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  • Selworthy Green Prior to 1938. And Kristallnacht.

    Selworthy Green Prior to 1938. And Kristallnacht.

    Selworthy Green Prior to 1938. And Kristallnacht.

    The Postcard

    A postcard that was published by F. Frith & Co. Ltd. of Reigate and printed in England. The card was posted in Waltham Cross on Tuesday the 8th. November 1938 to:

    Miss G. Huddlestone,
    25, Wellhouse Lane,
    Barnet,
    Herts.

    The message on the divided back of the card was as follows:

    "We shall be delighted to
    see you on the 19th. I shall
    have to go out to tea with a
    friend on Sunday, but I expect
    you will not mind.
    My sister wants you to have
    tea with her, & Dingles will be
    at home.
    Love from G. N. B.
    Len will meet you at the
    church at Barnet at 9 o’clock".

    Selworthy

    Selworthy is a small village 5 kilometres (3 mi) from Minehead in Somerset, England. It is located in the National Trust’s Holnicote Estate on the northern fringes of Exmoor.

    Jewish Suppression in Germany and Kristallnacht

    So what else happened on the day that the card was sent?

    Well, on the 8th. November 1938, the German government barred Jewish children from German state elementary schools as a precursor to Kristallnacht that took place on the following two days.

    Kristallnacht

    Kristallnacht was a pogrom against Jews carried out by SA paramilitary forces and civilians throughout Nazi Germany on the 9th. and 10th. November 1938. The German authorities looked on without intervening.

    The name Kristallnacht ("Crystal Night") comes from the shards of broken glass that littered the streets after the windows of Jewish-owned stores, buildings and synagogues were smashed.

    The pretext for the attacks was the assassination of the German diplomat Ernst vom Rath by Herschel Grynszpan, a 17-year-old German-born Polish Jew living in Paris.

    Jewish homes, hospitals and schools were ransacked as attackers demolished buildings with sledgehammers. Rioters destroyed 267 synagogues throughout Germany, Austria and the Sudetenland.

    Over 7,000 Jewish businesses were damaged or destroyed, and 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and incarcerated in concentration camps.

    Martin Gilbert wrote that no event in the history of German Jews between 1933 and 1945 was so widely reported as it was happening, and the accounts from foreign journalists working in Germany sent shockwaves around the world. The Times of London observed on the 11th. November 1938:

    "No foreign propagandist bent upon
    blackening Germany before the world
    could outdo the tale of burnings and
    beatings, of blackguardly assaults on
    defenceless and innocent people, which
    disgraced that country yesterday."

    Estimates of fatalities caused by the attacks have varied. Early reports estimated that 91 Jews had been murdered. However, modern analysis of German sources puts the figure much higher; when deaths from post-arrest maltreatment and subsequent suicides are included, the death toll reaches the hundreds, with Richard J. Evans estimating 638 deaths by suicide alone.

    Historians view Kristallnacht as a prelude to the Final Solution and the murder of six million Jews during the Holocaust.

    Background to Kristallnacht

    In the 1920’s, most German Jews were fully integrated into German society as German citizens. They served in the German army and navy, and contributed to every field of German business, science and culture.

    However, conditions for German Jews began to change after the appointment of Adolf Hitler (the Austrian-born leader of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party) as Chancellor of Germany on the 30th. January 1933, and the Enabling Act (implemented on the 23rd. March 1933) which enabled the assumption of power by Hitler after the Reichstag fire of the 27th. February 1933.

    From its inception, Hitler’s regime moved quickly to introduce anti-Jewish policies. Nazi propaganda alienated 500,000 Jews in Germany, who accounted for only 0.86% of the overall population, and framed them as an enemy responsible for Germany’s defeat in the First World War and for its subsequent economic disasters, such as the 1920’s hyperinflation and the Wall Street Crash Great Depression.

    Beginning in 1933, the German government enacted a series of anti-Jewish laws restricting the rights of German Jews to earn a living, to enjoy full citizenship and to gain education, including a law which forbade Jews from working in the civil service. The subsequent 1935 Nuremberg Laws stripped German Jews of their citizenship, and prohibited Jews from marrying non-Jewish Germans.

    These laws resulted in the exclusion and alienation of Jews from German social and political life. Many sought asylum abroad; hundreds of thousands emigrated, but as Chaim Weizmann wrote in 1936:

    "The world seemed to be divided into
    two parts – those places where the Jews
    could not live, and those where they
    could not enter."

    The international Évian Conference on the 6th. July 1938 addressed the issue of Jewish and Gypsy immigration to other countries. By the time the conference took place, more than 250,000 Jews had fled Germany and Austria, which had been annexed by Germany in March 1938; more than 300,000 German and Austrian Jews continued to seek refuge and asylum from oppression.

    As the number of Jews and Gypsies wanting to leave increased, the restrictions against them grew, with many countries tightening their rules for admission. By 1938, Germany had entered a new radical phase in anti-Semitic activity. Some historians believe that the Nazi government had been contemplating a planned outbreak of violence against the Jews, and were waiting for an appropriate provocation; there is evidence of this planning dating back to 1937.

    In the so-called "Polenaktion", more than 12,000 Polish Jews were expelled from Germany on the 28th. October 1938, on Hitler’s orders. They were ordered to leave their homes in a single night, and were allowed only one suitcase per person to carry their belongings. As the Jews were taken away, their remaining possessions were seized as loot both by Nazi authorities and by neighbours.

    The deportees were taken from their homes to railway stations and were put on trains to the Polish border, where Polish border guards sent them back into Germany. This stalemate continued for days in the pouring rain, with the Jews marching without food or shelter between the borders.

    Four thousand were granted entry into Poland, but the remaining 8,000 were forced to stay at the border. They waited there in harsh conditions to be allowed to enter Poland. A British newspaper told its readers that:

    "Hundreds are lying about, penniless and
    deserted, in little villages along the frontier
    near where they had been driven out by
    the Gestapo and left."

    A British woman who had been sent to help those who had been expelled reported that:

    "Conditions in the refugee camps are so bad
    that some actually tried to escape back into
    Germany and were shot".

    The Shooting of Ernst vom Rath

    Among those expelled from Germany was the family of Sendel and Riva Grynszpan, Polish Jews who had emigrated to Germany in 1911 and settled in Hanover.

    At the trial of Adolf Eichmann in 1961, Sendel Grynszpan recounted the events of their deportation from Hanover on the night of the 27th. October 1938:

    "They took us in police trucks, in prisoners’
    lorries, about 20 men in each truck, and they
    took us to the railway station.
    The streets were full of people shouting:
    ‘Juden Raus! Auf Nach Palästina!’" ("Jews out,
    out to Palestine!").

    Their seventeen-year-old son Herschel Grynszpan was living in Paris with an uncle. Herschel received a postcard from his family from the Polish border, describing the family’s expulsion:

    "No one told us what was up, but we realized
    this was going to be the end. We haven’t a
    penny. Could you send us something?"

    Herschel received the postcard on the 3rd. November 1938. On the morning of Monday, 7 November 1938, he purchased a revolver and a box of bullets, then went to the German embassy and asked to see an embassy official.

    After he was taken to the office of Ernst vom Rath, Grynszpan fired five bullets at Vom Rath, two of which hit him in the abdomen. Vom Rath was a professional diplomat with the Foreign Office who expressed anti-Nazi sympathies, largely based on the Nazis’ treatment of the Jews and was under Gestapo investigation for being politically unreliable.

    Grynszpan made no attempt to escape the French police and freely confessed to the shooting. In his pocket, he carried a postcard to his parents with the message:

    "May God forgive me. I must protest so
    that the whole world hears my protest,
    and that I will do."

    It is widely assumed that the assassination was politically motivated, but historian Hans-Jürgen Döscher says the shooting may have been the result of a homosexual love affair gone wrong. Grynszpan and vom Rath had become intimate after they met in Le Boeuf sur le Toit, which was a popular meeting place for gay men at the time.

    The next day, the German government retaliated, barring Jewish children from German state elementary schools, indefinitely suspending Jewish cultural activities, and putting a halt to the publication of Jewish newspapers and magazines, including the three national German Jewish newspapers.

    A newspaper in Great Britain described the last move, which cut off the Jewish populace from their leaders, as:

    "Intended to disrupt the Jewish community
    and rob it of the last frail ties which hold it
    together."

    Their rights as citizens had been stripped. One of the first legal measures issued was an order by Heinrich Himmler, commander of all German police, forbidding Jews to possess any weapons whatsoever, and imposing a penalty of twenty years’ confinement in a concentration camp upon every Jew found in possession of a weapon hereafter.

    The Death of Ernst vom Rath

    Ernst vom Rath died of his wounds on the 9th. November 1938. Word of his death reached Hitler that evening while he was with several key members of the Nazi party at a dinner commemorating the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch.

    After intense discussions, Hitler left the assembly abruptly without giving his usual address. Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels delivered the speech in his place, and said that:

    "The Führer has decided that demonstrations
    should not be prepared or organized by the
    party, but insofar as they erupt spontaneously,
    they are not to be hampered."

    The chief judge Walter Buch later stated that the message was clear; with these words, Goebbels had commanded the party leaders to organize a pogrom.

    Some leading party officials disagreed with Goebbels’ actions, fearing the diplomatic crisis it would provoke. Heinrich Himmler wrote:

    "I suppose that it is Goebbels’s megalomania
    and stupidity which is responsible for starting
    this operation now, in a particularly difficult
    diplomatic situation."

    The historian Saul Friedländer believes that Goebbels had personal reasons for wanting to bring about Kristallnacht. Goebbels had recently suffered humiliation for the ineffectiveness of his propaganda campaign during the Sudeten crisis, and was in some disgrace over an affair with a Czech actress, Lída Baarová.

    Goebbels needed a chance to improve his standing in the eyes of Hitler. At 1:20 am on the 10th. November 1938, Reinhard Heydrich sent an urgent secret telegram to the Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police) and the Sturmabteilung (SA), containing instructions regarding the riots.

    This included guidelines for the protection of foreigners and non-Jewish businesses and property. Police were instructed not to interfere with the riots unless the guidelines were violated. Police were also instructed to seize Jewish archives from synagogues and community offices, and to arrest and detain "healthy male Jews, who are not too old", for eventual transfer to (labour) concentration camps.

    Rioting

    Müller, in a message to SA and SS commanders, stated that the most extreme measures were to be taken against Jewish people.

    The SA and Hitler Youth shattered the windows of about 7,500 Jewish stores and businesses, hence the appellation Kristallnacht (Crystal Night), and looted their goods.

    Jewish homes were ransacked throughout Germany. Although violence against Jews had not been explicitly condoned by the authorities, there were cases of Jews being beaten or assaulted. Following the violence, police departments recorded a large number of suicides and rapes.

    The rioters destroyed 267 synagogues throughout Germany, Austria, and the Sudetenland. Over 1,400 synagogues and prayer rooms, many Jewish cemeteries, more than 7,000 Jewish shops, and 29 department stores were damaged, and in many cases destroyed. More than 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and imprisoned in Nazi concentration camps; primarily Dachau, Buchenwald, and Sachsenhausen.

    The synagogues, some centuries old, were victims of considerable violence and vandalism, with the tactics the Stormtroops practised on these and other sacred sites described as "approaching the ghoulish" by the United States Consul in Leipzig.

    Tombstones were uprooted and graves violated. Fires were lit, and prayer books, scrolls, artwork and philosophy texts were thrown upon them, and buildings were either burned or smashed until unrecognizable. Eric Lucas recalls the destruction of the synagogue that a tiny Jewish community had constructed in a small village only twelve years earlier:

    "It did not take long before the first heavy
    grey stones came tumbling down, and the
    children of the village amused themselves
    as they flung stones into the many colored
    windows.
    When the first rays of a cold and pale
    November sun penetrated the heavy dark
    clouds, the little synagogue was but a heap
    of stone, broken glass and smashed-up
    woodwork.

    After this, the Jewish community was fined 1 billion Reichsmarks (equivalent to 7 billion in 2020 USD). The Daily Telegraph correspondent, Hugh Greene, wrote of events in Berlin:

    "Mob law ruled in Berlin throughout the afternoon
    and evening and hordes of hooligans indulged in
    an orgy of destruction.
    I have seen several anti-Jewish outbreaks in Germany
    during the last five years, but never anything as
    nauseating as this.
    Racial hatred and hysteria seem to have taken
    complete hold of otherwise decent people. I saw
    fashionably dressed women clapping their hands
    and screaming with glee, while respectable
    middle-class mothers held up their babies to see
    the ‘fun’".

    Many Berliners were however deeply ashamed of the pogrom, and some took great personal risks to offer help. The son of a US consular official heard the janitor of his block cry:

    "They must have emptied the insane asylums
    and penitentiaries to find people who’d do
    things like that!"

    Tucson News TV channel briefly reported on a 2008 remembrance meeting at a local Jewish congregation. According to eyewitness Esther Harris:

    "They ripped up the belongings, the books,
    knocked over furniture, shouted obscenities".

    Göring, who was in favour of expropriating the Jews rather than destroying Jewish property as had happened in the pogrom, complained directly to Sicherheitspolizei Chief Heydrich immediately after the events:

    "I’d rather you had done in two-hundred
    Jews than destroy so many valuable assets!"

    The persecution and economic damage inflicted upon German Jews continued after the pogrom, even as their places of business were ransacked. They were forced to pay a collective fine of one billion marks for the murder of vom Rath (equal to roughly $US 5.5 billion in today’s currency), which was levied by the compulsory acquisition of 20% of all Jewish property by the state.

    Six million Reichsmarks of insurance payments for property damage owing to the Jewish community were to be paid to the government instead as "damages to the German Nation".

    The number of emigrating Jews surged, as those who were able to left the country. In the ten months following Kristallnacht, more than 115,000 Jews emigrated from the Reich. The majority went to other European countries, the U.S. and Mandatory Palestine, and at least 14,000 made it to Shanghai, China.

    As part of government policy, the Nazis seized houses, shops, and other property the émigrés left behind. Many of the destroyed remains of Jewish property plundered during Kristallnacht were dumped near Brandenburg.

    In October 2008, this dumpsite was discovered by Yaron Svoray, an investigative journalist. The site, the size of four Association football fields, contained an extensive array of personal and ceremonial items looted during the riots against Jewish property and places of worship on the night of the 9th. November 1938. It is believed the goods were brought by rail to the outskirts of the village and dumped on designated land. Among the items found were glass bottles engraved with the Star of David, mezuzot, painted window sills, and the armrests of chairs found in synagogues, in addition to an ornamental swastika.

    Responses to Kristallnacht

    The reaction of non-Jewish Germans to Kristallnacht was varied. Many spectators gathered at the scenes, most of them in silence. The local fire departments confined themselves to prevent the flames from spreading to neighbouring buildings. In Berlin, police Lieutenant Otto Bellgardt barred SA troopers from setting the New Synagogue on fire, earning his superior officer a verbal reprimand from the commissioner.

    The British historian Martin Gilbert believes that many non-Jews resented the round-up, his opinion being supported by German witness Dr. Arthur Flehinger who recalls seeing people crying while watching from behind their curtains.

    Rolf Dessauers recalls how a neighbour came forward and restored a portrait of Paul Ehrlich that had been slashed to ribbons by the Sturmabteilung:

    "He wanted it to be known that
    not all Germans supported
    Kristallnacht."

    The extent of the damage done on Kristallnacht was so great that many Germans are said to have expressed their disapproval of it, and to have described it as senseless.

    In an article released for publication on the evening of the 11th. November, Goebbels ascribed the events of Kristallnacht to the "healthy instincts" of the German people. He went on to explain:

    "The German people are anti-Semitic. It has
    no desire to have its rights restricted or to
    be provoked in the future by parasites of
    the Jewish race."

    Less than 24 hours after Kristallnacht, Adolf Hitler made a one-hour long speech in front of a group of journalists where he completely ignored the recent events on everyone’s mind. According to Eugene Davidson, the reason for this was that Hitler wished to avoid being directly connected to an event that he was aware that many of those present condemned, regardless of Goebbels’s unconvincing explanation that Kristallnacht was caused by popular wrath.

    Goebbels met the foreign press in the afternoon of the 11th. November and said that the burning of synagogues and damage to Jewish owned property had been:

    "Spontaneous manifestations of indignation
    against the murder of Herr Vom Rath by the
    young Jew Grynsban [sic]".

    As it was aware that the German public generally did not support the Kristallnacht, the propaganda ministry directed the German press to portray opponents of racial persecution as disloyal.

    The press was also under orders to downplay the Kristallnacht, describing general events at the local level only, with prohibition against depictions of individual events.[64] In 1939 this was extended to a prohibition on reporting any anti-Jewish measures.

    To the consternation of the Nazis, the Kristallnacht affected public opinion counter to their desires, the peak of opposition against the Nazi racial policies was reached just then, when according to almost all accounts the vast majority of Germans rejected the violence perpetrated against the Jews. Verbal complaints grew rapidly in numbers, and for example, the Dusseldorf branch of the Gestapo reported a sharp decline in anti-Semitic attitudes among the population.

    While individual Catholics and Protestants took action, the churches as a whole chose silence publicly. Nevertheless, individuals continued to show courage, for example, a parson paid the medical bills of a Jewish cancer patient and was sentenced to a large fine and several months in prison in 1941.

    Reformed Church pastor Paul Schneider placed a Nazi sympathizer under church discipline and he was subsequently sent to Buchenwald where he was murdered. A Protestant parson spoke out in 1943 and was sent to Dachau concentration camp where he died after a few days. A Catholic nun was sentenced to death in 1945 for helping Jews.

    Kristallnacht as a Turning Point

    Kristallnacht changed the nature of the Nazi persecution of Jews from economic, political, and social to physical with beatings, incarceration, and murder; the event is often referred to as the beginning of the Holocaust.

    In this view, it is described not only as a pogrom, but also as a critical stage within a process where each step becomes the seed of the next. An account cited that Hitler’s green light for Kristallnacht was made with the belief that it would help him realize his ambition of getting rid of the Jews in Germany.

    Prior to this large-scale and organized violence against the Jews, the Nazis’ primary objective was to eject them from Germany, leaving their wealth behind. In the words of historian Max Rein in 1988:

    "Kristallnacht came…and
    everything was changed."

    While November 1938 predated the overt articulation of "The Final Solution", it foreshadowed the genocide to come. Around the time of Kristallnacht, the SS newspaper Das Schwarze Korps called for a "destruction by swords and flames."

    At a conference on the day after the pogrom, Hermann Göring said:

    "The Jewish problem will reach its solution if,
    in anytime soon, we will be drawn into war
    beyond our border—then it is obvious that we
    will have to manage a final account with the
    Jews."

    Kristallnacht was also instrumental in changing global opinion. In the United States, for instance, it was this specific incident that came to symbolize Nazism and was the reason the Nazis became associated with evil.

    Kristallnacht was publicly referenced on the 10th. January 2021 by former Governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger in a speech decrying the actions of President Donald Trump and the attack he was said to have incited on the U.S. Capitol on the 6th. January.

    Posted by pepandtim on 2021-04-05 09:00:59

    Tagged: , postcard , old , early , nostalgia , nostalgic , Selworthy , Green , Kristallnacht , Frith , Reigate , printed , England , Waltham , Cross , 08/11/1938 , 1938 , 53SGP94 , Miss , Huddlestone , Wellhouse , Lane , Barnet , Herts. , Hertfordshire , tea , friend , sister , Jewish , suppression , Germany , broken , glass , shards , Herschel , Grynszpan , Ernst , vom , Rath , Arnold , Schwarzenegger

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  • Fulda, Germany, Cathedral, Fuldaer Dom, Sankt Salvator

    Fulda, Germany, Cathedral, Fuldaer Dom, Sankt Salvator

    Fulda, Germany, Cathedral, Fuldaer Dom, Sankt Salvator

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Fulda Cathedral
    The Cathedral of Christ the Saviour
    Fuldaer Dom

    Fulda Cathedral
    Fulda Cathedral is located in Germany

    Location in Germany
    50°33′14″N 9°40′18″ECoordinates: 50°33′14″N 9°40′18″E
    LocationFulda
    CountryGermany
    DenominationCatholic
    History
    Former name(s)The Abbey Church of Fulda
    StatusCathedral
    Founded23 April 1704
    Founder(s)Adalbert von Schleifras
    DedicationSaint Boniface
    Dedicated15 August 1712
    Past bishop(s)Sturmius , Johannes Dyba , Heinz Josef Algermissen
    Architecture
    Functional statusActive
    Architect(s)Johann Dientzenhofer
    Architectural typeChurch
    StyleBaroque
    Completed1712
    Specifications
    Length99 m (324 ft 10 in)
    Height39 m (127 ft 11 in)
    Number of spires2
    Spire height65 m (213 ft 3 in)
    Bells10
    Administration
    DioceseFulda
    ProvincePaderborn
    Clergy
    Bishop(s)Michael Gerber

    Fulda Cathedral (German: Fuldaer Dom, also Sankt Salvator)[1][2] is the former abbey church of Fulda Abbey and the burial place of Saint Boniface. Since 1752 it has also been the cathedral of the Diocese of Fulda, of which the Prince-Abbots of Fulda were created bishops. The abbey was dissolved in 1802 but the diocese and its cathedral have continued. The dedication is to Christ the Saviour (Latin: Salvator). The cathedral constitutes the high point of the Baroque district of Fulda, and is a symbol of the town.

    History

    The present cathedral stands on the site of the Ratgar Basilica (once the largest basilica north of the Alps), which was the burial site of Saint Boniface and the church of Fulda Abbey, functions which the new building was intended to continue.

    The plans of the new church were drawn up in 1700 by one of the greatest German Baroque architects, Johann Dientzenhofer, who was commissioned by the Prince-Abbot Adalbert von Schleifras for the new building on the recommendation of the Pope after Dientzenhofer’s study trip to Rome in 1699. The deliberate similarity of the church’s internal arrangement to that of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome is testimony to Dientzenhofer’s visit.

    The Ratgar Basilica was demolished to make way for the new Baroque structure, on which construction began on 23 April 1704[3] using in part the foundations of the earlier basilica. In 1707 the shell was completed. The roof was finished in 1708 and the interior in 1712. The new abbey church was dedicated on 15 August 1712. The dedication tablet placed on the facade by von Schleifras gives the dedication as Christus Salvator.[4]

    The new Baroque building, like its predecessor, served as the abbey church and the burial shrine of Saint Boniface. In 1752 it was elevated to a cathedral on the creation of the Diocese of Fulda. In 1802 Fulda Abbey was dissolved and the cathedral’s function as the abbey church ceased, but it continued in operation as the seat of the Bishops of Fulda.

    On 4 June 1905 during celebrations of the 1150th anniversary of the death of Saint Boniface a stray firework lodged in the righthand tower and started a fire (it is presumed to have set light to old jackdaws’ nests). The tower was burnt out, and the bells Osanna and Bonifatius were destroyed. Other parts of the cathedral were not damaged.

    After damage caused by air raids during World War II the cathedral was closed for restoration until 1954.

    Pope John Paul II visited Fulda on 17 and 18 November 1980. More than 100,000 people were present on the cathedral square on 18 November to attend the open-air mass celebrated by the Pope.[5]
    Architecture
    Orientation

    Like the Ratgar Basilica before it, and St. Peter’s in Rome, but unlike the great majority of European churches, Fulda Cathedral is oriented to the west. The main facade onto the cathedral square is the east front, and the choir is located at the west end of the nave. (The Ratgar Basilica had a second choir to the east, which Dientzenhofer did not replicate in his new building).
    Dimensions

    The cathedral is 99 meters long and 39 meters high into the top of the dome. The main frontage is flanked by two towers 65 meters high.
    Form and ground plan

    The building is a basilica, with a central aisle and two side aisles, and two transepts separated by the crossing, over which is the dome. The ground plan is thus a cross with double arms. The nave is extended to the east by the addition of an entrance hall, the two facade towers and two domed chapels (St. Andrew’s Chapel and St. John’s Chapel). Beyond the crossing and the northern transept the chancel continues, with the high altar and beyond it the choir, with the crypt of Saint Boniface beneath. The side aisles run parallel to the main aisle up to the sacristy and the Lady Chapel, which is directly adjacent to the former monastic buildings.
    Exterior

    Bell towers

    The facade is flanked by two towers 65 metres high, the four storeys of which are clearly delineated by ledges. Sandstone statues, greater than life size, by Andreas Balthasar Weber, represent to the right Saint Sturm as abbot, with a mitre, abbot’s staff and book, and to the left Saint Boniface as bishop with a crook and a Bible pierced by a dagger. On the third storey are copper and gilt numerals and hands belonging to a mechanical clock and a sundial.
    Main portal

    Four massive three-quarter columns accompanied by half-pilasters stand to either side of the main portal and support the architrave, the frieze with its triglyphs and the heavy cornices. On the architrave over segments of a round arch sit two large angels, supporting the arms of the Prince-Abbot Adalbert von Schleifras, sculpted by Balthasar Esterbauer, consisting of the arms of Fulda Abbey quartering those of von Schleifras.

    The portal door is ornamented with Corinthian pilasters and wrought iron door fittings.

    The upper storey of the facade is divided by massive pillars. A large round-topped window is decorated with columns, inflexed arches and urns. The window is surrounded by sandstone sculptures representing the patron saints of Fulda, the twin brothers Simplicius and Faustinus, as knights. Their shields bear their symbol – three lilies – and the cross, the device of the abbey, both of which appear in the arms of the town of Fulda.

    The central part of the facade is terminated by a triangular gable filled with urns and a round window. On the point of the gable stands a figure of Christ giving a blessing.
    Obelisks

    Next to the two domed chapels stand a pair of sandstone obelisks about 11 metres high, the function of which, besides being decorative, is to make the facade appear broader. On the Abschlussplatte is a pedestal with four rampant lions, and above them the arms of von Schleifras with various inscriptions.
    Interior

    The white interior combines elements of St. Peter’s Basilica and St. John Lateran in Rome. The magnificent decoration shows the influence of Roman Baroque. The overall effect is dominated by the contrast between the white of the walls and of the stucco on the one hand and the black and gold of the architectonic elements and of the fittings on the other. Giovanni Battista Artari, a stuccoist, decorative artist and sculptor, created the stucco work of the interior as well as the larger than life-size stucco figures of the Apostles, who are represented in accordance with their description by the Apostle Paul in Galatians 2.9 as "pillars" of the church.
    The Golden Wheel

    A great curiosity in both the old Ratgar Basilica and the later Baroque church and cathedral was the so-called "Golden Wheel" (German: das Goldene Rad), a medieval musical apparatus, which was made in 1415 during the rule of the Abbot Johann I von Merlau and for over 370 years delighted the faithful with its evocation of the "music of the spheres". It was in the form of a great star, consisting of 14 rays about 2.5 metres long mounted on a round metal plate; from the rays hung 350 bells. It was set and kept in motion by two ropes or cables running round an axle, by which the star could be kept turning and the bells ringing. It was lavishly decorated with glittering golden Gothic floral finials and vesica-shaped decorations.[6]

    By the time it was reinstalled in the new Baroque church in 1712 there were only 127 bells remaining.

    It was hung in the nave to the east of the dome. In 1781 a cable broke during the Whitsun service and the heavy wheel crashed to the ground causing deaths and injuries. It was left in a barn for two years, and before a decision could be reached about whether it should be re-hung, all the bells had disappeared. The bishop’s smith then broke it up and reused the metal.
    Dome

    Dientzenhofer was inspired in the design of the dome by that of the Church of Il Gesù in Rome, the mother church of the Jesuit Order, and like that of Il Gesù, the dome of Fulda Cathedral is intended to be the visual focal point of the building. In the spandrels above the pillars of the dome are well-preserved frescoes by Luca Antonio Columba, depicting the four Evangelists. In the niches are stucco figures greater than life-size by Giovanni Battista Artari: directly in front of the high altar stands the Archangel Michael holding scales and a sword, with the devil at his feet; to the left, the Archangel Gabriel holding a lily; to the right the Archangel Raphael holding a censer; and at the back a guardian angel, showing a child the way to heaven. Finally in the dome itself is a stucco figure of the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove in a burst of radiance.
    Fittings and furnishings
    Pulpit
    Bells

    The cathedral has ten bells hung in the two towers: bells 1–3 in the north tower, and bells 4–10 in the south tower.

    The Salvator is the only bell now surviving of the set cast in 1897 by Carl & Rudolf Edelbrock. In 1908 Carl Edelbrock added an Osanna.

    The Osanna which now hangs in the top storey of the north tower is a different bell, cast by Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling. It is supposed to be one of the best bells he ever cast: the story is that it did not need to be tuned after casting. The present Sturmius and Lioba bells were recast from bells of 1897 which were not in tune with the 1908 Osanna. In 1994 the Karlsruher Glocken- und Kunstgießerei cast five bells to replace another five smaller bells from the set of 1897.
    High altar

    The sculptor Johann Neudecker and the stuccoist Giovanni Battista Artari worked together to make the high altar, which on 15 August 1712 Prince-Abbot Adalbert von Schleifras dedicated in honour of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary,[1] as she is received by the Holy Trinity.
    Organ

    Between 1708 and 1713 an organ was built in the new church by the Franciscan Adam Öhninger, with 41 registers on three keyboards and pedals.[7] Andreas Balthasar Weber and the artist-woodworker Georg Blank undertook the carvings on the organ case. In a comprehensive restoration of the cathedral between 1992 and 1996 the case was restored and the old colours that were discovered were replaced as close as possible in the original. The Rieger Orgelbau company completed in 1996 the new organ works, using some of the pipes from the old Sauer organ. The present organ comprises 5 divisions on 4 manuals and the pedals with 72 registers.
    Crypt
    The tomb of Saint Boniface

    The Boniface Chapel in the crypt is a survival from the Ratgar Basilica and houses the remains of Saint Boniface, the "Apostle of the Germans", in a sarcophagus, which also has a relief carving and an antependium by Johann Neudecker. During his visit to Fulda in 1980, Pope John Paul II prayed at the tomb of Saint Boniface and in his sermon emphasized Boniface’s importance as the beginning of the gospel in Germany.[8]
    Surroundings of the cathedral

    To the north of the cathedral is the former St. Michael’s Priory, since 1831 the bishop’s residence, and the Carolingian St. Michael’s Church. Directly attached to the cathedral to the west are the Baroque former conventual buildings of the abbey, constructed between 1771 and 1778, now the Theological Department of the University of Fulda. Nearby is the modern chapel of the Catholic seminary, which was built 1966-1968 by the architect Sep Ruf. South of the monastery is the deanery and the dean’s garden, where a lapidarium is now located. In part of the deanery buildings is the cathedral museum.
    Cathedral museum

    The adjoining cathedral museum contains numerous liturgical vestments and vessels, including the "Silver Altar", dating from the 18th century, which includes a reliquary for the head of Saint Boniface and the dagger with which he was murdered, besides others of his relics.
    Cathedral square
    On the cathedral square directly in front of the main entrance large open-air concerts regularly take place, sometimes featuring international stars (e.g., José Carreras, Chris de Burgh).

    Posted by photolibrarian on 2022-05-15 18:53:50

    Tagged: , Fulda, Germany , Cathedral , Fuldaer Dom , Sankt Salvator , Boy and Wagon

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  • Woodworking Inspiration: [P1250476]

    An idea for <a href=woodworking [P1250476]”>

    Unfortunately, as an AI language model, I am unable to determine which content you are referring to. Please provide me with more information or a link to the specific content you want me to summarize.

    Posted by SeppoU [Read ‘About’ for info!] on 2013-09-25 16:43:07

  • The Hotel of the Hunter

    The Hunter Hotel

    The abandoned hotel is a mystery that lies deep within Germany’s dense forests. This once grand hotel, which was built in the early 1900s, was once the most sought-after destination for wealthy travellers. It was a lavish hotel with all the amenities and luxuries that people could desire.

    However, as the years went by, the hotel slowly lost its charm and glamour. Tourists stopped visiting, staff members left, and the hotel became a desolate place. Now, it stands abandoned and forgotten, a relic of a time long gone.

    The hotel’s history is shrouded in mystery. No one knows why it was abandoned or what led to its downfall. Some say that it was cursed, while others say that it fell victim to economic turmoil.

    Despite its abandoned state, the hotel still manages to attract visitors from all over the world. It has become an urban explorer’s paradise, with people travelling from far and wide to explore its corridors, crawl spaces, and hidden rooms.

    The hotel is surrounded by dense forests and imposing mountains, which only serve to enhance its eerie and ominous atmosphere. The hotel’s sprawling rooms and cavernous halls, once filled with laughter and merriment, now lay empty and covered in a thick layer of dust.

    As I walked through the hotel’s decaying halls, I couldn’t help but feel a sense of sadness and despair. It was as if the hotel was still mourning its lost glory, trapped in a never-ending cycle of regret and disappointment.

    The hotel’s grand ballroom, which was once the site of countless lavish parties and celebrations, now lay silent and abandoned. The room was littered with broken furniture and decaying drapes, and the once sparkling chandeliers had been reduced to mere skeletons of their former selves.

    The hotel’s guest rooms were equally distressing, with mold and decay taking over at every turn. The walls were dotted with peeling wallpaper, and the floorboards creaked ominously underfoot.

    Despite the hotel’s sorry state, it remains a true testament to the grandeur and elegance of a bygone era. It reminds us that even the most beautiful of things can fall victim to decay and neglect.

    In conclusion, the abandoned hotel in Germany is a forgotten gem that serves as a haunting reminder of our fleeting existence. It is a place that evokes a sense of melancholy in all who dare to explore its abandoned halls. It is a place where the past and present collide, and where the beauty of a bygone era meets the unforgiving reality of the present.

    Posted by Jonnie Lynn Lace on 2022-06-13 12:21:24

  • New York – Plaza Hotel Prior to 1921. And Donald Trump.

    New York – Plaza Hotel Prior to 1921. And Donald Trump.

    New York - Plaza Hotel Prior to 1921. And Donald Trump.

    The Postcard

    A postcard that was published by the Success Postal Card Co., Publishers, of New York. The card was printed in Germany.

    The card was posted in New York on Monday the 1st. August 1921 to:

    Mr. Jos. C. Aigner,
    Unlawater House,
    Newnham-on-Severn,
    Gloucestershire,
    England.

    Unlawater house is a mansion overlooking the River Severn. At some point in its history it was split into flats.

    The message side of the divided back of the card has been hand-stamped with the date and the sender’s name and address:

    "Aug 1st. 1921.
    Frank Tobias,
    332 East 73rd. St.,
    New York, N.Y."

    (So good they etc. etc.)

    The Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel (also known as The Plaza) is a luxury hotel and condominium apartment building in Midtown Manhattan in New York City. It is on the western side of Grand Army Plaza, just west of Fifth Avenue, between 58th. Street and Central Park South.

    The Plaza Hotel is named after Grand Army Plaza, which in turn is at the south-eastern corner of Central Park. Its primary address is at 768 Fifth Avenue, though the residential entrance is at One Central Park South.

    The 21-story, French Renaissance-inspired château-style building was designed by Henry Janeway Hardenbergh. The façade is made of marble at the base and white brick in the intermediate stories, while the hotel is topped by a mansard roof.

    The ground floor contains the two primary lobbies, as well as a corridor connecting the large ground-floor restaurant spaces, including the Oak Room, the Oak Bar, the Edwardian Room, the Palm Court, and the Terrace Room.

    The upper stories contain the ballroom and a variety of residential condominiums, condo-hotel suites, and short-term hotel suites. At its peak, the Plaza Hotel had over 800 rooms. Following a renovation in 2008, the building has had 282 hotel rooms and 181 condos.

    A predecessor hotel of the same name was built from 1883 to 1890. The original hotel was replaced by the current structure from 1905 to 1907.

    Warren and Wetmore designed an expansion to the Plaza Hotel from 1919 to 1921, and several major renovations were conducted through the rest of the 20th. century.

    The Plaza Operating Company, which erected the current building, operated the hotel until 1943. Subsequently, it was sold to several owners during the remainder of the 20th. century, including Conrad Hilton, A.M. Sonnabend, Westin Hotels & Resorts, Donald Trump, and a partnership of City Developments Limited and Al-Waleed bin Talal.

    The Plaza Hotel was renovated again after El Ad Properties purchased it in 2005, and the hotel was subsequently sold to Sahara India Pariwar, and most recently to Katara Hospitality.

    Since its inception, the Plaza Hotel has become an icon of New York City, with numerous wealthy and famous guests. The restaurant spaces and ballrooms have hosted events such as weddings, balls, benefits, and press conferences. The hotel’s design, as well as its location near Central Park, has generally received positive acclaim. In addition, the Plaza Hotel has appeared in numerous books and films. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the hotel’s exterior and some of its interior spaces as city landmarks, and the building is also a National Historic Landmark.

    The Site of the Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel is at 768 Fifth Avenue and One Central Park South in the Midtown Manhattan neighbourhood. It faces Central Park South (59th. Street) and the Pond and Hallett Nature Sanctuary in Central Park to the north; Grand Army Plaza to the east; and 58th. Street to the south.

    The Plaza Hotel’s site covers 53,772 square feet (4,995.6 m2). It measures 285 feet (87 m) along 58th. Street and 275 feet (84 m) along Central Park South, with a depth of 201 feet (61
    m) between the two streets.

    The Plaza Hotel’s main entrance faces the Pulitzer Fountain in the southern portion of Grand Army Plaza. An entrance to the Fifth Avenue–59th. Street subway station is within the base of the hotel at Central Park South.

    Fifth Avenue between 42nd. Street and Central Park South was relatively undeveloped through the late 19th century, when brownstone rowhouses were built on the avenue. By the early 1900’s however, that section of Fifth Avenue was becoming a commercial area.

    The first decade of the 20th. century saw the construction of hotels, stores, and clubs such as the St. Regis New York, University Club of New York, and the Gotham Hotel. The corner of Fifth Avenue, Central Park South, and 59th. Street was developed with the Plaza, Savoy, and New Netherland hotels during the 1890’s; the Savoy would be replaced in 1927 by the Savoy-Plaza Hotel, which itself would be demolished in 1964. All three hotels contributed to Fifth Avenue’s importance as an upscale area.

    Design of The Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel, a French Renaissance-inspired château-style building, contains 21 stories and is 252 ft (77 m) tall. The Plaza Hotel’s floors use a European floor-numbering pattern, where floor 1, corresponding to the second storey, is directly above the ground floor.

    The hotel was designed by Henry Janeway Hardenbergh in 1907, with a later addition by Warren and Wetmore from 1919 to 1922.

    The other interior spaces were designed by Annabelle Selldorf, and date largely to a renovation in 2008. Numerous contractors were involved in the construction of the hotel, including terracotta contractor Atlantic Terra Cotta and brick contractor Pfotenhauer & Nesbit.

    The Façade of The Plaza Hotel

    The detail of the façade is concentrated on its two primary elevations, which face north toward Central Park and east toward Fifth Avenue. The façade consists of three horizontal sections similar to the components of a column, namely a base, shaft, and crown.

    The northern and eastern elevations are also split vertically into three portions, with the centre portion being recessed. The north-eastern and south-eastern corners of the hotel contain rounded corners, which resemble turrets.

    There are numerous loggias, balustrades, columns, pilasters, balconies, and arches repeated on various parts of the facade. The 1921 annex contains a design that is largely similar to Hardenbergh’s 1907 design.

    Mechanical Features of The Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel originally contained three sets of pneumatic tube mail systems: one for guest mail, another for guests to order food from the kitchen, and a third for the hotel’s various operating departments.

    The hotel also originally had 10 passenger elevators, 13 dumbwaiters, and three sidewalk lifts. The hotel’s water storage tanks had a capacity of 75,000 U.S. gallons (280,000 L), and the hotel could filter 1,500,000 U.S. gallons (5,700,000 L) of water from the New York City water supply system each day.

    The mechanical plant in the subbasement originally contained nine 3,500 horsepower (2,600 kW) boilers; a coal plant with a capacity of 680 tons, fourteen ventilating fans; and an electric generating plant with a capacity of 1,100 kilowatts (1,500 hp).

    Also in the subbasement was a refrigerating plant that could generate 14 tons of ice every 24 hours, as well as a switchboard made of Tennessee marble, which controlled the hotel’s power and lighting.

    Structure of the Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel was developed with a steel frame superstructure and hollow tile floors, as well as wire-glass enclosures around all stairways and elevators. Originally, five marble staircases led from the ground floor to all of the other floors.

    As constructed, the stories above the ground floor surrounded a large courtyard, which was covered over with office space in a 1940’s renovation. Hardenbergh, in designing the Central Park South foyer, had believed the lobby to be the most important space in the hotel, as did Warren and Wetmore when they designed the Fifth Avenue lobby. Furthermore, Warren and Wetmore had thought restaurants to be the second most significant space in a hotel, in designing the Terrace Room.

    There were originally laundry rooms in the basement and on floor 18. The basement also contained a grill room, kitchen, various refrigeration rooms, and amenities such as a Turkish bath and a barber shop when it opened in 1907.

    Concealed within the mansard roof were originally the housekeepers’ quarters and maids’ dormitories; the eighteenth floor had carpentry, ironing, and tailors’ departments. The spaces on floor 18 had become offices by the late 20th. century.

    Hallways and Lobbies of The Plaza Hotel

    In Hardenbergh’s original design, a main corridor was built to connect the primary spaces on the ground floor. The corridor, which still exists, connects the lobbies on 58th. Street, Grand Army Plaza, and Central Park South.

    The layout of the ground-floor hallways dates largely from the 1921 expansion by Warren and Wetmore. The corridor wraps around the south, east, and north sides of the Palm Court in the centre of the ground floor.

    All of the halls are decorated with mosaic floors, coffered ceilings made of plaster, and marble columns and pilasters with bronze capitals.

    The Central Park South Entrance Foyer

    The Central Park South entrance foyer served as the original main lobby, and is shaped in a "U", with an overhanging mezzanine. It contains veined Italian-marble finishes, gold-colored trimmings, a mosaic floor, a plaster coffered ceiling, and columns similar to those in the main corridor.

    There is a bank of four elevators directly in front of the entrance, with decorative bronze doors. A crystal chandelier hangs from the ceiling. The entrance doorways contain bronze frames with lunettes.

    The Fifth Avenue Lobby

    The Grand Army Plaza lobby, also called the Fifth Avenue lobby, was created during Warren and Wetmore’s expansion as the hotel’s new main lobby, occupying the former Plaza Restaurant’s space. The lobby contains a "U"-shaped mezzanine running above the northern, eastern, and southern walls, with three entrance vestibules below the eastern section of the mezzanine.

    The Fifth Avenue lobby was decorated in bas-relief, and preserved some of the original decorations from the Plaza Restaurant, including panelled pilasters and a beamed ceiling. Other features, including the mosaic floor and a crystal chandelier, were added by Warren and Wetmore.

    The 58th. Street entrance has three elevators and adjoins what was formerly a women’s reception room. Running west of this lobby is a staircase leading up to a mezzanine-level corridor. This corridor has marble floors and ashlar walls.

    The layout of the upper floors was based on the layout of the ground-floor hallways, because all the stairways and elevators were placed in the same position on upper floors.

    The Oak Room

    The Oak Room, on the western part of the ground floor, was built in 1907 as the bar room. Compared to other spaces in the Plaza Hotel, it retains many details from the original design. The Oak Room was designed in a German Renaissance style. It features oak walls and floors, a coved ceiling, frescoes of Bavarian castles, faux wine casks carved into the woodwork, and a grape-laden brass chandelier.

    The Oak Bar

    The Oak Bar is just north of the Oak Room. It is designed in Tudor Revival style with a plaster ceiling, strapwork, and floral and foliage motifs. The bar room contains walnut woodwork with French furnishings. It also has three murals by Everett Shinn, which were added in a 1945 renovation and show the neighbourhood as it would have appeared in 1907. Prior to the 1945 renovation, it served as a brokerage office.

    The Edwardian Room

    The Edwardian Room, previously known as the Men’s Grill or Fifth Avenue Cafe, is at the northeast corner of the ground floor, measuring 50 by 65 feet (15 m × 20 m). It contains dark Flemish-oak panelling, with finishes and doorway surrounds made of Caen stone. The floor is inlaid with mosaic tiles. The beamed ceiling is inlaid with mirrors, and the room is lit by large windows and eight large bronze chandeliers.

    The Palm Court

    The Palm Court, previously known as the tea room, is in the centre of the ground floor. It contains a design inspired by the Winter Garden at the Carlton Hotel in London. It is outfitted with walls made of Caen stone. The Palm Court contains mosaic floors, as well as marble pilasters and columns, topped by bronze capitals. The Palm Court initially had a stained glass ceiling, which was removed in a 1940’s renovation, but it was restored in the mid-2000’s.

    The Terrace Room

    The Terrace Room, west of the Palm Court, is part of Warren and Wetmore’s 1921 design. The room was so-named because it contains three terraces. The terraces split the room in thirds, increasing in height from east to west; they are separated by balustrades and connected by small staircases.

    The space contains Renaissance style motifs on the pilasters, ceilings, and wall arches, as well as three chandeliers and rusticated-marble walls.

    The Persian Room

    The south-eastern corner of the ground floor originally contained the 58th. Street Restaurant, which was exclusively for the hotel’s permanent residents. In 1934, it was replaced by a nightclub called the Persian Room. The Persian Room had red and Persian blue upholstery by Joseph Urban, five wall murals by Lillian Gaertner Palmedo, and a 27 ft (8.2 m) bar. The Persian Room operated until 1978.

    The Ballroom

    The original double-height ballroom from Hardenbergh’s plan was on the north side of the second storey. The old ballroom, with a capacity of 500 to 600 people, was served by its own elevator and staircase, and contained a movable stage. It was served by its own entrance on 58th. Street. The old ballroom was replaced by offices by the 1970’s.

    The current ballroom on floor 1 is at the centre of that storey. It was initially designed by Warren and Wetmore, and had a capacity of 800 people during dinners and 1,000 people during dances. The room contained a coved ceiling with crosses, hexagons, and octagons, as well as six overhanging chandeliers. The ballroom had a stage on its western wall, within a rectangular opening.

    Warren and Wetmore’s ballroom was reconstructed in 1929 to a neoclassical design by Schultze & Weaver. The room has a white and cream color scheme with gold ornamentation, evocative of the original ballroom’s design. The stage remains on the western wall, but is within a rounded opening. The re-design added audience boxes on the north and east walls, with decorative metal railings.

    Condominiums and Suites of The Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel’s condominiums and suites start at the third storey, labelled as floor 2. As built, they contained three primary types of suites: those with one bedroom and one bathroom; those with two bedrooms and two bathrooms; and those with a parlour and a varying number of beds and baths.

    The walls were originally painted in rose, yellow, cream, and grey hues. For decorative effect, the rooms contained wooden wainscoting and furniture, while the plaster ceilings contained crystal chandeliers. A guest or resident could request multiple suites, since there were smaller private hallways adjacent to the main hallway on each floor.

    There were also staff rooms at the corners of the main corridor on each floor. Dumbwaiters led from the staff rooms to the basement kitchen, allowing guests to order meals and eat them in their suites.

    Following its 2008 renovation, the building contains 181 privately owned condominiums. The condominiums contain a variety of layouts, from studio apartments to three-storey penthouse units. The condos’ interior furnishings include parquet floors and stone counters, and largely reflect the original design of these rooms.

    There are also 282 hotel units on the southern side of the building. Of these, 152 condo-hotel units occupy the eleventh through twenty-first stories. The condo-hotel units serve as residences for investors or staff for up to four months a year, and are used as short-term hotel units for the remaining time. In addition, there are 130 rooms exclusively for short-term stays on the fourth through tenth stories. The hotel portion of the building retains a butler on each floor, reminiscent of the hotel’s original ambience.

    Hardenbergh’s design included the State Apartments on the northern side of floor 1. The state room was one of the most lavish suites in the entire hotel; it had a drawing room, antechambers, dining rooms, bedrooms and bathrooms, and food storage. The state room was turned into a private dining area and restored in 1974. Similarly ornate suites were located along the Central Park South side on eleven of the upper floors.

    History of the Plaza Hotel

    The lots making up the present-day Plaza Hotel were first parcelled and sold by the government of New York City in 1853, and acquired by John Anderson from 1870 to 1881. Prior to the Plaza Hotel’s development, the site was either occupied by the New York Skating Club, or was vacant. When John Anderson died in 1881, his will stipulated that his land would pass to his son, John Charles Anderson. The first development on the lot was proposed in 1882 when Ernest Flagg was enlisted to design a 12-storey apartment building for a syndicate led by his father Jared. However, the Flagg apartment development was not built, probably due to a lack of funding.

    The First Hotel on the Site

    John Duncan Phyfe and James Campbell acquired the site in 1883, and announced plans for a nine-storey apartment building. Construction began that same year. The builders borrowed over $800,000 from the New York Life Insurance Company, and obtained a second mortgage for a total investment of $2 million. By 1887, after taking three further loans from New York Life, Phyfe and Campbell found that they did not have enough funds to complete the apartment block.

    The extent to which the apartment building was completed before the builders’ bankruptcy is unclear. In February 1888, brothers Eugene M. and Frank Earle entered contract to lease the building from Phyfe and Campbell, and furnish it.

    New York Life concurrently foreclosed on the apartment building, and that September, bought it at public auction for $925,000. Shortly afterward, New York Life decided to remodel the interiors completely as a hotel, hiring architects McKim, Mead & White to complete it. New York Life leased the hotel to Frederick A. Hammond in 1889, and the Hammond brothers became the operators of the hotel for the next fifteen years.

    The first Plaza Hotel finally opened on the 1st. October 1890, at a cost of $3 million. The original hotel stood eight stories tall, and had 400 rooms. The interiors featured extensive mahogany and carved wood furnishings; lion motifs, representing the hotel’s coat of arms; and a 30-foot-tall (9.1 m) dining room, with stained glass windows and gold and white decorations. Moses King, in his 1893 Handbook of New York City, characterised the hotel as:

    "One of the most attractive public
    houses in the wide world".

    However, despite being described as fashionable, the hotel was not profitable. The New York Times reported in 1891 that the hotel netted $72,000 in rental income, out of the $1.8 million that New York Life had spent to complete the hotel, including loans to Phyfe and Campbell.

    Replacement and Early 20th. Century

    The first Plaza Hotel had been relatively remote when it was completed, but by the first decade of the 20th. century, was part of a rapidly growing commercial district on Fifth Avenue. Furthermore, several upscale hotels in Manhattan were also being re-built during that time.

    In May 1902, a syndicate purchased the Plaza and three adjacent lots on Central Park South for $3 million. The sale was the largest-ever cash-only purchase for a Manhattan property at the time. The purchase was headed by Harry S. Black—who headed the George A. Fuller Company, one of the syndicate’s members—as well as German financier Bernhard Beinecke.

    Shortly after the purchase, Black and Beinecke formed the Plaza Realty Company to redevelop the hotel. To acquire sufficient funding for the redevelopment, Black and Beinecke approached barbed-wire entrepreneur John Warne Gates, who agreed to fund the project on the condition that Frederic Sterry be named the managing director of the Plaza Hotel.

    Construction of The Plaza Hotel

    Henry J. Hardenbergh was hired as architect in 1905, initially being commissioned to expand the existing hotel by five stories. Hardenbergh had already gained some renown for designing other upscale hotels, such as the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, twenty-five blocks south, during the 1890’s.

    Beinecke, Black, and Gates subsequently discovered that the foundation of the existing hotel could not support the additional stories, so they decided to rebuild it completely.

    The first Plaza Hotel was closed on the 11th. June 1905, and demolition commenced immediately upon the expiration of the lease there. The existing hotel’s furnishings were auctioned immediately. The site was cleared within two months of the start of demolition. Hardenbergh filed plans for the hotel with the New York City Department of Buildings that September.

    By the next month, contractors were clearing the old hotel’s foundations. The new hotel required 9,100 tons of steel, and a group of 100 workers and seven derricks erected two stories of steelwork every six days.

    The Fuller Company decided to hire both union and non-union ironworkers for the hotel’s construction, a decision that angered the union workers. Patrolmen were hired to protect the non-union workers, and one patrolman was killed during a dispute with union workers. By October 1906, the façade of the new hotel was under construction.

    Hardenbergh and Sterry directed several firms to furnish the interior spaces, all of which were custom-designed for the hotel, such as 1,650 crystal chandeliers and the largest-ever order of gold-rimmed cutlery.

    Much of the furniture was manufactured by the Pooley Company of Philadelphia; where the Pooley Company could not manufacture the furnishings, the Plaza’s developers chartered ships to import material from Europe. Sterry was himself dispatched to Europe to purchase these materials.

    The developers anticipated that the hotel would cost $8.5 million to construct, including the furnishings. However, additional expenditures pushed the final construction cost to $12.5 million. To pay for the construction costs, the developers received a $5 million loan in mid-1906, followed by another $4.5 million loan in 1907.

    Opening and Expansion of The Plaza Hotel

    The new 800-room Plaza Hotel was opened on the 1st. October 1907, twenty-seven months after work had commenced. The opening was observed by people including Diamond Jim Brady; actresses Lillian Russell, Billie Burke, Maxine Elliott, and Fritzi Scheff; producers David Belasco and Oscar Hammerstein I; actor John Drew Jr.; and author Mark Twain.

    Though the opening coincided with the Panic of 1907, the hotel suffered minimal losses. The new hotel more than doubled the capacity of the first structure, and it was intended as a largely residential hotel at opening, although the terms for "hotel" and "apartment" were largely synonymous at the time.

    Ninety percent of the units were for long-term residents. The owners charged short-term guests $2.50 nightly. Gates, one of the original investors, was among the residents of the new Plaza; when he died in 1911, his funeral service was held at the hotel.

    Most of the public rooms were not originally given formal names. Although Hardenbergh had predicted that gender-segregated spaces would go out of fashion, there was a women’s reception room near 58th. Street, and the bar room and men’s grill (respectively the present Oak and Edwardian Rooms) were exclusively used by men. In practice, the men’s grill acted as a social club where business discussion was socially inappropriate, while the bar was a space for businessmen to talk.

    Between 1912 and the start of Prohibition in the United States in 1920, the brokerage office near the entrance, now the Oak Bar, was turned into an extension of the bar room.

    The Champagne Porch along Grand Army Plaza was the most exclusive area of the hotel, with meals costing between $50 and $500. The basement’s grill room hosted ice-skating in the summer, as well as a "dog check room" where residents’ dogs could be fed luxuriously. In its first decade, the Plaza employed a staff of over 1,500.

    From the start, the Plaza Operating Company was already preparing for the possibility of expansion, and it acquired the lots between 5 and 19 West 58th. Street in the first two decades of the 20th century. This land acquisition commenced before the second hotel had even opened. By 1915, the Plaza Operating Company had acquired four lots at West 58th. Street and one on Central Park South.

    The Plaza Operating Company received an exemption from the 1916 Zoning Resolution, which set height restrictions for new buildings on the 58th. Street side of the lots. The company filed plans for a 19-storey annex along 58th. Street in August 1919, to be designed by Warren and Wetmore. The George A. Fuller Company was again hired as the builder. To fund the construction of the annex, the Plaza Operating Company took out mortgage loans worth $2.275 million.

    The Champagne Porch was only frequented by the extremely wealthy, and after the start of Prohibition, Sterry decided to remove the room altogether in 1921. An enlarged entrance was placed at the site of the Champagne Porch. The work also included building a new restaurant called the Terrace Room, as well as a ballroom and 350 additional suites.

    The annex opened on the 14th. October 1921, with an event in the ballroom, but was not officially completed until April 1922. With the advent of Prohibition, the bar room was also closed, and the gender segregation rule was relaxed. The space occupied by the present-day Oak Bar became the offices of brokerage EF Hutton. The Plaza had become the city’s most valuable hotel by 1923.

    The Great Depression

    The Wall Street Crash of October 1929 heralded the Great Depression with a collapse of stock prices. Plaza Hotel co-owner Harry Black killed himself the following year in 1930, and his partner Bernhard Beinecke died two years later. The rebuilt Plaza’s first manager, Fred Sterry, died in 1933.

    The early 1930’s were financially difficult for the Plaza Hotel, as only half of the suites were occupied by 1932. To reduce operating costs for the hotel’s restaurants, the Grill Room in the basement was converted into a closet, while the Rose Room became an automobile showroom. The furnishings of the Plaza Hotel fell into disrepair and, during some months, management was unable to pay staff.

    By the mid-1930s, the old Tea Room was officially known as the Palm Court, having been frequently referred to as the "Palm Room" for the previous decade. The back room was reopened as the Oak Room restaurant in 1934, although it was still referred to as the "back room" by its frequent visitors, which included bankers and brokers.

    Hilton Operation of The Plaza Hotel

    The Atlas Corporation, collaborating with hotelier Conrad Hilton, bought the Plaza Hotel for $7.4 million in October 1943. At the time, the Plaza was 61 percent occupied, and many public areas were closed due to supply shortages caused by World War II.

    Hilton subsequently spent $6 million refurbishing the hotel. During mid-1944, the lobby on Fifth Avenue was renovated and its mezzanine was enclosed. The Palm Court skylight, having fallen into disrepair, was removed for the installation of air conditioning equipment.

    A mezzanine was also built above the hotel’s former courtyard, and the room itself became the Court Lounge. The brokerage office at the ground level’s north-western corner was turned into the Oak Bar, which opened in January 1945, and EF Hutton was relegated to the Fifth Avenue lobby’s mezzanine.

    The Plaza Hotel Corporation, the hotel’s operator, was merged into the Hilton Hotels Corporation in 1946. The following year, the Plaza Rendez-Vous opened within the old grill room space. By the early 1950’s, women were allowed inside the Oak Room and Bar during the evenings and summers. The Oak Room and Bar still acted as a men-only space before 3 p.m., while the stock exchanges operated.

    Hilton sold the hotel in 1953 to Boston industrialist A.M. "Sonny" Sonnabend for $15 million, and immediately leased it back for 2.5 years. Sonnabend became president of national restaurant chain Childs Company in 1955, and Childs purchased the Plaza that November, for $6.2 million in stock.

    The same year, the ground-floor Plaza Restaurant was renamed the Edwardian Room. James S. Graham Jr. simultaneously renovated the State Apartments, and air conditioning was installed in each guest room. Childs became the Hotel Corporation of America (HCA) in 1956, and Hilton’s lease was renewed indefinitely that year.

    HCA sold the Plaza to Lawrence Wien in November 1958 for $21 million, and immediately leased it back for 25 years. The transaction included curtailing Hilton’s lease to April 1960, upon which HCA assumed the operating lease.

    Sonnabend Operation

    The Plaza Hotel experienced financial difficulties during the early 1960’s, but under Sonnabend’s management, the Plaza’s financial outlook improved by 1964. The façade of the Plaza Hotel was cleaned in late 1960, the first time that the exterior had been fully cleaned since its construction. This was followed in 1962 by extensive exterior and interior renovations, which resulted in the redecoration of many of the suites and public rooms. Four of the hotel’s hydraulic elevators were replaced with electric elevators in 1964.

    A second phase of renovations was announced the same year, which entailed enlarging some public rooms and replacing the ground-floor barber shop with a Trader Vic’s bar. The improvements were completed by 1965, having cost $9 million.

    Upon Sonny Sonnabend’s death in 1964, his son Roger took over the hotel. Further changes to the hotel’s ownership occurred the next year, when Sol Goldman and Alexander DiLorenzo’s firm Wellington Associates bought an option to obtain a half-interest in the underlying land from Hilton.

    Gender restrictions at the Oak Room were removed in 1969, after the National Organization for Women held a sit-in to protest the men-only policy during middays. HCA, by then renamed Sonesta International Hotels, announced another round of renovations in 1971. This included the redecoration of the Grand Ballroom, as well as the replacement of the Edwardian Room with a restaurant called the Green Tulip.

    Sally Dryden’s pink, lime, and brown design for the Green Tulip received largely negative public reception.

    Westin Ownership

    In November 1974, Western International Hotels announced its intention to buy the Plaza Hotel from Sonesta for $25 million. The same year, the Edwardian Room was largely restored to designs by Charles Winslow, being rebranded as the Plaza Suite.

    Following Western International’s acquisition of the Plaza, it renovated the interior spaces, cleaned the exterior, and restored many of the original designs, at a total cost of $200 million. The four hydraulic elevators serving the Central Park South lobby, among the last of their type in the city, were also replaced with electric elevators in 1976.

    Westin also bought the Shinn murals for $1 million; they had not been part of the original sale. A 204-seat theatre called Cinema 3 opened in the basement. The Persian Room was closed in 1978 and a clothing boutique opened in its place. Westin had planned to restore the Palm Court’s skylight, but this did not happen.

    By the late 1970’s, the Plaza Hotel was again making a net profit. Western International changed its name to Westin Hotels in 1981. and the hotel was renamed soon after, becoming The Westin Plaza.

    However, Westin started to lose money in the late 1980’s. By 1987, Westin’s parent company announced its intention to sell the Plaza, generating interest from at least 150 investors. The Plaza, along with the rest of the Westin chain, were transferred to the Aoki Corporation and Robert M. Bass in January 1988.

    Shortly afterward, Philip Pilevsky and Arthur G. Cohen expressed their intention to buy the Plaza and turn it into a hotel-cooperative.

    Trump Ownership of The Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza was sold to real estate developer Donald Trump in March 1988 following a handshake agreement; the sale was valued at either $390 million or $410 million. After gaining title to the hotel that July, Trump appointed his wife Ivana as the hotel’s president.

    The Trumps subsequently announced a major renovation program, which entailed restoring the lobby and some of the other interior elements. The work also involved gilding many surfaces, replacing carpets, and reupholstering furniture. Trump also decided to shut the Trader Vic’s in the basement in 1989, saying it had become "tacky". The hotel made a modest profit for about two years after Trump’s purchase, largely from increased occupancy, suite rates, and banquet bookings.

    Trump had borrowed extensively to purchase the Plaza Hotel, but its operating income was several million dollars below the breakeven point. As a result, the Plaza Hotel’s debt ultimately grew to $600 million.

    By 1991, Trump was making plans to pay off the hotel’s debt by selling off the vast majority of its units as condominiums. Trump estimated that the conversion would net $750 million, almost twice the purchase price. Trump also considered converting the offices within the mansard roof to penthouse condos. The conversion plan failed because it would have been unprofitable, due to a then-recent drop-off in prices in the city’s real estate market.

    As a last resort, in March 1992, Trump approached the Plaza’s creditors, a group of seventy banks led by Citibank, who agreed to take a 49% stake in the hotel in exchange for forgiveness of $250 million in debt and an interest rate reduction.

    Sale to Kwek and Al-Waleed

    By 1994, Trump was looking to sell the Plaza before Citibank and other creditors could find a buyer, thereby wiping out his investment. One of his executives identified Hong Kong-based Sun Hung Kai Properties as a potential buyer. The deal fell through after the family of Sun Hung Kai executive Walter Kwok got trapped behind a jammed door while touring the Plaza Hotel.

    Trump, attempting to maintain public appearances, threatened to sue the New York Post that December for reporting that the Sultan of Brunei, Hassanal Bolkiah, had made an offer for the hotel. Meanwhile, the creditors had also identified Singaporean developer Kwek Leng Beng as a likely buyer.

    Kwek’s company, City Developments Limited (CDL), offered to take over the creditors’ ownership stake. Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal was also interested in buying the Plaza, and by March 1995, Al-Waleed and CDL had raised $325 million for a controlling stake. Trump unsuccessfully petitioned Kwek to partner with him instead of Al-Waleed.

    Trump sold the controlling stake to Kwek and Al-Waleed in April 1995. As part of the transaction, the hotel’s debt was cut by $25 million and Kwek and Al-Waleed each bought a 42 percent stake. Citibank received the other 16 percent stake, a move intended to prevent Trump from intervening in the sale.

    The partnership also agreed that, if the mansard penthouses were ever created, some of the profits would be shared with Trump.

    In 1997, Hong Kong developer Great Eagle Holdings agreed to buy half of Al-Waleed’s stake in the Plaza Hotel. DiLorenzo International renovated the ballroom in the mid-1990’s.

    The Plaza became highly profitable in the late 1990’s, with an operating income of almost $46 million at the end of that decade.

    The Plaza Hotel in the 21st. century

    The Plaza Hotel turned 100 years old in October 2007, celebrating with ceremonies and fireworks.

    The September 11 attacks in 2001 resulted in a downturn in the NYC tourism industry. Correspondingly, the Plaza’s operating profits decreased greatly, leaving Kwek and Al-Waleed unable to refurbish the Plaza as they had previously planned to do.

    In 2004, they sold the Plaza Hotel for $675 million to developer El Ad Properties.

    El Ad wished to add residential and commercial units, but initially faced pushback from hotel unions and preservationists, who opposed El Ad’s plan to remove most of the hotel rooms and convert the restaurant spaces to retail stores.

    After over sixty hours of discussions between El Ad and the hotel unions, they came to an agreement on the 14th. April 2005, in which El Ad would convert fewer units to apartments, while preserving more of the hotel suites.

    The Plaza Hotel temporarily closed for a $450 million renovation on the 30th. April 2005, two weeks after the agreement had been brokered. The Plaza’s furnishings were auctioned on-site.

    Fairmont Hotels and Resorts took over operation of the hotel portion. During the renovation, most of the short-term hotel rooms were converted into residential units, and the Palm Court’s stained glass ceiling was restored. In addition, floors 18 and 19 were extended toward the interior courtyard, while a small floor 20 was created above the existing roof.

    The hotel reopened on the 1st. March 2008. That November, the Plaza Hotel unveiled its retail collection, an underground mall featuring luxury brands. Two years later, the Plaza Food Hall opened in the underground mall, anchored by the Todd English Food Hall in collaboration with chef Todd English. The Oak Room restaurant closed in July 2011, two years after the renovation was completed.

    Sale to Sahara India

    In mid-2012, Sahara India Pariwar agreed to buy a 75 percent controlling stake for $570 million from El Ad Properties. The deal closed that December. However, even at the time of the sale, Sahara was experiencing legal issues and was selling off other properties that it owned.

    The development of the nearby Billionaires’ Row, an area with several residential skyscrapers marketed for the ultra-wealthy, also negatively affected sales at the Plaza. The Plaza’s net income decreased from $3.67 million in 2012 to negative $1.2 million in 2014, a figure that declined even further to a negative $10 million by 2017.

    Two years after buying the Plaza, Sahara’s Subrata Roy announced that he was looking for a buyer for his company’s $4 billion majority stake. The Sultan of Brunei made a bid for $680 million, which Sahara rebuffed as being too low. After Roy was unable to secure a buyer, he hired a broker in August 2017 to sell the hotel, prompting inquiries from about 50 potential buyers.

    Simultaneously, former co-owner Al-Waleed, whose Kingdom Holding Company now owned a minor stake in the hotel, partnered with Ashkenazy Acquisition Corporation. Kingdom and Ashkenazy’s partnership included a right of first refusal, which allowed the companies to match any third-party offer for the hotel.

    In May 2018, the Sahara Group announced it had finalised a deal with businessmen Shahal M. Khan and Kamran Hakim to buy a majority share of the hotel for $600 million.

    However, Ashkenazy and Kingdom exercised their right of first refusal, and sued Sahara for trying to sell the hotel to a third party. Ashkenazy and Kingdom received an extension to close on their purchase of the Plaza, but instead opted to sell its stake to Qatari state-owned hotelier Katara Hospitality, which the companies felt was better positioned to close on the sale.

    Sale to Katara Hospitality

    Katara Hospitality acquired full ownership of the Plaza Hotel in July 2018 after buying Sahara’s, and Askenazy and Kingdom’s, stakes. Under Katara’s ownership, the condominium units garnered high asking prices; for instance, a four-bedroom unit was listed for $45 million in early 2020. Around the same time, the Plaza’s condominium board sought to make repairs to the facade.

    Because of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, and a corresponding downturn in tourism globally, the Plaza’s hotel rooms were temporarily closed in March 2020 for an indefinite period, and several hundred employees were laid off.

    Residents of The Plaza Hotel

    When the Plaza Hotel opened in 1907, the first guest to sign its register was Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt. The hotel also housed other wealthy residents such as George Jay Gould, as well as Oliver Harriman Jr. and his wife Grace Carley Harriman.

    John Gates, the hotel’s co-developer, had a 16-room apartment on floor 3. Harry Frank Guggenheim lived in the hotel’s State Apartment, while Russian princess Vilma Lwoff-Parlaghy, a prominent portrait painter in the early 20th. century, lived in a suite on floor 3 with her lion.

    The hotel’s appeal to the wealthy came from the fact that, in the early 20th. century, apartments at the Plaza were generally cheaper than in more upscale apartment buildings, and that it faced Central Park, which at the time was highly patronized by the wealthy.

    Later in the 20th century, the Plaza Hotel served as home to wealthy widows, such as performer Kay Thompson, who wrote the Eloise children’s book series about a young girl who lived at the hotel. During the Great Depression, the wealthy widows were considered a tourist attraction in their own right, with their rent income keeping the hotel solvent.

    After many units were converted to condominium units in 2008, the Plaza Hotel became highly coveted among the wealthy. However, only about a third of these buyers were full-time residents, with the remainder using their Plaza condominiums as pieds-a-terre. The residents included executives such as New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, JetBlue CEO David Barger, Bear Stearns CEO James Cayne, Viacom CEO Thomas E. Dooley, and Sony Music Entertainment CEO Doug Morris.

    Other notable residents included musician Moby, developer Christian Candy, and fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger.

    Guests of The Plaza Hotel

    The guestrooms have also hosted several notable personalities. These have included opera singer Enrico Caruso, as well as novelists F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald.

    Frank Lloyd Wright often stayed at the Plaza when he was designing the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum on Fifth Avenue, considering it to be his home. Art dealer Joseph Duveen, 1st Baron Duveen, who helped assemble the Frick Collection at the nearby Frick House, lived at the Plaza and held important auctions in the ballroom.

    In addition, the Beatles stayed at the Plaza Hotel during their first visit to the United States in February 1964.

    Social Scene

    The Plaza Hotel became associated with celebrities and the wealthy upon its opening, surpassing the original Waldorf Astoria in that respect. The Palm Court (then the Tea Room), with its mostly female guest list, was particularly frequented.

    Weeks after the hotel’s 1907 opening, actress Mrs Patrick Campbell attempted to smoke there, and the resulting controversy boosted the Plaza’s stature. In January 1908, crowds flocked to see heiress Gladys Vanderbilt and her fiancé, Hungarian count László Széchenyi, have tea while Theodora Shonts arrived with her fiancé Emmanuel d’Albert de Luynes, the Duke of Chaulnes.

    That year, the New York World dubbed the hotel the "Home-for-the-Incurably Opulent". By 1909, the Palm Court was consistently exceeding its 350-person capacity.

    During the 1920’s, the basement’s grill room was a popular meeting place for young adults born during the Lost Generation. The Oak Room was frequented by actor George M. Cohan, and a commemorative plaque for Cohan was installed in the room in the 1940’s after his death.

    The Persian Room was popular with the "cafe society", being frequented by socialites and fashion trendsetters. Eddy Duchin and Hildegarde were among the Persian Room’s early performers, and it later attracted others such as Eartha Kitt, Peggy Lee, and Liza Minnelli. By the 1970’s, the Persian Room hosted performances from pop singers like Robert Goulet and Dusty Springfield.

    The hotel has also been popular among world leaders, particularly presidents of the United States. The first of these was Theodore Roosevelt, who moved his Republican Party’s events to the Plaza Hotel from the Fifth Avenue Hotel after the closure of the latter in 1908.

    Theodore Roosevelt’s distant cousin, president Franklin D. Roosevelt, had his birthday luncheon in the Palm Court in 1935. Other U.S. presidents who frequented the hotel’s guestrooms or restaurants have included William Howard Taft, Harry S. Truman, and Richard Nixon, as well as onetime owner Donald Trump.

    For other world leaders, the Plaza Hotel kept a series of national flags, which were displayed whenever a foreign head of state visited. The Plaza Hotel has additionally been used for diplomacy, as in September 1985, the finance ministers of several countries signed the Plaza Accord at the hotel, which depreciated the U.S. dollar in relation to other currencies.

    Receptions at The Plaza Hotel

    The Terrace Room has frequently been used for press conferences, luncheons, and receptions. For instance, it hosted a 1956 press conference where Laurence Olivier and Marilyn Monroe talked about their upcoming film The Prince and the Showgirl. At another press conference in the Terrace Room in 1968, Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor discussed their film Dr. Faustus. During the Beatles’ 1964 stay at the hotel, visitors were allowed to take pictures with the Beatles at the Terrace Room.

    Benefits and Weddings at The Plaza Hotel

    Upon the Grand Ballroom’s opening in 1921, it immediately became popular as a venue for debutante balls, including those in honor of Joan Whitney Payson and Cathleen Vanderbilt. The rebuilt ballroom hosted social benefits such as a dinner honouring physicist Marie Curie in 1929, and a meeting of the Girls Service League in 1935 that was attended by U.S. first lady Eleanor Roosevelt.

    Following World War II, the Grand Ballroom again became a popular venue for debutante balls and benefits, including a disabled veterans’ benefit called the December Ball, as well as an event benefiting the Kennedy Child Care Study Center in 1959.

    Writer Truman Capote hosted the "Black and White Ball" there in 1966, in honor of publisher Katharine Graham.

    The Plaza Hotel, particularly the Grand Ballroom and Terrace Room, has also been used for weddings and wedding receptions. For example, the Terrace Room held the reception for figure skater Sonja Henie’s 1949 wedding to Winthrop Gardiner Jr. Peter Lawford and Patricia Kennedy Lawford’s wedding reception was hosted at the ballroom in 1954, as was David Eisenhower and Julie Nixon Eisenhower’s reception in 1968. The ballroom also hosted Donald Trump and Marla Maples’s 1993 wedding. In 2000, actors Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones married at the Plaza.

    Impact of The Plaza Hotel

    The Plaza Hotel has become an icon of New York City. Paul Goldberger, writing for The New York Times in 1982, stated that the Plaza had become an important part of the city’s architectural history, similar to the Grand Central Terminal and the New York Public Library Main Branch.

    As another historian said:

    "Every tourist I’ve ever met, every tour
    group I’ve ever had, they all know the
    Plaza Hotel".

    The Plaza Hotel in The Media

    The Plaza Hotel has been used as a setting in several media works throughout its history. Most notably, it served as the setting for books such as the Eloise series, the success of which led the hotel’s owners during the 1960’s to hang the character’s portrait in the lobby. The Plaza was also featured in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel The Great Gatsby.

    The Plaza Hotel is also one of the most popular filming locations in New York City. Films shot or set in the hotel include:

    — North by Northwest (1959)
    — Barefoot in the Park (1967)
    — Funny Girl (1968)
    — Plaza Suite (1971)
    — The Way We Were (1973)
    — Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992)
    — Arthur (1981)
    — Scent of a Woman (1992)
    — Sleepless in Seattle (1993).

    The Plaza Hotel has also restricted some productions from filming there. For example, when the Plaza’s managers refused to allow the producers of Big Business (1988) to film there, the film’s producers created their own version of the Plaza Hotel on a sound stage.

    When Home Alone 2 was being filmed, producer Chris Columbus said that Donald Trump requested a cameo in the film, in exchange for allowing the film crew to shoot scenes in the lobby.

    The lobby scene involved the star sliding across the floor, so the carpeting was removed, thus revealing some old tilework with the Plaza logo that had been concealed for several decades. The management decided not to replace the carpet. (… just as well – it must have been very old!)

    Riots in Spain

    So what else happened on the day that Frank posted the card?

    Well, on the 1st. August 1921, riots broke out in Spain, and troops mutinied against the government of King Alfonso XIII after the defeat of Spanish troops by Moroccan tribesmen in Melilla.

    President Warren G. Harding

    Also on that day, U.S. President Warren G. Harding officiated at the tercentenary celebration at Plymouth, Massachusetts for the 300th. anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims in North America.

    Warren obviously had a busy day, because on the same day he informed the U.S. Congress that Secretary of State Hughes had concluded that the U.S. was obligated to lend five million dollars to Liberia as part of an agreement made in September, 1918.

    Posted by pepandtim on 2021-06-02 08:04:53

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