Palm Beach Hotel (Palm Beach, Florida)
The Palm Beach Hotel, built in 1925 to replace an earlier building of the same name, is an historic four-story hotel located at 235-251 Sunrise Avenue in Palm Beach, Florida. Designed by architect Mortimer Dickerson Metcalfe in the Mediterranean Revival style, it was built by Thomas R. Clarke. In 1969 it became vacant and, except for several attempts to reopen it as a retirement hotel, it remained so until 1981 when it was converted into a condominium, the Palm Beach Hotel Condominium.[2]
Palm Beach Hotel | |
Location | 235-251 Sunrise Avenue, Palm Beach, Florida |
---|---|
Coordinates | 26°43′13″N 80°2′23″W |
Built | 1925 |
Architect | Mortimer Dickerson Metcalfe |
Architectural style | Mediterranean Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 10000212[1] |
Added to NRHP | April 21, 2010 |
On April 21, 2010, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places as No. 10000212.[1]
Part of the fourth floor is now occupied by an Orthodox synagogue, the New Synagogue of Palm Beach.[3]
History
The original Palm Beach Hotel was constructed in 1902 and located on the shoreline of Lake Worth, where the Biltmore Condominiums stand today. The hotel burned down in March 1925 in the same fire that destroyed The Breakers for a second time. Embers from the flames at The Breakers blew across the island and landed on the Palm Beach Hotel, igniting a fire. The Palm Beach Hotel burnt rapidly, with the some 160 guests reportedly only able to retrieve small items. After the fire, the hotel's owner, Sidney Maddock, left Palm Beach and never returned. Maurice Heckscher built a new hotel at the site for approximately $7 million. Opened in February 1926, this 550-room hotel would be known as the Alba Hotel, before being renamed the Biltmore Hotel in 1934.[4]
Mortimer Dickinson Metcalfe designed and Thomas A. Clarke built the Palm Beach Hotel at its current location,[2]:13 with construction beginning on May 1, 1925.[5] The site of the new Palm Beach Hotel was originally a dirt road lined by wooden shacks as part of The Styx, a section of town where African-American hotel staff lived until the 1910s.[2]:13 The Palm Beach Hotel reopened on January 9, 1926. More than 1,000 people attended the festivities for the grand opening and danced to a musical accompaniment by the Strauss Orchestra of New York, including Mengo Lazarus Morgenthau, brother of Henry Morgenthau Sr.[2]:15 A story by The Palm Beach Post on the following day included the following description of the building: "Three stories in height and 400 feet [121.92 meters] in length, the hotel provides each of the 320 rooms an outlook either on Lake Worth or the ocean. The spacious dining room, surrounded by a low wall, gives a sunken garden effect."[5]
Unlike some other hotels in Palm Beach, the Palm Beach Hotel did not often attract particularly wealthy guests. However, the hotel hosted guests such as W. C. Fields, Arthur Hammerstein, Kyra Markham, William Starr Myers, and Will Rogers.[2]:16 During the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane, the hotel suffered water damage and some windows broke.[6]
References
- National Register Weekly List April 30, 2010
- Palm Beach Hotel (PDF). National Register of Historic Places (Report). National Park Service. March 2010. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
- New Synagogue home page
- "1925 Hotel Fires". Historical Society of Palm Beach County. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
- "New Palm Beach Hotel Opens For First Time". The Palm Beach Post. January 10, 1926. p. 1-A. Retrieved July 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Few Buildings Escape Damage From Hurricane". The Palm Beach Post. September 18, 1928. p. 1. Retrieved July 21, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Palm Beach Hotel. |
- Rogers, David, Palm Beach Hotel earns National Register of Historic Places status, Palm Beach Daily News (The Shiney Sheet), May 6-7, 2010, accessed May 9, 2009
- Mortimer Dickinson Metcalfe at Find a Grave
- http://www.gilmartinusa.net/chapter15-08.html Thomas A Clarke