman J.W.
Morelock arrived they found the Union Social Club empty except for the dead
man, but there were about forty excited black people in the street. Keller and Morelock pulled their guns and
arrested the whole crowd. One man ran
and Captain Keller’s warning shots just made him go faster. He was never
identified.
Police raids were expensive not only because police confiscated liquor and arrested the customers, but they often broke up the furniture too. U.S. Library of Congress. |
Standard procedure for solving a black-on-black murder at
the time was to arrest all black people in the area and try and get one of them
to confess. After interrogating the
forty suspects, Capt. Keller identified six who had witnessed the murder and
who named “Mack Porter” as the killer.
Birdlegs Reed cooperated with the police and identified Lena Smith as
the cause of the trouble. During a “general
roundup in the negro quarter” Keller arrested Lena Smith as a material witness.
Mack McPorter was nowhere to be found. The murder generated excitement for a few
days, but when the killer couldn’t be found the police ceased investigating.
McPorter had fled to Washington State where he remained at large until 1920
when he was picked up in Everett, WA on another charge. The Everett police identified him as a murder
suspect from Portland, but since no indictment existed for him no one ever
tried to extradite him from Washington and the murder was forgotten. The publicity didn’t hurt business at the
Union Social Club, which continued to operate until 1918, two years into
Prohibition. After a major raid that
year, Birdlegs closed the place and opened Birdlegs’ Roadhouse just outside the
city limits on the Baseline Road.
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