Oh Gilded Palace of Sin
 
 The Glisan / Holladay house on the south west corner of Third and Stark.
"After
 buying a large home from Doctor Rodney Glisan, "he remodeled it and 
immediately installed a harem of high class prostitutes."
-Wikipedia, on Ben Holladay   
 (click on pictures to expand)
The statement plays into the well established narrative of Ben Holladay's sojourn in Portland, and notions of a raucous frontier of painted ladies and soiled doves. Often repeated, the anecdote has acquired the authority of settled fact.
A close examination of the story however reveals a different picture; a cautionary tale of how myths perpetuate and history is made.

"He
 was a man of splendid physique, fine address, and knew well how to 
manage the average human nature.  He was energetic, untiring, 
unconscionable, unscrupulous, and wholly destitute of fixed principles 
of honesty, morality and common decency." 
 -Joseph Gaston in Portland Oregon, Its History and Builders (1911).
Much of what has been passed down about Holladay's time in Oregon has come from the works of historian Joseph Gaston, whose poisoned penned invective was anything but impartial. The root of his animosity dates to the situation in Portland in April 1868, when two railroad companies, both named Oregon Central, began building toward California hoping to obtain the lucrative Federal land grants to be awarded to the first company to complete twenty miles of track.
Joseph Gaston was president of the Oregon Central (West Side). He was backed by wealthy Portland interests that included John C. Ainsworth of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company and banker William S. Ladd. Its chosen route to the Golden State was via Hillsboro and Corvallis.
With an eye for the grand sweep of history, Gaston envisioned his railroad leading to the rise of a Portland, that: "...holding the keys and being the gateway and handmaid to commerce between the Atlantic and the Indies, shall rival Venice in its adornment and Constantinople in its wealth."
The Oregon Central (East Side) had dubious origins in San Francisco. It started building in East Portland and was backed largely by down state and Salem interests who stood to gain a railroad by its route.
The Salem group had the easier to build route. They hired Chinese labor (who knew something about building railroads) "rows upon rows of them" (the actual number at the time of the quote was around forty). The Portland (or what Gaston would call, the Gaston) group had route route that was more roundabout. They avoided hiring Chinese workers, a fact they stated with pride.
Finances and geography considered, the two camps were evenly matched - until the arrival of Ben Holladay in August 1868.
 
Much of what has been passed down about Holladay's time in Oregon has come from the works of historian Joseph Gaston, whose poisoned penned invective was anything but impartial. The root of his animosity dates to the situation in Portland in April 1868, when two railroad companies, both named Oregon Central, began building toward California hoping to obtain the lucrative Federal land grants to be awarded to the first company to complete twenty miles of track.
Joseph Gaston was president of the Oregon Central (West Side). He was backed by wealthy Portland interests that included John C. Ainsworth of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company and banker William S. Ladd. Its chosen route to the Golden State was via Hillsboro and Corvallis.
With an eye for the grand sweep of history, Gaston envisioned his railroad leading to the rise of a Portland, that: "...holding the keys and being the gateway and handmaid to commerce between the Atlantic and the Indies, shall rival Venice in its adornment and Constantinople in its wealth."
The Oregon Central (East Side) had dubious origins in San Francisco. It started building in East Portland and was backed largely by down state and Salem interests who stood to gain a railroad by its route.
The Salem group had the easier to build route. They hired Chinese labor (who knew something about building railroads) "rows upon rows of them" (the actual number at the time of the quote was around forty). The Portland (or what Gaston would call, the Gaston) group had route route that was more roundabout. They avoided hiring Chinese workers, a fact they stated with pride.
Finances and geography considered, the two camps were evenly matched - until the arrival of Ben Holladay in August 1868.

Portland at the start of the 1870s.  Note the railroad on the east side of the river.
 Holladay had made fortunes with stagecoaches, steamboats 
and steamships and was looking to make another with 
railroads.  He acquired the east-side company and later reorganized it as the 
Oregon & California Railroad.  A master of Gilded Age lobbying, 
he was said to have dispatched one of his steamboats to Salem for use as a pleasure barge to influence the Oregon legislature.  Money, alcohol and 
favors were liberally applied to the task at hand.  He then rammed 
through the construction of the railroad to win the offered Federal land
 grants: today's O&C timber lands.
Out played, out spent and out built, the Portland group 
decided to reach accommodation with Holladay, to wait, as W.S. Ladd put 
it, until he hung himself financially.  In an exchange of letters 
between John C. Ainsworth and Ben Holladay, Joseph Gaston's dream was 
sold out from under him.
 Joseph Gaston, 1838-1913.
 Holladay eventually "hung himself financially" in the financial panic of 1873.  Thirty-eight years later Gaston would write: 
"But
 it is all past into history.  All the actors in the drama are dead but 
one.  All the members of all the old companies are dead but this one.  
And while he was robbed of his rights and his property by a corrupted 
legislature, and corrupt judges, he still remains to enjoy in comfort a 
pleasant home that looks down on the city he has helped build, with all 
the necessary comforts in life; and what is better than all else, the 
respect of his friends and neighbors -and lives to write this history of
 those who wantonly robbed him, and gained nothing in the end by their 
wrong doing." 
 While Wikipedia quotes Gaston's assessment of Holladay, 
the anecdote about a brothel at his house at Third and Stark was taken, 
nearly verbatim, from E. Kimbark MacColl's labyrinthine history of 
Portland plutocracy, The Shaping of a City, Business and Politics in Portland Oregon1885-1915: 
 "When he bought one of Portland's largest homes from 
the city's most prominent physician, Dr. Rodney Glisan, he remodeled it 
and immediately installed a harem of high class prostitutes."
  MacColl's source is the diaries of Judge Matthew P. Deady, later published as Pharisee Among Philistines (1975).
The entry he specifically cited was from March 8 
1872, where Deady described a confrontation between James A Nesmith and 
Ben Holladay, related by Nesmith. 
 James Nesmith (1820-1885) pioneer, congressman, and 
raconteur.  He was the originator and thus far, only source of the story
 that Portland co-founder William Overton was later hanged in Texas.
 The incident took place the previous fall at Nesmith's house: 
"He said that H (Holladay) was bantering him
 about running for Congress and advising him to keep out of politics and
 threatened to put a man on his track who knew all about him if he did. 
 Nes asked who it was and H finally said it was O'Meara.  Nes replied 
that if any man set his dog on him, he would not stop to kick the dog, 
but would go after his master, and if you -H set your dog on me I'll get
 up on the stump and tell the people of Oregon, that Ben H keeps two 
whores in Portland, O'Meara and the other one and I'll tell the name of 
the other one -meaning of course Miss E.C."  
"O'Meara" was James O'Meara, editor of Ben Holladay's 
Portland paper, the Daily Bulletin. He had been on good terms with 
Matthew Deady before falling out with him over the Wallamet / Willamette controversy.  If O'Meara was one half of whom MacColl would refer to as "a harem of high class prostitutes" who then was "Miss E.C."?
Esther Lydia Campbell, later Holladay (1849-1889)
-Courtesy of the Oregon Historical Society, OrHi #12167.
 Esther Campbell was the daughter of pioneers, Hamilton 
Campbell and Harriet Biddle, who arrived in Oregon in 1840 on the ship 
Lausanne to join Jason Lee's mission.  They had six daughters and two 
sons.
 Hamilton Campbell was an artisan who was to engrave the 
dies used to coin the territory's first currency, the locally minted 
so-called "beaver money."  He became a daguerreotypist and established a
 photography business in Corvallis, and later, San Francisco.  He went 
to Mexico in 1862 to become the Superintendent of Mines in Guaymas, 
where he was murdered the following year.
 According to the Portland City Directory of 1868, the 
year Holladay arrived in Portland, Harriet Biddle Campell lived on 
Washington Street between Third and 4th, likely with her family which 
included her nineteen year old daughter Esther.
 By the time of Deady's diary entries (1872) Esther was 
the constant companion of Ben Holladay.   The specifics are lost but the
 equation is familiar to any reader of Edith Wharton or Henry James:  a 
unhappily married tycoon, an absent wife, a prominent family in hard 
times, a beautiful daughter, a scandal.
 Ben Holladay departs Portland for San Francisco on his
 steamship, the Oriflamme, in a notice from the Morning Oregonian, 
January 20 1872.  Miss Campbell is further down the list.  Two months 
later, the Morning Oregonian of March 7 1872  announced his return from 
San Francisco on the Oriflamme.  A Miss E. Campbell appeared on that 
list.  
"...The Oriflamme came back in yesterday afternoon, bringing Holladay and Household back to Portland."  - entry from Matthew Deady's diary, March 7 1872.  
The scandal can be found in numerous places in Deady's diary.  MacColl, buttressing his his brothel theory, (Shaping of a City pp 41) mentioned an entry from June 6 1873:
"Reed called and said the had a story at Baker City that young Ben (Holladay) went below (to San Francisco) at met his mother about to come up to Oregon, and he told her not to go, she was too old to go into a whore house." 
"Young Ben" Holladay was the son of Ben Holladay and his 
first wife Ann, who was visiting San Francisco from her home in upstate 
New York.  MacColl summarized the entry as to mean that "Holladay was running a whore house in his own home."
  The 
anecdote actually reflects the rocky relationship between Holladay and his son, and the son's feeling about his father's 
relationship with another woman.
 Deady was an occasional guest at Holladay's where he was to enjoy dinners and "some white wine said to have cost in New York $63 a dozen."  The prominent upright judge would be seen entering a suspected brothel.  More probable was Deady's interest in how Holladay's domestic scandal was played out publicly.
 Esther Campbell Holladay and daughter, Linda Holladay.
  -Courtesy of the Oregon Historical Society, OrHi #100106.
 Ann Holladay died September 18 1873, three months 
after her visit to San Francisco, at the same time Ben Holladay's 
fortune was collapsing in a financial panic.  A year later, Ben Holladay
 and Esther Campbell married.  They had two children together, a son, 
Ben Campbell Holladay, and a daughter, Linda.  They lived at the house 
on Third and Stark as Holladay tried unsuccessfully to return to 
riches.  He died in 1887, Esther died two years later.  They are 
buried together in Portland's Mt. Calvary cemetery.
 -The Sunday Oregonian, November 20 1921. 
An article in the Sunday Oregonian, written forty-three 
years after Ben Holladay's death, brings the house at Third and Stark 
and its surroundings into sharper focus.  It celebrates the eightieth 
year of Maria Evangeline Campbell Smith, one of Esther's older sisters. 
 In it she describes her long time home on lot #2 of block #47, on Third
 Street between Stark and Washington, and her years spent as the 
organist at the church that neighbored her house to the south.  
 Third and Stark (the present site of Huber's).
The article, combined with city directories and other 
sources provides a view of the house at Third and Stark, not as a high 
class brothel, but as part of what was essentally a 
Holladay-Campbell compound.  
Directly behind Holladay's residence lived his brother Joseph, a loyal lieutenant and eventual foe .  The house to left of Holladay's
belonged to Maria Campbell Smith and her husband, prominent druggist 
Samuel Smith. Partially visible is the Presbyterian Church where she was
 the organist.
To the rear the church, in a house facing Washington, lived Harriet Biddle Campbell, Maria and Esther's
 mother, likely with their youngest sister, Harriet, who would 
eventually marry R.H. Towler, Ben Holladay's personal secretary. 
Behind the photographer was the 
Catholic Cathedral (today, the Bishop's House is a remnant) on the north
 east corner of Third and Stark, to which Holladay, a Catholic, donated a
 stained glass window in his and Esther's name.
Even by the extravagant standards of his peers, 
Holladay's methods and life style stood out.  His brazenness was 
unforgivable, once his fortunes turned.  He was not to receive
from
 the Oregonian the relatively free pass granted to the later financial 
over-extensions of Henry Villard or George B. Markle.  
Joseph Gaston's views, dominant into the age of 
Wikipedia, provided the fertile ground for Kimbark MacColl's erroneous  
interpretation of, if not a scandal, then the wrong scandal.  A closer 
look at history, and the circumstances of its writing, asks for a more 
nuanced approach. 










 
