Irving Underhill photographed the newly-completed building in 1924 -- from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
On midnight, January 16, 1920 the selling and manufacture of
intoxicants became illegal in the United States. The arrival
of Prohibition, which some thought would reduce crime and domestic violence,
and enhance living conditions for all proved just the opposite. The enormous increase in illegal activities
would not be noticeable for some time; but the effect on millions who were
suddenly without jobs was immediate.
In Manhattan bartenders, brewery and distillery workers,
waitresses, liquor store employees and sommeliers were suddenly out of
work. And Prohibition dealt a heavy and
unexpected blow to the cash flow of the city’s grand hotels whose wine cellars
were stocked with expensive and rare vintages.
Within months hotels failed.
On July 4, 1920 the New-York Tribune noted that three of New
York’s resident hotels, including the Holland House and 20-year old Manhattan
House, had shut their doors. One year after Prohibition went into effect
John Jacob Astor closed his elegant Knickerbocker Hotel.
The Tiffany Studios Building stood at Madison Avenue and 45th Street -- photograph by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
And so it was perhaps startling to some when on September 2,
1922 the New-York Tribune announced that a $6 million hotel, 18 stories
tall, was being designed by the well-known architectural firm of George B. Post
& Sons.
Two months later, on November 25, 1922 both the height and
the cost had risen. The Real Estate
Record & Builders’ Guide reported that demolition had started on the
massive brick and stone Tiffany Studios Building on Madison Avenue at 45th
Street where a “palatial hostelry, to be known as the Roosevelt Hotel” was to
be built. The structure had sprouted two
more floors and the cost was now estimated at $10 million.
George B. Post & Sons released its rendering in November 1922 (copyright expired) |
The project was spearheaded by a syndicate known as the United
Hotels Company of America. The Record & Guide
reported on the projected 1,107 rooms and baths, “several spacious restaurants
and private dining rooms.”
Engulfing the entire block from Madison to Vanderbilt Avenue
and from 45th to 46th Streets, it took advantage of the
site directly over the Grand Central tracks.
The Guide noted it “will have an entrance from the Grand Central
Terminal, which will be a great advantage to incoming and outgoing railroad passengers.” In addition, the New-York
Tribune noted on November 19 that the hotel was to have “a series
of rooms which will be reserved for persons who wish to remain overnight only
or for a few hours while waiting for train connections.”
The planners included stores and leased office space along
the sidewalk level. It was an unusual
move and according to the 1987 New York
1930, Architecture and Urbanism Between The Two World Wars, was intended to
compensate for the lost revenues caused by Prohibition.
Less than five months into construction, the hotel’s leasing
agent, Douglas L. Elliman & Co. reported that already more than half of the
store space was rented. Among the “important”
leases was signed by the Knox Hat Company, whose upscale store traditionally
provided headwear for United States Presidents.
The hotel's massive size was captured in a postcard (copyright expired) |
Just under two years after construction began, the Roosevelt
Hotel neared completion. On September
14, 1924 The New York Times noted that, once again, the height and the cost had
changed—now 22 stories tall and costing $12 million. The exterior of the massive brick and stone
structure melded with the Adamesque architecture of the other buildings of what
was then called “the Grand Central Group;” and later known as “Terminal City.”
But inside, George B. Post & Sons drew from colonial
America. The 42nd Street
vestibule contained a replica of the doorway into St. Paul’s Chapel downtown,
built in 1764. It opened into a lobby
dripping with American references. The architects used Homewood, an 1809
Baltimore mansion, and the New York City Hall for inspiration here. Iron panels flanking the stairs were copies
of those in City Hall. The iron balcony
railings were taken from an old mansion on Irving Place, and the iron rails in
the arcades were copied from leaded glass sidelights of various colonial
American doorways.
Reproduction Chippendale chairs and colonial details added to the historical motif. |
For the 20-foot wide paneled lounge facing Madison Avenue,
inspiration was taken from a room of the colonial house in Coventry,
Connecticut installed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The New York Times added “A handsome and
ornamental office desk screen is based on the original in the Hamilton House
(1812), Philadelphia. ‘Homewood’ provided
the designs for the cornice in the ‘working lobby’ and also in the mezzanine
balcony.”
Other colonial homes used for inspiration were the 18th
century Octagon House in Washington D. C., Kenmore, a 1753 Virginia mansion,
the 1800 Gordon House in Savannah, and the Charleston, South Carolina Gibbs
House built in 1752.
A postcard presented an elegant lobby. |
The Roosevelt Hotel, named for the late President Theodore
Roosevelt, was formally opened on September 22, 1924. Although The New York Times remarked the
following day that “It is equipped with the latest devices for service;” its
planners cleverly did not target the millionaires who came and went at the
Waldorf-Astoria or Plaza Hotels; but businessmen and visiting families.
When Theodore Roosevelt died, political cartoonist J. N. “Ding”
Darling published a cartoon entitled the “Long, Long Trail.” It depicted the former President in his Rough
Rider outfit, waving good-bye as he rode off into the clouds. On December 8, 1925 a bronze reproduction of
the cartoon, four and one-half by six feet, was unveiled in the main lobby of
the hotel in the presence of several hundred people, including many of the
Roosevelt family.
Earlier that year the Roosevelt Hotel had added an
innovative concept—a radio station atop the hotel. The first transmission from station WRNY was
broadcast on the evening of June 12, 1925.
And while the schedule included the expected musical programs “in which
operatic singers and Broadway stars” took part, there was also a weekly educational
program for high school students interested in science and technology.
On that first night, the venerable politician and attorney
Chauncey M. Depew spoke to the children.
He began saying that many of the youthful audience “have made their own
radio machines in whole or in part.” He
echoed the feelings of many 21st century seniors who feel
overwhelmed by the whirl of new technology. “The boys and girls of today have so many
opportunities for their mental and spiritual advancement, which never existed
before, that we older people wonder how we got on at all.”
He then went on to proclaim that technological advances just
might make life worse than in the good old day.
He pointed out that the greatest thinkers of history—Plato, Socrates and
Aristotle—“had none of these modern wonders.”
And the greatest orators and artists “are still unapproachable by our
times.”
The youngsters listening may have had more hope when Dr. Lee
De Forest took the mic. He was the inventor
of the modern vacuum tube and the “phonofilm,” the new motion picture film that
included sound. Instead, he tossed cold
water on their anticipation of television.
“Mr. De Forest said that the intricate difficulties which
must be overcome before moving pictures in the home by radio are an every-night
occurrence, are such that ‘most of us will not live to see this miracle,’”
reported The New York Times. “He also
declared that he knew of no practical method of eliminating static disturbance.”
Although Queen Marie of Rumania stopped over at the
Roosevelt Hotel in October 1926; she was the exception among royalty and heads
of state. Instead the hotel played host
to politicians (many of whom ran their election campaigns from offices here),
entertainment celebrities, and athletes.
It was also, interestingly, the favorite of the class of new American
heroes—aviators.
Typical of the events held in the Roosevelt in the 1920s was
the star-studded 1926 gala benefit given by the Authors’ League of
America. The ballroom was filled with luminaries
from the stage and society, as well as “well-known persons of letters.” Authors like Edna Ferber rubbed shoulders with
Lulu Belle who was currently playing Lorelei Lee on Broadway in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. And cartoonist Rube Goldberg did a skit with
Harry Herschfield and Milt Gross.
Another was the February 1927 dinner for Notre Dame coach
Knute Rockne hosted by alumni. During
the dinner he announced he was considering a game between Notre Dame and the
University of Hawaii during the 1927 Christmas season.
What would be not only a hotel tradition, but a national
one, began when Guy Lombardo and his orchestra first performed at the Roosevelt
Grill on October 3, 1929. The Royal
Canadians would continue playing “the sweetest music this side of Heaven” here
for three decades. The music was transmitted
live into the guest rooms via radio.
The annual New Year’s Eve broadcast from the ballroom which
featured the orchestra playing Auld Lang Syne became synonymous with New Year’s
Eve for families across the nation. An
up-and-coming bandleader, Lawrence Welk, got his start by filling in for
Lombardo and the Royal Canadians when they took their summer breaks to play on
Long Island each year.
In the 1920s and ‘30s, it would not be unusual to see
celebrated aviators like Charles A. Lindberg, Richard E. Byrd or Amelia Earhart
Putnam at a dinner in the Roosevelt Hotel.
But on the night of April 9, 1931 they were here not as guests of honor;
but to pay tribute to a weatherman.
The next day The New York Times reported “Aviators who have
crossed the Atlantic in heavier-than-air machines gathered last night for
dinner at the Roosevelt Hotel to pay tribute to Dr. James H. Kimball of the New
York office of the United States Weather Bureau as the man who, more than any
other, had been responsible for the success of their flights.”
Nationally-famous journalist and newscaster Lowell Thomas
was toastmaster and the room was filled with a who’s-who of the aeronautical field. In addition to Lindberg, Byrd and Earhart
were Clarence Chamberlin, Bernt Balchen, Frank E. Courtney, Armand Lotti and
James Fitzmaurice, among others. A
message from President Herbert Hoover was read.
The system of underground tunnels linking the hotel to the
train station and to other locations proved to be a convenience not only to
guests, but to a criminal on July 31, 1931.
Mary Gilmartin had been the hotel’s cashier for several years. Employees received their pay in cash and
every afternoon at around 2:30 she would carry a tin box containing the day’s payroll
for the afternoon and evening shifts from the paymaster’s office on the second
floor to the cashier’s office on the main floor. In the Depression years, the $5,000 payroll,
in the neighborhood of $78,000 in 2015, was a tempting target.
The 27-year old woman picked up the box that afternoon, as
always, and headed for the elevator.
Sitting in the corridor was a young man who twirled his brown felt hat
on his finger. Mary paid little
attention to him as she pressed the elevator button. She was suddenly attacked and the man fled
with the box into the fire stairs eight feet away.
Mary ran back to the paymaster’s office and signaled all the
watchmen at the hotel entrances. The
fire entrance led to a passageway under Vanderbilt Avenue, another under the
main entrance to the hotel, and also to a corridor leading to an employee’s
exit on 46th Street.
The crook, who apparently had scouted Mary’s routine for
several days and had his escape route well planned, slipped past all the
watchmen. Detectives surmised he had
been an employee at one time. The
robber, about 25 years old, successfully made off with the unmarked bills.
Happy days were anticipated by the hotel industry when the
end of Prohibition became imminent. The
Roosevelt Hotel planned a festive “Funeral of Old Man Prohibition” at “a repeal
ball in costume.” The New York Times reported on
December 5, 1933 that already more than 1,200 reservations had been booked.
“At the stroke of midnight, twelve models will trumpet
reveille, a burial ceremony will conclude with the opening of the casket
supposed to contain the remains of Prohibition, which will let out, according
to the announcement, ‘a beautiful female figure symbolic of the returning
spirit of Bacchus.’”
But the repeal of Prohibition came a few months too late for
the Roosevelt Hotel. The Depression had
taken its toll and for some time its management had denied rumors that the hotel
was in trouble. But in 1934 the rumored
became fact when the Roosevelt was put into receivership and the courts
approved a $25,000 bid on the hotel that had cost $12 million.
At mid-century, the Rough Rider Cocktail lounge featured palomino-printed upholstery and frescoes of Roosevelt's Rough Riders. |
Conrad Hilton purchased the Roosevelt Hotel in 1943, calling
it “a fine hotel.” The Hilton chain was
forced to sell it 13 years later, in April 1956, as part of an Anti-trust suit
filed by the Government.
Although the Roosevelt Hotel continued to be a favorite spot
for campaign headquarters—Thomas E Dewey not only lived here but ran his
Presidential headquarters in the building, and Nelson A. Rockefeller had his
Gubernatorial headquarters here in 1958, as did Kenneth B. Keating who was
campaigning for Senate—changing times and an aging structure posed problems in
the 1960s.
The famous Grill Room was closed the weekend before
Christmas in 1963 “with no plans for reopening,” according to The New York
Times; and in September 1962 newspapers announced “An Era Ends” when Guy
Lombardo’s 33-year stretch came to an end.
Trouble continued in 1980 when, on July 19, the Colonial
Room nightclub was destroyed by a flash fire and a month later the hotel
received bad press when a Pennsylvania delegate to the Democratic National
Convention, Cynthia Friedman, was robbed at knife point in the hotel corridor.
A year earlier the Pakistan International Airlines, heavily backed by Prince Faisal bin Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia,
signed a long-term lease on the Roosevelt, with an option to purchase after 20
years. Nevertheless, the hotel, growing
ever more dated, would not receive a face lift until that lease was up.
When the Pakistan International Airlines exercised its
option to buy, it spent not only $36.5 million for the property, but initiated a
$65 million renovation which prompted the ABA Journal on August 5, 1998 to
proclaim it “once again reflects the simple splendor of its glittering past.”
Another updating was announced on January 1, 2011. It resulted in the amenities expected by 21st
century travelers, including a rooftop lounge, fitness facility and Wi-Fi—none
of which Chauncey Depew would have found necessary. George B. Post & Sons’ handsome façade and
historic-inspired interiors were little changed.
photo by Billy Hathorn |
The hotel has appeared in about a dozen motion pictures and
in popular television shows like Mad Men. Today the Roosevelt Hotel is the last
unaltered hotel of Terminal City—built at a time when the Grand Central area bustled
with the comings and goings of thousands of business travelers who needed a
place to stay.
I like your turn of phrase about Queen Marie's visit- that she "stopped" at the Roosevelt. That seemed to be common usage for a hotel stay years ago, but one sadly not seen much today. Bravo for reviving it.
ReplyDeletePerhaps I'm showing my age!
DeleteThanks for this post -- it brought back memories of when I worked across the street at 380 Madison and used to use the shortcut through the Roosevelt to Grand Central for my commute. There was also a popular bar in the hotel we used to go to on Friday nights after work.
ReplyDeleteThe massive hotel lobby is still one of the most elegant in the city. Unfortunately this hotel is constantly in the news as under threat of demolition, especially with the recent up zoning of the Vanderbilt Ave corridor. Hopefully someone will recognize the beautifully maintained period interiors before this becomes the site of yet another boring glass block. NYarch
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great post. I use to work at the hotel, in the bar and restaurant for many years and I was always impressed by the lobby and rooftop former radio station (now the rooftop bar). I would love how women would come in and tell me about the weekly Sunday Tee Dances held in the front lobby in the 30's and 40's.
ReplyDeleteI love your site and this is one of the very best history blogs on the net! Keep up the great work.
Great article. However, there is bad news for this historic landmark due to the pandemic.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.zerohedge.com/markets/amhersts-largest-hotel-sale-top-bid-comes-only-18-securitized-value
The Roosevelt Hotel was sold to The Bowman- Biltmore Hotel Corporation in 1934 . They also owned two other hotels in the Terminal City The Biltmore and The Commodore . After Hilton sold The Roosevelt in 1953 to Sonesta Hotel Corporation which opened the first chain restaurant in a hotel The Rib Room. Eventually The New York Central Railroad who owned all three anyway though the New York State Realty and Terminal Company started running them on their own though a subsidiary Reality Hotels which also included The Barclay . The railroad went bankrupt and sold three to Lowe’s in 1978 . Commodore was sold earlier to Trump / Hyatt . Lowe’s sold to whom we see today .
ReplyDelete