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Fliess used his much of his wealth to fund enterprises in the Far West. Said to be one earliest New York City money men to invest in mines, he became president of the California Mining and Water Company located in Utah. Later he is said to have declined President Grant’s offer to make him territorial governor of that state. Fliess also invested in railroad transportation, listed as president of the St. Joseph and Kansas line. He established a reputation as a philanthropist, for thirty years annually hosting a Thanksgiving dinner for New York’s orphan newsboys.
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Orphan Thanksgiving |
In Fliess’s day New York was ruled by the highly corrupt “Tammany Hall Ring,” run by the notorious Boss William Tweed. In July 1871, an investigation and eventual prosecution was undertaken by a committee of seventy citizens, led by Samuel J. Tilden, later elected Governor of New York. Fliess, considered one of New York City’s upright and progressive citizens, was chosen as a member and became chairman of its law committee, a singular honor.
Tweed subsequently was indicted in 1872 for forgery and grand larceny, and sentenced to prison, as were others in Tammany Hall. The power of the ring was broken. The resulting prestige appears to have vaulted Fliess into the upper echelons of New York society. Advertised as “the only recognized fashionable society magazine in the City of New York,” Rider and Driver magazine in 1893 listed its “blue blood” stockholders, leading off with John Jacob Astor. Four names below was “William M. Fliess.” A biographer called him: “A thorough businessman, a good public speaker, an enthusiastic fisherman and an excellent rife shot.”
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Fliess’ Hollywood Distilling Company was located on Broadway within the Tenderloin. Just how and when the businessman might have met Williams is unclear. Soon, however, the district’s police officials were taking great interest in the sale of Hollywood Whiskey. Police captains and ward detectives were introducing company salesmen to the saloonkeepers of the precinct “with special recommendations of the excellence of the beverage offered, and of the high favor with which its sale is regarded at ‘headquarters’” (i.e, Inspector Williams). With implied police protection for those who purchased it, many proprietors agreed. “…The Hollywood Company is said to be in a highly prosperous condition, yielding large profits,” said an investigative report.
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Lexow had a particular interest in the relationship of Williams to the Hollywood Distilling Company and Fliess. One report suggested that Fliess had given Williams a part ownership in his company. Others believed it was just a standard case of bribery with Clubber filtering some of the money down to his foot soldiers in blue. I can find no record of Fliess being called to testify. A Mr. J. Kalt, representing the Hollywood Company, denied to investigators any knowledge of a meeting at which the scheme allegedly was hatched.
Williams, as expected, denied any wrongdoing but did admit receiving $6,000 from "my friend" William Fliess. In today's dollar that would amount to $132,000. But "Clubber" denied it had anything to do with promoting Hollywood Whiskey, as had been charged. The police inspector eventually was removed from his position but never went to jail.
Williams, as expected, denied any wrongdoing but did admit receiving $6,000 from "my friend" William Fliess. In today's dollar that would amount to $132,000. But "Clubber" denied it had anything to do with promoting Hollywood Whiskey, as had been charged. The police inspector eventually was removed from his position but never went to jail.
With the Lexow Committee hearings meriting daily stories in all of New York’s newspapers, Fliess’s reputation as a businessman, anti-corruption leader, and member of New York high society clearly was besmirched. But why would such a man stoop to deal with Clubber Williams, a known shady character? My belief is that the liquor dealer was in financial distress, possibly over the collapse of his Western investments. The St. Joseph and Kansas Railroad, it appears, was never built. Moreover, investments in mining frequently went bust. Fueling his need for money may well have been the cost of keeping up with the Astors and other “blue bloods” both socially and in philanthropy. So Fliess had swung to the dark side.
Less than a decade later, William Maynard Fliess was dead, his cause of his death in 1904 at the age of 71 is not available from Internet sources. Details of his life during that time period are scanty. He was able to keep the Hollywood Company in business despite the police scandal, but almost nothing else about him appears in the public record, including his place of interment. Although Fliess’s has biographical material on ancestry.com, a descendant has taken much of it private, unavailable for general viewing. The last New York City directory entry for the Hollywood Company was 1910. At that time a son, William M. Fliess Jr., was president.
Notes: This post is gathered from a variety of sources. The most important are the biography of Fliess in the 1896 Cyclopedia of America Biography and the transcript of the Lexow Committee that encompasses five large volumes. Key passages about the relationship betweem Fliess and Williams unfortunately are found in volumes not currently available on the Internet.
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