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Washington,
DC – March 2024 / NewsmakerAlert: Historic
Hotels of America®, the official program of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation for promoting and celebrating authentic
historic hotels, has released its 2024
Top 25 Historic Hotels of America® Where Women Made History List.
Since 2020, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has supported
the identification and elevation of women’s history at historic places
through the Where
Women Made History campaign. Historic Hotels of America is proud to
tell the stories of women at its historic member hotels.
The
written histories of historic hotels are largely records of the men who
built, bought, visited, and made history at these hotels. In the United
States, most historic hotels were built in eras where it was uncommon,
even considered immoral, for a single woman to stay at a popular hotel
without a female companion or family member. When travel became easier
in the 19th century with the widespread use of passenger trains, women
were expected to tend to their homes and their families, and not to travel
on business or on their own for leisure. However, this does not mean that
women were not present at hotels and, subsequently, not a part of the history
of hotels in the United States in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Women-only
hotels were once common and remained popular through the 1970s. Larger
hotels offered separate women’s and men’s dining rooms and reading rooms,
and tearooms for female guests. Within the fields of hotel management and
design, a few women held privileged positions of power at hotels as the
female relatives of hoteliers or were able to break social barriers and
achieve professional success. Under racial segregation up until the mid-20th
century, these spaces and rare opportunities for advancement at luxury
hotels were exclusively for white women. However, women of all racial identities
and classes have been making history at hotels throughout the history of
American hospitality: performing historically gendered labor such as keeping
rooms clean, meals served on time, and telephones connected, but even taking
action to protest racial segregation.
At
Historic Hotels that travelers can visit today, the achievements and compelling
stories of the iconic “Harvey Girls” waitresses, trailblazing “Whirly-Girls,”
First Ladies, athletes, artists, activists, engineers, entrepreneurs, and
other women who made history represent many facets of women’s history and
women’s diverse experiences in the United States. Historic Hotels of America
invites travelers to experience these historic hotels in person, and to
be inspired to learn more at these places where women made history.
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The
Omni Homestead Resort (1786)
Hot
Springs, Virginia
Women’s
sports history has been made several times on the historic golf courses
of The Omni Homestead Resort in Hot Springs, Virginia. Designated a National
Historic Landmark by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior, and recently featured
in the 2023
Top 25 Historic Hotels of America Most Historic Golf Courses List,
this historic resort has hosted many tournaments since the 1890s, and women
have made history on all the historic courses. The New York Times
wrote on September 10, 1899: “The well-kept greens have won the praise
of all the visiting experts, and, as usual, golf has been the most popular
pastime here this Summer. Everyone is anxiously looking forward to the
tournament.” Glenna Collett Vare, perhaps the greatest female golfer of
her time, won the USGA Women’s Open on The Cascades course in 1928. The
victory was among her finest, as she defeated one of her most challenging
competitors, Virginia Van Wie. Collett’s win at The Omni Homestead would
ultimately be the first of three consecutive first-place finishes in the
U.S. Women’s Amateur tournaments; she would ultimately win six U.S. Women’s
Amateur tournaments. In 1935, Babe Didrikson Zaharias famously drove her
ball into the fork of a tree. Aspiring French golfer Catherine Lacoste
won the 1967 U.S. Women's Open at The Omni Homestead Resort. An underdog
heading into the competition, no one expected her to win amongst a crowded
field of competitors like Louise Suggs, Marilynn Smith, and Sandra Haynie.
Despite the odds stacked against her, she managed to beat the entire field,
finishing with a 79 in the final round. Lacoste subsequently became the
first international golfer to win the U.S. Women’s Open, as well as the
youngest. She also had the distinction of being the only real amateur to
win the tournament—an achievement that still stands today.
The
Red Lion Inn (1773)
Stockbridge,
Massachusetts
The
Red Lion Inn has hosted guests in the picturesque town of Stockbridge,
Massachusetts, for over 250 years, and has maintained a long-standing tradition
of female stewardship. In 1773, Silas Pepoon established the small tavern
and his widow, Anna Bingham, successfully operated the tavern for eleven
years after his death. A century later, “Mert” Plumb, married to the inn’s
owner, took on the duties of managing the Inn, and began collecting antiques
for refurnishing the Inn, some of which remain inside the Inn to this day.
In recent decades, The Red Lion Inn has been owned and operated by three
generations of women. In 1968, the Inn was purchased by Stockbridge residents,
Jack and Jane Fitzpatrick, who renovated the property and made it a year-round
destination for the first time. Jane operated the Inn until 1993, when
her daughter, Nancy, followed in her mother’s footsteps, and became the
President of The Red Lion Inn. In 2013, Nancy’s stepdaughter, Sarah Eustis,
became part of the leadership team at the family-owned and women-operated
historic hotel. Family recipes passed down through the generations of women
also appear on the Inn’s menus. When The Red Lion Inn’s Apple Pie à
la Mode recipe was selected for the 2023
Top 25 Historic Hotels of America Most Unique Culinary Heritage and Culinary
Traditions, Nancy Fitzpatrick recalled that the recipe was passed down
from her grandmother, Mary Pratt: “When we first opened, Nana May (as we
called her), went out to the kitchen and showed the chef how she made her
pie.” The Red Lion Inn, a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America
since 1989, dates to 1773.
The
Willard InterContinental, Washington DC (1818)
Washington,
DC
The
Willard InterContinental, Washington, DC, has hosted an impressive roster
of notable women over the past two centuries. The hotel offered something
uncommon: public areas designated for women, including a Ladies’ Lounge,
a private entrance for ladies to enter and exit the hotel, and the famous
Peacock Alley, when the center of Washington, DC was dominated by male-only
spaces. In The Pompeian Room, where men and women mingled, women were even
permitted to smoke—scandalous at the time. One of the most notable women
to stay at The Willard in the 19th century was Julia Ward Howe. Howe was
an American writer and political activist who started her literary career
in the 1850s. While she had attracted some national attention for her support
of the abolitionist movement, Howe would not become a household name until
she wrote the lyrics to the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” at the beginning
of the American Civil War. Howe was inspired to pen the song during a trip
to Washington with her husband to meet President Abraham Lincoln in 1861.
Inspired by the music she had heard during a review of the troops, Howe
returned to her guestroom at The Willard that night and began to write.
By morning, she had written the verses for a new song that served as the
spiritual ode to the preservation of the Union. Entitled “Battle Hymn of
the Republic,” it first appeared on the front page of The Atlantic Monthly
in February 1862. It was an overnight sensation, becoming one of the most
frequently sung tunes by Northern soldiers during the American Civil War.
Hamilton
Hotel (1851)
Washington,
DC
Given
its prime location just a few blocks from the White House, Hamilton Hotel
has seen its fair share of history pass through its stately hallways since
it opened in 1851. However, this storied hotel is not just a testament
to the “old boys’ club.” In fact, while some might assume that the Hamilton
Hotel takes its name from one of the United States’ Founding Fathers, Alexander
Hamilton, the moniker honors his second daughter, Eliza Hamilton Holly,
who was a family friend of the hotel’s original owner. The Hamilton Hotel
continues to draw inspiration from history-making women to this day with
The Suffrage Suite: Women Win The Vote. Created in partnership with the
Freedom Forum’s Newseum and Boston-area political activist Barbara Lee,
the suite was unveiled in 2020 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the
19th Amendment. This specialty suite is both a women’s history exhibit
and a guestroom, featuring a treasure trove of photographs, original artwork,
historical artifacts, and more contemporary memorabilia—all curated by
Samantha Barry, the Editor-in-Chief of Glamour magazine. The suite
is decorated in shades of yellow and purple, the colors of the suffragists.
Within the suite, guests can experience the stories of suffragists, from
Sojourner Truth and Susan B. Anthony, to modern-day changemakers like Supreme
Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the 116 women elected to Congress
in 2018, the “Year of the Woman.” A member of Historic Hotels of America
since 2021 and listed in the National Register of Historic Places, the
Hamilton Hotel is a Beaux-Arts-style masterpiece, and has been one of the
most illustrious hotels in the capital city for generations.
Palmer
House®, A Hilton Hotel (1871)
Chicago,
Illinois
Bertha
Honoré Palmer’s life became entwined with the historic Palmer House®,
A Hilton Hotel when she married Potter Palmer, who built the hotel for
her as a wedding present in 1871. Today, the hotel’s interior beauty and
personality can be traced to her creativity and passions. The glamour of
the hotel can, in part, be credited to her interior design choices: she
specifically installed additional features like garnet-draped chandeliers;
a 1.25 ton, 24-karat gold winged-angel Tiffany candelabra; and 21 breathtaking
ceiling frescoes created by French painter Louis Pierre Rigal. A great
patron of the arts, in her lifetime, Palmer collected over 200 Impressionist
paintings, making it one of the largest collections of its kind outside
of France. She selected pieces from her own collection to curate the hotel,
and much of the collection is now part of The Art Institute of Chicago.
Palmer is also famous for her work planning the World’s Columbian Exposition
of 1893. She was involved in the creation of the exposition’s Women’s Building,
which showcased the historical achievements of American women over the
past century, and famously proclaimed there, “even more important than
the discovery of Columbus is the fact that the government has just discovered
women.” Her experiences at the World’s Fair inspired her to create a unique
treat that guests could easily eat when walking through the Palmer House®,
A Hilton Hotel. At her request, the hotel’s team of pastry chefs concocted
a handheld, cake-like chocolate dessert that they called the “brownie.”
Although they have likely enjoyed the treat before, guests can experience
the Palmer House Brownie during their visit, and can even take a square
home with them. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, Palmer
House®, A Hilton Hotel dates to 1871, and was inducted into Historic
Hotels of America in 2007.
Wentworth
by the Sea (1874)
New
Castle, New Hampshire
A
member of Historic Hotels of America since 2004, Wentworth by the Sea is
among the last great stately resort hotels to grace New Hampshire’s coast.
Originally opening as The Wentworth Hotel in 1874, the resort provided
sun, sand, and sea to generations of guests. Among the activities Wentworth
by the Sea offered were classes taught by renowned experts. Two of the
experts brought in to entertain guests were trailblazing female celebrities
of the early-20th century: sharpshooter Annie Oakley, and Olympic swimmer
Helen Wainwright. Annie Oakley was a renowned sportswoman who became a
pop culture icon for her incredible marksmanship during America’s Gilded
Age. Oakley arrived at Wentworth by the Sea in 1916, and exhibited her
rifle skills and abilities on horseback. Throughout her career, Oakley
taught thousands of gun-handling lessons to interested individuals. In
1920, new management led to exciting modern amenities and entertainment,
including a saltwater pool, a nine-hole golf course designed by legendary
golf course architect Donald Ross, and private bathrooms in the guestrooms—a
luxury at that time. After the change in management, Oakley supervised
shooting lessons at the resort's new golf course. Oakley was followed by
Helen Wainwright, an internationally renowned swimmer who competed in the
1920 and 1924 Olympic Games. Notably, Wainright won Olympic silver medals
in both swimming and diving. She trained to be the first woman to swim
across the English Channel, though she never completed it due to injury.
In 1925, Wainwright taught swimming classes at Wentworth by the Sea and
gave special demonstrations for guests in the saltwater pool. She was at
the height of her fame. Once dubbed "America's all-around champion mermaid"
by The New York Times, Wainwright continued coaching swimming and
in 1972, she was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame
in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
1886
Crescent Hotel & Spa (1886)
Eureka
Springs, Arkansas
Known
as “The Grand Ol’ Lady of The Ozarks,” 1886 Crescent Hotel & Spa opened
in 1886 in Eureka Springs, Arkansas. Between 1908 and 1934, during the
resort’s “off” seasons, the Crescent College & Conservatory for Young
Women housed students at the hotel. An advertisement in the Arkansas
Gazette on July 6, 1910, described the girls’ school as being "on top
of the Ozarks, at Eureka Springs, the famous health resort. Most picturesque
town in America," where young women could take “Full Preparatory and Collegiate
courses. Conservatory of Music, Art, Expression, Commercial branches, Horseback
riding a feature.” It soon became one of the most exclusive boarding academies
in Arkansas, training the minds of countless women who passed through its
doors. Due to tough economic times brought on by the Great Depression,
the college closed in 1934. Among its most influential graduates are Mary
Ella Lundy and Mayme “Natachee" Scott Momaday. Lundy, a dedicated athlete
and musically gifted student during her time at Crescent College, went
on to become the Head of Women's Education and Physical Education for Women
at the University of Georgia for 35 years. Momaday made history for her
talents as an artist, educator, and writer. Because of her Kiowa and Cherokee
heritage, she championed Native American cultures and student-centered
education. Momaday taught at the Jemez Pueblo Day School in New Mexico
and is popularly known as the author of the children’s book, Owl in
the Cedar Tree (1965).
The
Strater Hotel (1887)
Durango,
Colorado
When
Hattie Mashburn and her business partner, Charles E. Stilwell, purchased
The Strater Hotel in Durango, Colorado, in 1893, she broke with convention
in an era where women were generally expected to maintain a home for their
family, work in a factory, or be in service to another household. Professional
occupations like hotel management and investing were uncommon for women
to pursue in the 1890s, but Mashburn grew up in a large family that educated
its daughters, as well as its sons, and she set out to make a successful
living. In Colorado, where women’s political and economic power was less
restricted than in the Southern and Eastern United States, Mashburn became
a hotel manager and real estate investor. After decades overseeing the
hotel, she sold The Strater Hotel in 1926 to a group of investors led by
Earl A. Barker, Sr. In the second half of the 20th century, through their
connections to Barker, two notable women worked to preserve the history
and architecture of The Strater Hotel: Marion L. Jarvis and her daughter,
Jentra Barker. Jarvis guided her daughter (who was married to Earl Barker,
Jr.) in acquiring period furniture and restoring the family-managed hotel.
Jarvis’ vision for the hotel's preservation is still reflected in the American
Victorian style interior design of the building, especially in the Diamond
Belle Saloon. Jarvis was also an author and published several books, including
The
Strater Hotel Story, A story of the old landmark of the Southwest (1963)
and "Come on in Dearie": Or Prostitutes and Institutes of Early Durango
(1976). An authentic and refined “Old West” hotel, The Strater Hotel is
centrally located in Durango, Colorado, just two blocks from the historic
Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad. The Strater Hotel, a Charter
Member of Historic Hotels of America since 1989, dates back to 1887.
Jekyll
Island Club Resort (1887)
Jekyll
Island, Georgia
The
Jekyll Island Club Resort on Jekyll Island, Georgia, opened in 1887 as
a private club for the United States’ wealthiest families. The club’s members
were all men at the time, but as a New York Times article described
in 1886, the club was not intended to be "a selfish and exclusive 'man's'
club.” It was a Gilded Age family retreat, and the daughters, wives, and
sisters of male club members were welcome to enjoy the same club privileges,
including fishing, shooting, horseback riding, swimming, and camping. The
club truly broke with the club norms of the time when in 1893, the first
female member, Kate Allerton Papin, inherited her father’s membership.
According to historians at the Jekyll Island Club Resort, Papin was likely
one of the first women, if not the first woman, to enjoy full membership
in a prestigious men’s social club of the era. Several years later, in
1897, Frances Baker became the first woman to be a club member in her own
right. Within 50 years, the club boasted 31 women who were full members.
As wealthy women with philanthropic experience in their home cities, the
female club members invested in the social welfare of the region. Their
efforts led to the opening of a local hospital and two schools for the
children of the Jekyll Island Club staff, among other projects. The Jekyll
Island Club Resort was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 1994.
Bright
Angel Lodge & Cabins (1890) and Phantom
Ranch (1922)
Grand
Canyon National Park, Arizona
Carved
by the mighty Colorado River, the majesty of the Grand Canyon has been
a source of artistic inspiration for thousands of years. Several hotels
inducted into Historic Hotels of America are located in Grand Canyon National
Park, and reflect this source of artistic inspiration. Two of these hotels
were designed by pioneering architect Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter. Between
1902 and 1948, Colter worked her way up to become the principal architect
and interior designer for the Fred Harvey Company, a popular tourism and
hospitality company prominent in the American West. Although Colter designed
and decorated many buildings throughout her prolific career, some of her
seminal works are the park’s Bright Angel Lodge & Cabins and Phantom
Ranch. Both lodgings have been members of Historic Hotels of America since
2012. These Grand Canyon National Park hotels showcase Colter’s take on
National Park Service rustic-style architecture, which draws upon a building’s
surroundings for inspiration, utilizes natural materials, and synthesizes
architectural styles like Mission Revival, Spanish Colonial, and Arts and
Crafts, to create an organic aesthetic and architectural style. This can
especially be seen in her “Geologic Fireplace” in Bright Angel Lodge’s
History Room. In a true masterstroke, the fireplace is crafted from each
of the Grand Canyon’s rock layers, from cobbles from the river, up to the
rim’s newer stone strata. Bright Angel Lodge & Cabins was completed
in 1935, and today, it is a hub of activity along the gorge’s South Rim,
as it serves as the check-in point for the Grand Canyon’s famous mule rides.
Phantom Ranch opened in 1922, and today, it retains the same rustic charm
and sense of adventure that Colter imbued in it many years ago, remaining
the only lodging facility located beneath the canyon rim. Open year-round,
Phantom Ranch is only accessible by mule, by foot, or by rafting down the
Colorado River. The accommodations available at Phantom Ranch are dormitory
spaces and cabins.
The
Brown Palace Hotel and Spa, Autograph Collection (1892)
Denver,
Colorado
On
April 29, 1912, Margaret “the Unsinkable Molly” Brown checked into The
Brown Palace Hotel and Spa in Denver, Colorado. Just two weeks prior, she
survived the tragic sinking of the RMS Titanic on April 15, 1912.
After organizing charitable donations from her fellow first-class passengers
for less fortunate survivors aboard the RMS Carpathia and arriving safely
in New York City, Brown traveled to Denver and spoke with the press at
the hotel about her experience on the ill-fated ship. A reporter for Rocky
Mountain News quoted her saying, “A tragedy like that of the Titanic...was
as unnecessary as running the Brown Palace into Pikes Peak.” Although having
no connection to the businessman with the same last name who founded the
historic Grande Dame twenty years earlier, Margaret Brown was a frequent
guest at the hotel for many decades until she died in 1932. Brown and her
husband came from humble origins and made their fortune in Colorado mining.
Brown traveled frequently for philanthropic work and political causes—including
women’s suffrage—but when she was in Denver, she enjoyed staying at the
Grande Dame hotel so much that Room 629 was always reserved for her. She
took voice lessons from her room there, and hosted royalty. Today, The
Brown Palace Hotel and Spa, Autograph Collection is five blocks away from
the Molly Brown House Museum, where visitors can learn more about the hotel’s
famous guest. The Brown Palace Hotel and Spa, Autograph Collection, a Charter
Member of Historic Hotels of America since 1989, dates to 1892.
St.
Louis Union Station Hotel, Curio Collection by Hilton (1894)
St.
Louis, Missouri
On
September 1, 1894, the iconic Union Station opened its doors as a major
train depot. Today, the St. Louis Union Station Hotel, Curio Collection
by Hilton, is a popular family entertainment destination. When this National
Historic Landmark opened, it was a symbol of the city's position as a hub
of commerce and transportation. Legendary restaurateur Fred Harvey opened
his Harvey House dining room at Union Station in 1895. Visitors can dine
in the same elegant dining room today, now called the Station Grille. In
its heyday, St. Louis Union Station was the largest and busiest railroad
terminal in the nation, with more than two dozen railroads operating from
its massive train shed. In 1943, at the height of World War II, the Fred
Harvey restaurants at Union Station served more than 2,700,000 meals in
their three distinctive dining rooms. Dining with Fred Harvey was an elegant
experience, with linens imported from Ireland, silver from England, and
china from France. Harvey's waitresses were recruited to head West, and
formed the bulk of the workforce. To be a Harvey Girl, women had to be
between the ages of 18-20 and of "good character"—they even had to sign
a contract to stay in their job for one year at a fixed rate of $17.50
per month. The Harvey Girls were housed in dormitories and watched over
by a “housemother.” During the early era of the Fred Harvey Company, Harvey
Restaurant waitresses wore long black dresses with starched white collars
and white aprons. They also could not wear makeup, pinch their cheeks,
or flirt. Nevertheless, the "Harvey Girls" helped make the restaurants
a fixture in the St. Louis community for years until the station’s conversion
to a hotel at the end of the 20th century.
The
Algonquin Hotel Times Square, Autograph Collection (1901)
New
York, New York
Since
opening at the turn of the 20th century, The Algonquin Hotel Times Square,
Autograph Collection, has been a cultural phenomenon. Standing as one of
New York City's greatest storied hotels, it is perhaps best known for The
Round Table, one of the literary world’s most famous gathering spots. Beginning
in 1919, a group of writers and critics gathered weekly for lunch to discuss
current and upcoming projects. Famous attendees of The Round Table included
American literary legends Dorothy Parker and Edna Ferber, whose careers
are intertwined with the esteemed hotel. The Algonquin Hotel Times Square,
Autograph Collection, was one of the first New York City hotels that welcomed
reservations from single female guests. In 1955, contralto Marian Anderson
made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera, becoming the first Black singer
to hold a leading role in the renowned company, while in-residence at The
Algonquin. Anderson is one of many accomplished women that were long-term
guests of the hotel; others include celebrated poet Maya Angelou, author
Gertrude Stein, and jazz icon Ella Fitzgerald. During Women’s History Month
2024, The Algonquin Hotel Times Square, Autograph Collection is serving
a new cocktail at its famed Blue Bar named after Dorothy Parker. Visitors
can order “Dorothy’s Wit," made with elderflower gin, lemon juice, raspberry
syrup, and egg white, and raise a glass to the writer and her legacy at
the hotel and in the literary world. A portion of proceeds from drink orders
will be donated to a women’s organization in New York City. The Algonquin
Hotel Times Square, Autograph Collection was inducted into Historic Hotels
of America in 2023.
West
Baden Springs Hotel (1902)
West
Baden Springs, Indiana
West
Baden Springs Hotel has long captivated the imaginations of its guests
with its unique architecture and luxurious amenities. Since 1902, its most
stunning feature is its unique architecture, epitomized by the magnificent
historic dome that rests atop the resort. While many have contributed toward
creating the opulence that defines the West Baden Springs Hotel, none were
more influential than Lillian Sinclair Cooper. The daughter of the hotel’s
owner, Lee Wiley Sinclair, Cooper assumed managerial responsibilities over
the West Baden Springs Hotel in 1912, and inherited the hotel upon his
death in 1917. Her appointment prompted her to initiate extensive renovations.
She oversaw the creation of numerous new architectural motifs, including
the development of a stunning brick driveway that featured 24 elaborate
eagle-topped light standards. The road’s most compelling feature was the
Beaux-Arts-inspired gateway that Cooper herself made with double-arched
steel and stone. While her work covered many areas of the hotel building,
it was underneath the dome where she truly left her mark. Cooper’s new
additions featured a floor-to-ceiling “classical reformation,” which replaced
the brick façade with marble-paneled lower walls and plastered columns.
However, she also focused on the atrium, installing millions of gorgeous
marble tiles, and adding an 11-foot-tall, 20-foot-wide Rookwood Pottery
fireplace. The West Baden Springs Hotel is truly an architectural masterpiece,
thanks in no small part to the efforts of Lillian Sinclair Cooper. West
Baden Springs Hotel, built in 1902 and inducted into Historic Hotels of
America in 2009, is designated a National Historic Landmark by the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior.
Mizpah
Hotel (1907)
Tonopah,
Nevada
The
Mizpah Hotel in Tonopah, Nevada, was heralded as “the finest stone hotel
on the desert” by local newspapers when it opened its doors in 1908, and
was the state’s tallest building at the time. The Mizpah Hotel became the
gathering place for the mining and political elite of Nevada; prominent
guests included Tasker Oddie, who became governor of Nevada and later a
U.S. Senator; Key Pittman, another U.S. Senator from Nevada; and Henry
Calvin “Cal” Brougher, the director of the Mizpah Hotel Corporation of
Tonopah. But women, too, gathered there to increase their own political
and economic power. Between 1912 and 1914, Nevada women met at the Mizpah
Hotel to organize for women’s suffrage. The hotel is part of the William
G. Pomeroy Foundation’s National Votes for Women Trail, and a marker was
installed outside the hotel in 2019, describing its historical significance.
The meetings at the Mizpah Hotel were led by Marjorie Moore Brown. According
to the Nevada Women’s History Project, Brown was a founding member of the
Nevada Equal Franchise Society, and a member of the National Woman Suffrage
Association, among other organizations. Brown lived in, and organized for
women’s rights in, Tonopah, rubbing elbows at the Mizpah Hotel with the
likes of Oddie and Pittman, until she moved out of the state in the early
1920s. Visitors today can see the women’s suffrage marker right outside
the hotel, at the corner of Veterans Memorial Highway and Brougher Avenue.
The
Fairmont Hotel San Francisco (1907)
San
Francisco, California
The
story of The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco dates to 1903, when two sisters—Theresa
Fair Oelrichs and Virginia Fair Vanderbilt—decided to build a spectacular
boutique hotel in the heart of San Francisco’s Nob Hill neighborhood. Dedicated
in honor of their father, Senator James Graham Fair, the two sisters hoped
that the business would become a renowned local icon. However, mere weeks
after the building debuted to the public, the San Francisco Earthquake
of 1906 struck the region. Like many other buildings in Nob Hill, the hotel
was destroyed. Undeterred, the sisters hired an up-and-coming architect
and engineer Julia
Morgan to rebuild the entire structure. Under the direction of Morgan,
The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco became the city’s first major business
to reopen following the earthquake and her hotel is the one travelers flock
to visit today. Morgan was one of the world’s preeminent female architects:
the first woman to be admitted to study architecture at École des
Beaux-Arts, and the first woman to be granted an architect’s license in
California in 1904. Her early advancement in San Francisco was due to her
uncommon knowledge of earthquake-resistant concrete construction—a lucrative
skill after the 1906 earthquake. She went on from designing The Fairmont
Hotel San Francisco to designing hundreds of buildings, many listed in
the National Register of Historic Places, and at least two designated National
Historic Landmarks by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior. The Fairmont
Hotel San Francisco was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2001
and listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.
Hotel
Boulderado (1909)
Boulder,
Colorado
In
1922, two entrepreneurial women began operating their successful taxi business
from an office at Hotel Boulderado, which opened in Boulder, Colorado,
in 1909. The story of Florence Molloy and Mabel MacLeay can be traced to
the 1910s, when the two women met in Syracuse, New York. Both were married
previously, and census records state they were either divorced from, or
widowed by, their husbands by the time that they moved out West. What is
known is that they became good friends in New York and moved to Colorado
together by 1918. The women were excellent drivers, and to make money,
they started a small scenic tour business with a Cadillac V8, showing tourists
the beauty of Colorado between Estes Park and Nederland. During the Flu
Pandemic of 1918, Molloy and MacLeay saw a need for taxi services and then,
as the community rebounded, their work blossomed into a thriving transportation
company. By 1922, the Molloy-MacLeay Taxi Company moved into Hotel Boulderado.
They continued to serve the Boulder community, driving guests anywhere
in Boulder for $0.25 per ride, until 1927. On the eve of the Great Depression,
the two women sold the business and opened a dude ranch on Gold Hill in
Boulder, which later became the Colorado Mountain Ranch, and is still in
operation. Today, guests can see Molloy and MacLeay’s portraits as a part
of the self-guided and historian-guided history tours around the Hotel
Boulderado.
The
Hermitage Hotel (1910)
Nashville,
Tennessee
In
2020, The Hermitage Hotel was designated a National Historic Landmark by
the U.S. Secretary of the Interior for its integral place in the ratification
of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. A century prior, in 1920,
the fate of the amendment hung precariously in the balance. With nearly
all of the states split evenly over its pending passage, only North Carolina
and Tennessee were undecided. Led by esteemed suffragists like Carrie Chapman
Catt, (President of the National American Woman Suffrage Association and
Anne Dallas Dudley (President of the Tennessee Equal Suffrage Association),
suffragists from around the country flocked to Nashville to push for the
amendment’s adoption. Catt, Dudley, and their colleagues eventually set
up headquarters at The Hermitage Hotel to coordinate with their allies
in the Tennessee State Capitol nearby. Despite winning the support of the
Tennessee Senate, the suffragists struggled to get enough votes within
the deadlocked Tennessee House of Representatives. However, a young representative
named Harry T. Burn decided to flip his vote to “yes” after reading an
impassioned letter from his mother, who encouraged him to support Carrie
Chapman Catt. The amendment subsequently passed amid a second round of
voting on August 18, officially ratifying the 19th Amendment. A chorus
of cheers erupted all over the city, and countless suffragists flooded
into The Hermitage Hotel to celebrate. In the years since the ratification
of the 19th Amendment, The Hermitage Hotel has honored and shared with
visitors its connection to women’s history in the United States. The hotel
offers a wealth of programming that highlights this history for guests
and visitors alike: Suffrage Sunday suppers, a Yellow Rose Tea every week
in August, and a 45-minute Suffragist History Tour. The Grande Dame of
Nashville for more than 110 years, The Hermitage Hotel first opened its
doors to guests in 1910 and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 1996.
The
Skirvin Hilton Oklahoma City (1911)
Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma
Women’s
history and Civil Rights history was made at The Skirvin Hilton Oklahoma
City in Oklahoma during the summer of 1961. That year, Clara Luper, a schoolteacher
and adviser to the NAACP's local youth council, selected its segregated
lobby as a site for a lunch counter sit-in protest. This sit-in was one
in a series of Oklahoma City sit-ins that Luper organized, beginning with
the Katz Drug Store sit-in of 1958, and continuing at other restaurants
that only allowed white patrons to sit and eat. During the Oklahoma City
sit-in movement, Luper, her young son and daughter, and numerous young
members of the NAACP Youth Council strategically planned and successfully
carried out nonviolent sit-in protests at restaurants. The segregation
policies at the places they sat-in were eventually overturned, but these
businesses required pressure from activists like Luper to change. Her actions
in Oklahoma City inspired future sit-ins, such as the 1960 Woolworth’s
lunch counter sit-in in Greensboro, North Carolina, and her students went
on to participate in other Civil Rights Movement actions, including the
Birmingham Children’s Crusade on May 2, 1963. In 2023, The Skirvin Hilton
Oklahoma City’s Artist-in-Residence, LaQuincey Booker T. Reed, designed
a Clara Luper statue that is part of the new Clara Luper Sit-In Plaza,
located where the Katz Drug Store once stood. The hotel is honored to support
Mr. Reed’s work and to have this opportunity to participate in a momentous
celebration of Clara Luper’s activism. Listed in the National Register
of Historic Places, The Skirvin Hilton Oklahoma City opened in 1911 and
was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2008.
HOTEL
DU PONT (1913)
Wilmington,
Delaware
When
HOTEL DU PONT opened in 1913, the 12--story, Italian Renaissance-style
building was widely considered to be a great achievement in both hotel
architecture and ingenuity. Five years later, the hotel was expanded to
offer more guestrooms and the Ballroom Suite, which included the Gold Ballroom.
This breathtaking ballroom features French neoclassical design elements,
including glistening chandeliers, gilded ceiling detail, and hand-carved
medallions featuring bas-reliefs of famous women. Designed by Violet Terwilliger
of New York, the bas-relief medallions of twenty women from history memorialize
figures including Mary, Queen of Scots; Pocahontas; Emma, Lady Hamilton;
Cleopatra; and Dido Elizabeth Belle.?The walls depict women in typical
fashions from different eras around the world, along with mythological
figures. The artwork was created using sgraffito, a "scratching" technique
where the design is hand-cut into multiple layers of colored plaster. It
took thirty artisans more than a year to complete the room under Terwilliger’s
direction.?HOTEL DU PONT, a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America
since 1989, dates to 1913.
The
Broadmoor (1918)
Colorado
Springs, Colorado
The
championship golf courses at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, Colorado,
have attracted the world’s best professional and amateur players for almost
a century. One player with a lifelong connection to the resort is amateur
champion Judy Bell, the first female president of the United States Golf
Association (1996-1997). In 1947, 10-year-old Bell traveled with her parents
to the historic resort to compete in The Broadmoor Ladies Invitation amateur
golf tournament. Judy Bell was the only competitor in the girls’ division,
winning by default, but over the next few years, Bell became an exceptional
golfer. In the 38 USGA championships she competed in during her lifetime,
she advanced to the quarterfinals three times. Bell set the single-round
scoring record in 1964 at the U.S. Women’s Open—a record she held for 14
years—and twice represented the U.S. in the Curtis Cup competition, including
in 1962 at The Broadmoor. While at the top of her game, Bell also served
as an occasional team captain, volunteered for the USGA as a rules official,
and even learned business. Emerging as a leader in the golfing community,
Bell became the guiding force behind The Broadmoor Ladies Invitation. Between
1962 and 2000, she and fellow golfer Barbara McIntire co-owned and managed
seven different retail shops at The Broadmoor. Visitors to The Broadmoor
can learn more about women in golf history at the Colorado Golf Hall of
Fame, which relocated to The Broadmoor in 2023. It includes a moving display
of images, memorabilia, and trophies. Between May 17-20, 2024, The Broadmoor
will host the Women's Callaway Weekend. This inaugural event will include
female golf pro speakers, skills clinics, and equipment demonstrations.
The Broadmoor, a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America since 1989,
dates to 1918.
Hacienda
Del Sol Guest Ranch Resort (1929)
Tucson,
Arizona
In
1929, John and Helen Murphey created Hacienda Del Sol, a desert oasis and
“home-away-from-home” ranch school for girls. Inspired by early Spanish
Colonial-style architecture, the school contained many outstanding structural
details that the Murpheys constructed themselves. The school offered a
college preparatory curriculum for adolescent women, as well as an array
of outdoor activities that captured the essence of the Old American West.
These extracurricular programs focused on equine sports, with the school
providing space to house any of their students’ horses. The climate, culture,
and scholastic appeal of Hacienda Del Sol attracted the daughters of many
prominent American families. Indeed, the school’s student body featured
illustrious surnames like Westinghouse, Pillsbury, Kellogg, and Vanderbilt.
A granddaughter of former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson even attended Hacienda
Del Sol. Nevertheless, the academy had to shutter its operations during
World War II, and struggled to stay open once the conflict ended. The Murpheys
thus reluctantly sold the site to Howard Morgan for a sum of $110,000.
But the Morgans would prove to be wonderful stewards, spending thousands
of dollars on refurbishing the remarkable estate into a resort called the
“Hacienda Del Sol Hotel.” Now known as the Hacienda Del Sol Guest Ranch
Resort, this spectacular holiday destination has become one of the best
vacation spots in the American Southwest. Hacienda Del Sol Guest Ranch
Resort is also committed to preserving its heritage as an all-girls academy,
taking great pains to maintain its collection of artifacts and memorabilia.
Hacienda Del Sol Guest Ranch Resort was inducted into Historic Hotels of
America in 2009.
La
Fonda on the Plaza™ (1922)
Santa
Fe, New Mexico
La
Fonda on the Plaza™ in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is a beloved landmark of Southwestern
hospitality, and was the earliest and best-known hotel in America’s oldest
capital city. Dating to 1922, the hotel was inducted into Historic Hotels
of America in 1991, and is proud to celebrate its connections to women’s
history as it was once a hotel and restaurant of the Fred Harvey Company.
Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter, a noteworthy figure in the architectural history
of the Southwest, was the principal architect and interior designer for
the Fred Harvey Company from 1902 to 1948. One of the most visionary architects
and interior designers of her time, Colter was a trailblazer in what was
traditionally a male-dominated industry. Not only did she set the tone
for the interior of La Fonda, but she served as one of the guiding forces
behind National Park Service Rustic-style architecture, believing that
a building should grow organically out of its environment. Today, you can
see both her vision and authentic elements of the American Southwest in
La Fonda’s hand-hewn beams, hammered-tin chandeliers, painted headboards,
and terra cotta tiles, each crafted by local artisans. Many visitors who
stayed in Fred Harvey Company hotels like La Fonda may not have known of
Colter, but they certainly knew the “Harvey Girls” who worked there. Employed
throughout the Fred Harvey Company’s nationwide chain of hotels and restaurants,
Harvey Girls had to be between the ages of 18-20 and of ‘good character’—they
had to sign a contract to stay in the job for one year. Typically, Harvey
Girls were housed in dormitories and watched by a housemother. Attracted
to the job by the promise of adventure and decent wages, young women from
the East and Midwest made their way West to restaurants and hotels like
La Fonda, providing guests with impeccable service and good food.
The
Mayflower Hotel, Autograph Collection (1925)
Washington,
DC
Women’s
aviation history was made at The Mayflower Hotel, Autograph Collection
in 1955, when the world’s first female helicopter pilots from France, Germany,
and the United States met in Washington, DC, to form the “Whirly-Girls.”
The women established the Whirly-Girls for women from around the world
to unite around their shared interest piloting helicopters. Their first
meeting (or as they called them, their first “hovering”) was held on The
Mayflower Hotel’s mezzanine. The pilots borrowed a typewriter and Mayflower
stationery from the hotel to draft their bylaws. Pilots at the first “hovering”
included French Army neurosurgeon and pilot Dr. Valérie André,
and Americans Edna Gardner Whyte and Jean Ross Howard Phelan. Phelan organized
the first “hovering,” and became the Whirly-Girls' first president. Whyte
is notable for training military pilots after being denied access to flying
as a military pilot. She was also one of two women in history to fly an
early autogyro, a predecessor of the helicopter; the second woman with
that distinction was Amelia Earhart. Earhart, who had disappeared long
before the Whirly-Girls' “hovering,” had also been a visitor at The Mayflower
Hotel. Following her 1932 solo flight from Newfoundland to the British
Isles, Amelia Earhart posed for photographs in The Mayflower Suite before
she received the Special Gold Medal of the National Geographic Society
from President Herbert Hoover.
“Historic
Hotels of America is proud to preserve and tell the stories of women who
lived, worked, and visited the historic hotels that travelers can experience
today. Some hotels were once occupied entirely by women or girls, as schools
or as women-only hotels. Several notable historic hotels have been operated
by women, may have once been the site of a protest or political organizing
by a woman or groups of women, and were even designed by pioneering women
artists and architects, the firsts or few of their gender in the professional
fields of design and engineering at the time,” Lawrence
P. Horwitz, Executive Vice President of Historic Hotels of America
and Historic Hotels Worldwide. “We invite travelers to be inspired to visit
historic hotels to learn more about these compelling and remarkable women
that made history at Historic Hotels of America. Truly, the history of
these legendary hotels in the United States is women’s history.”
For
more information, please visit HistoricHotels.org
and sign
up for the Historic Hotels of America Discover & Explore newsletter
to stay up to date on new member hotels and offers.
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About
Historic Hotels of America®
Historic
Hotels of America® is the official program of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation for recognizing, celebrating, and promoting
the finest historic hotels in the United States of America. The National
Trust for Historic Preservation was chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1949
and is a private 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. The National Trust for
Historic Preservation is leading the movement to save places where our
history happened. To be nominated and selected for membership in this prestigious
program, a hotel must be at least 50 years old; designated by the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior as a National Historic Landmark or listed in
or eligible for listing in the National
Register of Historic Places; and recognized as having historical significance.
Of the more than 300 historic hotels inducted into Historic
Hotels of America from 45 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico, all historic hotels faithfully preserve their sense of authenticity,
sense of place, and architectural integrity.
To
learn more, please visit:
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Contact:
Katherine
Orr
Historic
Hotels of America | Historic Hotels Worldwide
Director,
Marketing Strategy and Communications
Tel:
202-772-8337
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