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{{short description|Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, United States}} |
{{short description|Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, United States}} |
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{{About|the hotel in Chicago| |Tremont House (disambiguation)}} |
{{About|the hotel in Chicago| |Tremont House (disambiguation)}} |
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The '''Tremont House''' was a hotel located in [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]]. A modern hotel also bears |
The '''Tremont House''' was a hotel located in [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]]. A modern hotel also bears a similar name. |
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==Original== |
==Original== |
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===First hotel=== |
===First hotel=== |
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The original hotel's building was built in 1833. It was a three-story wooden structure located at the northwest corner of the intersection of [[Lake Street (Chicago)|Lake Street]] and Dearborn Street. It was lost to a fire in 1839.<ref name="GCF1">{{cite web |title=Tremont House |url=https://www.greatchicagofire.org/landmarks/tremont-house/ |website=The Great Chicago Fire & The Web of Memory |publisher=Chicago Historical Society and Northwestern University |access-date=30 June 2021 |language=en}}</ref> It took its name from the Boston [[Tremont House (Boston)|Tremont House]].<ref name=EOCH/> It was later recounted by a reporter that he recalled the hotel having been a three-story [[frame structure]] |
The original hotel's building was built in 1833. It was a three-story wooden structure located at the northwest corner of the intersection of [[Lake Street (Chicago)|Lake Street]] and Dearborn Street. It was lost to a fire in 1839.<ref name="GCF1">{{cite web |title=Tremont House |url=https://www.greatchicagofire.org/landmarks/tremont-house/ |website=The Great Chicago Fire & The Web of Memory |publisher=Chicago Historical Society and Northwestern University |access-date=30 June 2021 |language=en}}</ref> It took its name from the Boston [[Tremont House (Boston)|Tremont House]].<ref name=EOCH/> It was later recounted by a reporter that he recalled the hotel having been a three-story [[frame structure]] approximately {{convert|80|ft|m|abbr=on}} long and {{convert|70|ft|m|abbr=on}} wide.<ref name="oldandnew"/> |
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The building was originally a [[rooming house]].<ref name="CT1">{{cite web |last1=Keegan |first1=Anne |title=TALES OF THE CRYPT |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1993-01-03-9303150301-story.html |website= |
The building was originally a [[rooming house]].<ref name="CT1">{{cite web |last1=Keegan |first1=Anne |title=TALES OF THE CRYPT |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1993-01-03-9303150301-story.html |website=Chicago Tribune |date=January 3, 1993 |access-date=14 August 2021}}</ref> Its original proprietor of the property was Starr Foot, who sold it to Malliory & Able in 1835. The operation was then sold to a man named Dorwin in 1837. Dorwin sold the lease months later that year to brothers [[Ira Couch]] and James Couch.<ref name="oldandnew"/><ref name="CT1"/><ref name="WTTW">{{cite web |title=TREMONT HOUSE |url=https://interactive.wttw.com/timemachine/tremont-house |website=WTTW Chicago |access-date=30 June 2021 |language=en |date=2013-12-01}}</ref><ref name="Jamesobit"/> The Couch brothers turned the building into the city's first [[hotel]], operating it in the building for the two years before it burnt down.<ref name="oldandnew"/><ref name="CT1"/> |
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===Second hotel=== |
===Second hotel=== |
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===Third hotel=== |
===Third hotel=== |
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[[Image:Tremont House.JPG|thumb|right|200px| |
[[Image:Tremont House.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Third hotel]] |
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[[File:Chicago In 1853, Dearborn And Lake Streets, Showing Old Tremont House (NBY 415212).jpg|thumb|1853 illustration of the street scene outside of the third hotel]] |
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⚫ | After the loss of the second building, a third hotel building was constructed on the same site. It was a five and one-half floor block masonry brick structure with 260 rooms, and was designed by [[John M. Van Osdel]].<ref name="GCF1"/><ref name="EAC11" /><ref name=EOCH/><ref name="Jamesobit"/> The new hotel covered the entirety of the land that the Couch brothers had acquired before the loss of previous building.<ref name="Jamesobit"/> It was equipped with the finest amenities of the day, costing $75,000 to construct |
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[[File:Tremont House, Chicago - presentation of flag to Light Guards, by Duquesne Greys of Pittsburgh LCCN99614042 (1).jpg|thumb|1853 illustration from [[Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper]] of a crowd gathered outside the hotel for an event]] |
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[[File:Chicago Fire of 1871, Tremont House (NBY 1547).jpg|thumb|Ruins of the third hotel after the 1871 [[Great Chicago Fire]]]] |
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⚫ | After the loss of the second building, a third hotel building was constructed on the same site. It was a five and one-half floor block masonry brick structure with 260 rooms, and was designed by [[John M. Van Osdel]].<ref name="GCF1"/><ref name="oldandnew"/><ref name="EAC11" /><ref name=EOCH/><ref name="Jamesobit"/> The new hotel covered the entirety of the land that the Couch brothers had acquired before the loss of previous building.<ref name="Jamesobit"/> It was equipped with the finest amenities of the day, costing $75,000 to construct,<ref name=EOCH/> and $260,000 to furnish.<ref name="oldandnew"/> Many rooms were equipped with the luxury of being [[en suite]]-style, with private bathrooms and bathtubs.<ref name="oldandnew"/> Before its opening, the new large building was ridiculed as "Couch's Folly" by those that expected it to fail.<ref name="WTTW"/><ref name="Jamesobit"/> The third hotel opened its doors on September 29, 1850.<ref name="Jamesobit"/> For a time, it was considered the leading hotel in the western United States.<ref name="GCF1"/><ref name="WTTW"/> |
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The hotel's neighborhood was located at the border of the developed business district and undeveloped prairie land at the time it was constructed. In 1848, the city's business district had been located on Lake Street west of [[Clark Street (Chicago)|Clark Street]]. The area east of Dearborn Street was undeveloped [[prairie]], placing the hotel at the border of the developed business district and undeveloped prairie land. With the construction of the hotel, the undeveloped area began to see some residential construction, before the third hotel and its positive reputation began attracting more intense development to the area.<ref name="Jamesobit"/> |
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In 1853, three years after the third incarnation of the hotel opened, the building was leased and the furniture was sold to [[David Allen Gage]] and [[George W. Gage (baseball)|George W. Gage]].<ref name="Jamesobit"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Bannos |first1=Pamela |title=Hidden Truths: Pamela Bannos |url=https://hiddentruths.northwestern.edu/couch/ira.html |website=hiddentruths.northwestern.edu |publisher=Northwestern University |access-date=14 August 2021 |date=2021}}</ref> In 1855, [[John Drake (1826–1895)|John Drake]] joined the Gages, acquiring a quarter interest in the hotel's operation.<ref name=BRC>{{cite web|url=http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC?vrsn=149&OP=contains&locID=chipl&srchtp=name&ca=2&c=1&AI=1180514&NA=John+Drake&ste=12&tbst=prp&tab=1&n=10&docNum=BT2310014495&bConts=33| access-date=April 24, 2007|author=Utter, William T.|publisher=Biography Resource Center|year=2007|title=John Burroughs Drake}}</ref> In |
At the time the third hotel was constructed, its neighborhood was located at the border of the developed business district and undeveloped prairie land. In 1848, the city's business district had been located on Lake Street west of [[Clark Street (Chicago)|Clark Street]]. The area east of Dearborn Street was undeveloped [[prairie]], placing the hotel at the border of the developed business district and undeveloped prairie land. With the construction of the hotel, the undeveloped area began to see some residential construction, before the third hotel and its positive reputation began attracting more intense development to the area.<ref name="oldandnew"/> |
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In 1853, three years after the third incarnation of the hotel opened, the building was leased and the furniture was sold to [[David Allen Gage]] and [[George W. Gage (baseball)|George W. Gage]].<ref name="Jamesobit"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Bannos |first1=Pamela |title=Hidden Truths: Pamela Bannos |url=https://hiddentruths.northwestern.edu/couch/ira.html |website=hiddentruths.northwestern.edu |publisher=Northwestern University |access-date=14 August 2021 |date=2021}}</ref> The Couches had attempted to back out of the agreement shortly after the lease was sold, but relented after the Gages threatened a lawsuit.<ref name="oldandnew"/> In 1855, [[John Drake (1826–1895)|John Drake]] joined the Gages, acquiring a quarter interest in the hotel's operation.<ref name=BRC>{{cite web|url=http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC?vrsn=149&OP=contains&locID=chipl&srchtp=name&ca=2&c=1&AI=1180514&NA=John+Drake&ste=12&tbst=prp&tab=1&n=10&docNum=BT2310014495&bConts=33| access-date=April 24, 2007|author=Utter, William T.|publisher=Biography Resource Center|year=2007|title=John Burroughs Drake}}</ref> In 1861, he became the sole owner of its operation, and would remain so until 1872.<ref name="oldandnew">{{cite web |title=Old and New |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/349794817 |website=Newspapers.com |publisher=Chicago Tribune |access-date=1 August 2022 |language=en |url-access=subscription |date=February 2, 1874}}</ref><ref name=BRC/> |
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The building was among the largest to be physically raised [[Raising of Chicago|when Chicago heighted the grade of its streets]] in the 1850s and 1860s.<ref name="GCF1"/> In 1861, Ely, Smith and Pullman lifted the Tremont House six feet in the air<ref>{{cite news|title=The Tremont House Improvement|date=January 22, 1861|publisher=Chicago Daily Tribune|url=http://www.nike-of-samothrace.net/csc.html#y1861_m01_d22|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130507042514/http://www.nike-of-samothrace.net/csc.html#y1861_m01_d22|archive-date=May 7, 2013|df=mdy-all}}</ref> ([[George Pullman]] made his reputation as a building raiser before becoming famous for manufacturing [[sleeping cars]]).<ref>{{cite web| publisher=Encyclopedia of Chicago| title=George Pullman and His Town| access-date= February 27, 2007| author=Leyendecker, Liston E. |year=2005|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1721.html}}</ref> The building was one of many buildings in Chicago raised to match the upward shifting street grade during the mid nineteenth century. |
The building was among the largest to be physically raised [[Raising of Chicago|when Chicago heighted the grade of its streets]] in the 1850s and 1860s.<ref name="GCF1"/> In 1861, Ely, Smith and Pullman lifted the Tremont House six feet in the air<ref>{{cite news|title=The Tremont House Improvement|date=January 22, 1861|publisher=Chicago Daily Tribune|url=http://www.nike-of-samothrace.net/csc.html#y1861_m01_d22|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130507042514/http://www.nike-of-samothrace.net/csc.html#y1861_m01_d22|archive-date=May 7, 2013|df=mdy-all}}</ref> ([[George Pullman]] made his reputation as a building raiser before becoming famous for manufacturing [[sleeping cars]]).<ref>{{cite web| publisher=Encyclopedia of Chicago| title=George Pullman and His Town| access-date= February 27, 2007| author=Leyendecker, Liston E. |year=2005|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1721.html}}</ref> The building was one of many buildings in Chicago raised to match the upward shifting street grade during the mid nineteenth century. |
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During the [[1859 United States Senate election in Illinois|1858 United States senatorial race in Illinois]], [[Stephen A. Douglas]], who regularly stayed at the hotel while in Chicago, delivered a July 9, 1858 speech that included a rebuke to [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s [[Lincoln's House Divided Speech|House Divided Speech]]. Lincoln, who was in Chicago to attend an opening session of [[United States District Court]], appeared at the hotel that night to deliver a rebuttal.<ref name="GCF1"/> This, in a sense, was the start of each individual's campaigns for senate.<ref name="EAC11">Host, William R. and Brooke Ahne Portmann, "Early Chicago Hotels," Arcadia Publishing, 2006, p. 11., {{ISBN|0-7385-4041-2}}.</ref> |
During the [[1859 United States Senate election in Illinois|1858 United States senatorial race in Illinois]], [[Stephen A. Douglas]], who regularly stayed at the hotel while in Chicago, delivered a July 9, 1858 speech that included a rebuke to [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s [[Lincoln's House Divided Speech|House Divided Speech]]. Lincoln, who was in Chicago to attend an opening session of [[United States District Court]], appeared at the hotel that night to deliver a rebuttal.<ref name="GCF1"/> This, in a sense, was the start of each individual's campaigns for senate.<ref name="EAC11">Host, William R. and Brooke Ahne Portmann, "Early Chicago Hotels," Arcadia Publishing, 2006, p. 11., {{ISBN|0-7385-4041-2}}.</ref> |
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The hotel served as the headquarters for the [[Illinois Republican Party]] during the [[1860 Republican National Convention]] (held at the nearby [[Wigwam (Chicago)|Wigwam]]) as they lobbied for [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s nomination.<ref name=EOCH>{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/603.html|author=Berger, Molly|access-date=March 28, 2007|year=2005|publisher=Chicago Historical Society|title=Hotels|encyclopedia=The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago}}</ref><ref name=EOCW>{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1355.html|access-date=March 28, 2007|year=2005|publisher=Chicago Historical Society|author=Karamanski, Theodore J.|title=Wigwam|encyclopedia=The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago}}</ref> |
The hotel served as the headquarters for the [[Illinois Republican Party]] during the [[1860 Republican National Convention]] (held at the nearby [[Wigwam (Chicago)|Wigwam]]) as they lobbied for [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s nomination.<ref name=EOCH>{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/603.html|author=Berger, Molly|access-date=March 28, 2007|year=2005|publisher=Chicago Historical Society|title=Hotels|encyclopedia=The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago}}</ref><ref name=EOCW>{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1355.html|access-date=March 28, 2007|year=2005|publisher=Chicago Historical Society|author=Karamanski, Theodore J.|title=Wigwam|encyclopedia=The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago}}</ref> |
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The hotel would become the residence of many prominent residents of Chicago. Additionally, popular gathering spot for notable figures was the hotel's bar room, which actor [[John Brougham]] had given the name "House of David".<ref name="oldandnew"/> Among the notable frequenters of the "House of David" over the years was former congressman [[David Stuart (brigadier general)|David Stuart]].<ref name="oldandnew"/> At the time it was lost to fire, a notable resident of the third hotel was former Chicago mayor and former U.S. congressman [[John Wentworth (Illinois politician)|John Wentworth]].<ref name="oldandnew"/> |
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Stephen A. Douglas died at the hotel on June 3, 1861.<ref name="GCF1"/><ref>DN-0060398, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago Historical Society.</ref> |
Stephen A. Douglas died at the hotel on June 3, 1861.<ref name="GCF1"/><ref>DN-0060398, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago Historical Society.</ref> |
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In 1865, [[Mary Todd Lincoln|Mary Lincoln]] stayed at the hotel for one week following the [[Assassination of Abraham Lincoln|assassination]] of her husband. [[Robert Todd Lincoln|Robert Lincoln]] and [[Tad Lincoln]] stayed with her during that time.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Madness of Mary Lincoln|last=Emerson|first=Jason|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|year=2007|isbn=978-08093-2771-3|location=Carbondale, Illinois|pages=20–22}}</ref> |
In 1865, [[Mary Todd Lincoln|Mary Lincoln]] stayed at the hotel for one week following the [[Assassination of Abraham Lincoln|assassination]] of her husband. [[Robert Todd Lincoln|Robert Lincoln]] and [[Tad Lincoln]] stayed with her during that time.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Madness of Mary Lincoln|last=Emerson|first=Jason|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|year=2007|isbn=978-08093-2771-3|location=Carbondale, Illinois|pages=20–22}}</ref> |
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The hotel burned to the ground during the [[Great Chicago Fire]] in 1871.<ref name="EAC29" /><ref name="Jamesobit |
The hotel burned to the ground during the [[Great Chicago Fire]] in 1871.<ref name="EAC29" /><ref name="Jamesobit"/> |
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===Interim post-fire hotel operation=== |
===Interim post-fire hotel operation=== |
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===Fourth hotel=== |
===Fourth hotel=== |
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[[Image:Tremont House IV.JPG|thumb|left| |
[[Image:Tremont House IV.JPG|thumb|left|Illustration of the fourth hotel]] |
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[[Image:Tremont House.jpg|thumb|left| |
[[Image:Tremont House, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views 2 (1).jpg|thumb|left|Photograph of the fourth hotel]] |
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The fourth hotel was designed by John M. Van Osdel, who had designed the previous third hotel. It opened its doors in 1873. It stood six floors.<ref name="GCF1"/> It was constructed James Couch and the estate of his brother Ira Couch, who had himself passed away in 1857.<ref name="WTTW"/><ref name="Jamesobit"/> The rebuilt hotel remained along with the [[Palmer House]], [[Grand Pacific Hotel (Chicago)|Grand Pacific Hotel]] and the [[Sherman House Hotel|Sherman House]] as a leading hotel after the Great Chicago Fire.<ref name="EOCH" /> It was built in the commercial [[palazzo]] architecture style of the day and claimed to be fireproof.<ref name="EOCH" /> |
The fourth hotel was designed by John M. Van Osdel, who had designed the previous third hotel. It opened its doors in 1873. It stood six floors.<ref name="GCF1"/> It was constructed James Couch and the estate of his brother Ira Couch, who had himself passed away in 1857.<ref name="WTTW"/><ref name="Jamesobit"/> The rebuilt hotel remained along with the [[Palmer House Hilton|Palmer House]], [[Grand Pacific Hotel (Chicago)|Grand Pacific Hotel]] and the [[Sherman House Hotel|Sherman House]] as a leading hotel after the Great Chicago Fire.<ref name="EOCH" /> It was built in the commercial [[palazzo]] architecture style of the day and claimed to be fireproof.<ref name="EOCH" /> James Couch and his ''son'' Ira Couch (not to be confused with his late brother of the same name) were the proprietors of the new fourth incarnation of the hotel at its opening.<ref name="oldandnew"/> The hotel was one of the city's "big four" post-fire hotels, the other three being the [[Grand Pacific Hotel (Chicago)|Grand Pacific]], Palmer House, and the [[Sherman House Hotel|Sherman House]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Sherman House III |url=https://chicagology.com/rebuilding/rebuilding004/ |website=chicagology.com |access-date=2 January 2021}}</ref> |
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The building stood until 1937, but the hotel had closed earlier.<ref name="GCF1"/> In 1902, the building was purchased by [[Northwestern University]], and housed its law, dental, and business schools.<ref name="GCF1"/> |
The building stood until 1937, but the hotel had closed earlier.<ref name="GCF1"/> In 1902, the building was purchased by [[Northwestern University]], and housed its law, dental, and business schools.<ref name="GCF1"/> |
Latest revision as of 09:45, 11 September 2024
The Tremont House was a hotel located in Chicago, Illinois. A modern hotel also bears a similar name.
Original
[edit]First hotel
[edit]The original hotel's building was built in 1833. It was a three-story wooden structure located at the northwest corner of the intersection of Lake Street and Dearborn Street. It was lost to a fire in 1839.[1] It took its name from the Boston Tremont House.[2] It was later recounted by a reporter that he recalled the hotel having been a three-story frame structure approximately 80 ft (24 m) long and 70 ft (21 m) wide.[3]
The building was originally a rooming house.[4] Its original proprietor of the property was Starr Foot, who sold it to Malliory & Able in 1835. The operation was then sold to a man named Dorwin in 1837. Dorwin sold the lease months later that year to brothers Ira Couch and James Couch.[3][4][5][6] The Couch brothers turned the building into the city's first hotel, operating it in the building for the two years before it burnt down.[3][4]
Second hotel
[edit]The second hotel was built after the loss of the first,[1] breaking ground in December 1839 and opening in May 1840. The structure was a three-story frame structure located at the southeast corner of the intersection of Lake and Dearborn streets.[1] It had 93 ft (28 m) of frontage on Dearborn street and 100 ft (30 m) of frontage along Lake Street It was lost to a fire on July 21, 1841.[6] Around 1839, the brothers purchased the land on which the hotel stood.[3] By the time the building was lost, in 1841, they owned 180 ft (55 m) feet of frontage of the block along Dearborn Street and 140 ft (43 m) of frontage on the block along Lake Street.[6]
Third hotel
[edit]After the loss of the second building, a third hotel building was constructed on the same site. It was a five and one-half floor block masonry brick structure with 260 rooms, and was designed by John M. Van Osdel.[1][3][7][2][6] The new hotel covered the entirety of the land that the Couch brothers had acquired before the loss of previous building.[6] It was equipped with the finest amenities of the day, costing $75,000 to construct,[2] and $260,000 to furnish.[3] Many rooms were equipped with the luxury of being en suite-style, with private bathrooms and bathtubs.[3] Before its opening, the new large building was ridiculed as "Couch's Folly" by those that expected it to fail.[5][6] The third hotel opened its doors on September 29, 1850.[6] For a time, it was considered the leading hotel in the western United States.[1][5]
At the time the third hotel was constructed, its neighborhood was located at the border of the developed business district and undeveloped prairie land. In 1848, the city's business district had been located on Lake Street west of Clark Street. The area east of Dearborn Street was undeveloped prairie, placing the hotel at the border of the developed business district and undeveloped prairie land. With the construction of the hotel, the undeveloped area began to see some residential construction, before the third hotel and its positive reputation began attracting more intense development to the area.[3]
In 1853, three years after the third incarnation of the hotel opened, the building was leased and the furniture was sold to David Allen Gage and George W. Gage.[6][8] The Couches had attempted to back out of the agreement shortly after the lease was sold, but relented after the Gages threatened a lawsuit.[3] In 1855, John Drake joined the Gages, acquiring a quarter interest in the hotel's operation.[9] In 1861, he became the sole owner of its operation, and would remain so until 1872.[3][9]
The building was among the largest to be physically raised when Chicago heighted the grade of its streets in the 1850s and 1860s.[1] In 1861, Ely, Smith and Pullman lifted the Tremont House six feet in the air[10] (George Pullman made his reputation as a building raiser before becoming famous for manufacturing sleeping cars).[11] The building was one of many buildings in Chicago raised to match the upward shifting street grade during the mid nineteenth century.
During the 1858 United States senatorial race in Illinois, Stephen A. Douglas, who regularly stayed at the hotel while in Chicago, delivered a July 9, 1858 speech that included a rebuke to Abraham Lincoln's House Divided Speech. Lincoln, who was in Chicago to attend an opening session of United States District Court, appeared at the hotel that night to deliver a rebuttal.[1] This, in a sense, was the start of each individual's campaigns for senate.[7]
The hotel served as the headquarters for the Illinois Republican Party during the 1860 Republican National Convention (held at the nearby Wigwam) as they lobbied for Abraham Lincoln's nomination.[2][12]
The hotel would become the residence of many prominent residents of Chicago. Additionally, popular gathering spot for notable figures was the hotel's bar room, which actor John Brougham had given the name "House of David".[3] Among the notable frequenters of the "House of David" over the years was former congressman David Stuart.[3] At the time it was lost to fire, a notable resident of the third hotel was former Chicago mayor and former U.S. congressman John Wentworth.[3]
Stephen A. Douglas died at the hotel on June 3, 1861.[1][13]
In 1865, Mary Lincoln stayed at the hotel for one week following the assassination of her husband. Robert Lincoln and Tad Lincoln stayed with her during that time.[14]
The hotel burned to the ground during the Great Chicago Fire in 1871.[15][6]
Interim post-fire hotel operation
[edit]During the interim period following the fire, the hotel operated as the "New Tremont House" out of a structure that John Drake had bought at Michigan Avenue and Congress.[15] Drake bought this temporary Hotel as a successful bet that it would escape the fire as the fire was raging across the city.[15]
Fourth hotel
[edit]The fourth hotel was designed by John M. Van Osdel, who had designed the previous third hotel. It opened its doors in 1873. It stood six floors.[1] It was constructed James Couch and the estate of his brother Ira Couch, who had himself passed away in 1857.[5][6] The rebuilt hotel remained along with the Palmer House, Grand Pacific Hotel and the Sherman House as a leading hotel after the Great Chicago Fire.[2] It was built in the commercial palazzo architecture style of the day and claimed to be fireproof.[2] James Couch and his son Ira Couch (not to be confused with his late brother of the same name) were the proprietors of the new fourth incarnation of the hotel at its opening.[3] The hotel was one of the city's "big four" post-fire hotels, the other three being the Grand Pacific, Palmer House, and the Sherman House.[16]
The building stood until 1937, but the hotel had closed earlier.[1] In 1902, the building was purchased by Northwestern University, and housed its law, dental, and business schools.[1]
Modern hotel
[edit]The Tremont Chicago Hotel is at 100 East Chestnut Street, between Michigan Avenue on the Magnificent Mile and Rush Street. The hotel housed the Chicago location of Mike Ditka's restaurant, which closed in 2020.[17] This block of Chestnut is also known as Mike Ditka Way.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Tremont House". The Great Chicago Fire & The Web of Memory. Chicago Historical Society and Northwestern University. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f Berger, Molly (2005). "Hotels". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Old and New". Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. February 2, 1874. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
- ^ a b c Keegan, Anne (January 3, 1993). "TALES OF THE CRYPT". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ a b c d "TREMONT HOUSE". WTTW Chicago. December 1, 2013. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "James Couch Killed". Chicago Tribune. February 11, 1892. p. 1. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
- ^ a b Host, William R. and Brooke Ahne Portmann, "Early Chicago Hotels," Arcadia Publishing, 2006, p. 11., ISBN 0-7385-4041-2.
- ^ Bannos, Pamela (2021). "Hidden Truths: Pamela Bannos". hiddentruths.northwestern.edu. Northwestern University. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ a b Utter, William T. (2007). "John Burroughs Drake". Biography Resource Center. Retrieved April 24, 2007.
- ^ "The Tremont House Improvement". Chicago Daily Tribune. January 22, 1861. Archived from the original on May 7, 2013.
- ^ Leyendecker, Liston E. (2005). "George Pullman and His Town". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Retrieved February 27, 2007.
- ^ Karamanski, Theodore J. (2005). "Wigwam". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
- ^ DN-0060398, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago Historical Society.
- ^ Emerson, Jason (2007). The Madness of Mary Lincoln. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 20–22. ISBN 978-08093-2771-3.
- ^ a b c Host, William R. and Brooke Ahne Portmann, "Early Chicago Hotels," Arcadia Publishing, 2006, p. 29., ISBN 0-7385-4041-2.
- ^ "Sherman House III". chicagology.com. Retrieved January 2, 2021.
- ^ Sneed, Michael (May 19, 2020). "Ditka on his iconic Ditka's eatery closing: 'It's over and it was good'". Chicago Sun-Times.
- ^ Sager, Mike (October 1, 1999). "Is Ditka Nuts?". Esquire.