Presenting the madams of Central Colorado
Article by Ed Quillen
Local Lore - September 2007 - Colorado Central Magazine - No. 163 - Page 39
Copyright © 2007 by Ed Quillen and Central Colorado Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
Return to September 2007 table of contents.
PUT HALF A DOZEN women on a stage, recalling their careers from an
era when there weren't many career options for women in Central
Colorado, and you've got the basis for a production that has been
playing to packed houses this summer.
It's called "Madams of Central Colorado," and it features
impersonations of some of the more notorious businesswomen from our
past, among them Cockeyed Liz Spurgeon and Belle Brown of Buena Vista,
along with Laura Evans of Leadville and Salida. Other shady ladies from
long ago include Lillian Powers, who rose from Salida crib girl to
madam of her own bordello in Florence, and two of Miss Laura's
employees, Lavern and Silverheels Jesse.
Some don't have last names that are known to history. Prostitution
in the Old West gets a fair amount of attention from modern historians,
but back in the day, many "soiled doves" used aliases and
eschewed surnames. Thus census and court records are hard to connect
with distinct people, and newspapers of the time seldom told much about
the "brides of the multitude" who abided in the "red
light district."
Trying to learn more, and to bring this part of history back to
life, has become something between a hobby and a passion for Kathi
Perry, who can generally be found working in the old church building
that houses the Buena Vista Chamber of Commerce.
It started in 2004, when Buena Vista was celebrating its 125th
birthday with historical presentations almost every night. Local writer
Marge Dorfmeister had written a melodrama, "The Legend of
Cock-eyed Liz," about Buena Vista's most famous madam. Perry who
had some amateur theater experience, was asked to play the title
role.
The play went over pretty well, Perry recalls, and the more she
learned about her character, the more she wanted to find out. Elizabeth
Spurgeon ran her Buena Vista "Parlor of Joy" from 1886 to
1897. She became "Cock-eyed Liz" after a rival madam, Belle
Brown, sent a bunch of rowdy drunks her way. In the ensuing brawl, Liz
was cut with a broken bottle, damaging a nerve that controlled eye
movement.
"The really special thing about Liz," Perry says, "is
that she got married and settled down. That in itself wasn't unusual,
but it was unusual that they stayed in the small town of Buena Vista,
and people generally accepted her in her new role."
At the time, prostitutes were generally restricted to certain parts
of town, although there were times when they were allowed to visit the
more respectable sections to shop for gowns or make-up.
As Mrs. Spurgeon, Liz was able to take on a new life where many
residents remembered her old one, but Perry notes that "after she
died, they wouldn't let her be buried in the main part of the cemetery.
She's out on the edge."
Come 2005, and Buena Vista's Gold Rush Days wanted to bring back a
popular street-theater group, the Shady Ladies. "But they wanted
more money than we could afford, and then I wondered 'Why can't we do
this ourselves?'"
THAT WAS THE GENESIS of "Madams of Central Colorado."
Perry pored through several relevant histories (i.e., Ladies of the
Tenderloin by Linda Wommack and Bordellos, Brothels & Bad Girls
by Jan Mackeel). She interviewed old-time Salida residents who
remembered Laura Evans -- "they still wanted to be
anonymous," she notes -- and read the transcripts of interviews
with Evans in the Salida Regional Library.