Hotel strike, Pittsburgher Hotel managed by R.J. Hemingray

[Newspaper]

Publication: The Gettysburg Times

Gettysburg, PA, United States
p. 4, col. 5-6


Hotel Executives Run

Elevators And Cook As

Service Workers Strike


PITTSBURGH, Oct. 2 — (AP) — Dignified hotel executives operated elevators and cooked meals today as the steel city's eight principal hotels strove to accommodate 3,500 guests bewildered and inconvenienced by a strike.

The walkout of 2,400 service employes of the hostelries Tuesday midnight left their managers and white collar workers with the necessity of performing menial tasks themselves. Richard Nash, manager of Webster Hall Hotel, said he "fried the steaks myself" last night for a group of assistants with whose help the hotel is "trying to get by."

Overshoot Mark

Patrons chuckled over the way some managers ran elevators, shooting the cages up quickly and often overshooting the mark.

"Their finding the floor level is like a drunk trying to find a keyhole," said one guest.

Registrations were being refused and guests had to shift for themselves, such as by carrying their own luggage and making up beds. Dining rooms, barber shops and bars in the hotels were closed.

Missing the usually blusting scene of travelers going to and from in the lobby, assistant manager R. J. Hemingray of the Hotel Pittsburgher said:

"It's kinda lonesome around here. In fact, it's barren."

Managements counted themselves fortunate in having no large conventions scheduled this week, but a four day conclave of the Pennsylvania Medical Society with an attendance of 2,200, is booked for the 1,600-room William Penn Hotel starting Monday.

Small Hotels Busy

A spokesman said nervously the hotel's "plans' are unchanged" and indicated its main hope was that the strike would end before the date, adding "it is not a pleasant situation."

Smaller hotels, unaffected by the strike, were doing a landslide business among the hundreds of out-of-town "business representatives making calls in this great defense center, the nation's twelfth largest city.

The strike was called by the AFL Hotel and Restaurant Employes International Alliance, seeking wage increases of 15 to 20 per cent for service employes whose scale had ranged from $20 a month (bellhops) to $175 a month (chief cook and chief baker.


Keywords:Hemingray
Researcher notes: 
Supplemental information: 
Researcher:Bob Stahr
Date completed:March 30, 2008 by: Bob Stahr;