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Santa Rita Hotel Letter And Brochure Tucson Arizona Antique Rare History

$ 21.12

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    Description

    Santa Rita Hotel Letter And Brochure Tucson Arizona From The John Goodman Estate:
    "John Goodman was truly a man of accomplishment. He graduated from the Wharton School of Finance and went on to graduate summa cum laude from Yale in 1942. He enlisted in the Army Air Corps where he worked in Japanese Intelligence until his honorable discharge. A fearless horseman, Jack was a true cowboy and strove to perpetuate Western culture. Some of his achievements include being a member of Rancheros Visitadores in Santa Ynez California since 1947, co-founding and serving as president of Los Charros del Desierto, co-owning "Team Spirit", winner of the 1964 Grand National Steeplechase in England, co-founding the School of Racetrack Management at the University of Arizona, co-founding the Mountain Oyster Club and serving as a past president. He was one of the founders of Friends of Western Art, serving as past president and a member of The Jockey Club, serving as a past Steward. He was proud to be inducted into the "Hall of Great Westerners" at the Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City in 2014. He and Harold Ashton formed and operated Ashton Goodman Properties, where he worked until his retirement in 2017. His father owned the Santa Rita Hotel and this letter references the 1953 Preakness Winner, Native Dancer."
    History of The Santa Rita Hotel:
    "Santa Rita Hotel was a historic building located in downtown Tucson, Arizona. It was designed by architect Henry Trost in the Mission Revival Style and built in 1903 by Quintus Monier. The hotel was considered the finest hotel in the Arizona Territory at the time of its opening.
    The construction of the hotel project was a major moment in Tucson’s early twentieth century history and represented both a major investment into the territory and the introduction of amenities and refinement that would attract Americans from the east. The hotel was completed at a cost of 5,000 USD and featured 101 guest rooms.
    The location of the Santa Rita Hotel was on the southeast corner of the insertion of Broadway Boulevard and Scott Avenue in Tucson Arizona. The area was part of the old Military Plaza that had been occupied by the U.S. Cavalry at an outpost called Camp Lowell. The land was subdivided and block 257 lots 2 and 3 auctioned by the City of Tucson and given to developer R. H. Raphael, of Los Angeles, “in consideration of his building a .000 hotel thereon.”
    The hotel was billed as the ‘Finest in the Territory.’ Raphael sold the unfinished hotel to Charles M. Shannon of Clifton, Arizona in February 1903. Arizona papers at the time reflected that: “This will be welcome news to the people of Tucson. It shows that Arizona people have confidence in Arizona investments, and that Arizona capitalists are sufficiently enterprising and public-spirited to participate actively in local enterprises.” The hotel and property was deed to the Santa Rita Company owned by partners and Tucson entrepreneurs Levi Manning, Julius Goldbaum and Federico José María Ronstadt.[5]
    The builder and contractor of the hotel was architect, stonemason and brick maker Quintus Monier, builder of major projects in the southwest including the Cathedral of Santa Fe. The construction was supervised by J. V. McNiel and was developed through an agreement with the City of Tucson. The roof was completed by John Burke of the Los Angeles Roofing Company, the plumbing completed by Julian Brothers.
    The Arizona Daily Star reported before the opening: “The new structure will not only be a credit to Tucson, but it will be one of the finest hotels in the entire west, and by all odds the finest and most modern equipped hotel in this territory [...] The building of this magnificence, modern hotel means much for Tucson. Tousis and people of means will in the future be able to find accommodation and service of the highest order right here in our beautiful city.
    The City of Tucson made numerous public policy changes to support the success of the hotel venture. In August 1903 the Tucson city Council passed a resolution to prohibit gambling near the hotel to assure the property would not be “blighted by gambling,” and in December 1903 issued a license to the Santa Rita to have a bar and install a roulette wheel. In December 1903 and with construction almost finished the Mayor and Council approved an electric streetcar system with the first line to be operated running from the Santa Rita Hotel to the Street Railway Company Park a mile beyond the University of Arizona.
    The main entrance of the hotel fronted Scott Avenue with balconies overlooking an open courtyard 30 ft wide by 32 ft deep. The courtyard lead to a tiled roof rotunda 50 ft x 80 ft and 26 ft high and then to a lobby. There was an oak finished dining room, cafe and bandstand. The grand lobby included a marble staircase to the second floor menenie level. Eight storefronts fronted Scott and Broadway. All of the ornamental architectural plaster relief work was designed and fabricated by artist and Henry Trost associate Gustav Zierold.
    At the end of December 1903 the completed and furnished hotel was sold to L.J.F. Iaeger for 0,000 USD. Iaeger was the proprietor of the Montezuma Hotel in Nogales and was for a timer owner of the three Southern Pacific Railroad Hotels in Arizona: Yuma, Tucson and Bowie.
    The opening of the Santa Rita on February 1, 1904 was a monumental event. Two thousands people (25% of the City of Tucson population at the time) attended the opening. The local paper reported that “Fashionably dressed women, accompanied by their husbands or friends availed themselves of the excellent opportunity of inspecting this imposing edifice and thronged the lobby, the rotunda and the corridors.” Levi Manning was presented with a chest of silver in token of the appreciation of his efforts. The silver setting of 600 pieces was manufactured by the Gorbam Silver Company.
    The finished hotel was six stories tall with a full basement and two wings with four stories in height featuring electric elevators and steam heat. On the sixth floor was a roof garden and dance hall. Each room included a private telephone connection and private bathroom. All of the furniture was purchased through the Tucson firm of L. Zeckendorf & Company.
    The Santa Rita Hotel was an important social and cultural touchstone in Tucson. It played host to movie stars and industrialists. The hotel hosted important art exhibits and cultural events.
    The original 1904 hotel building was closed on April 30, 1972 and demolished as part of a plan to redevelop the property. The 1917 addition was demolished in 2009 by UniSource Energy Services and their subsidiary Tucson Electric Power, despite the pleas of preservationists."