Brown Hotel (Louisville, Kentucky)

Brown Hotel Building and Theater
Location 335 W Broadway
Louisville, Kentucky 40202
Coordinates 38°14′47.76″N 85°45′28.09″W / 38.2466000°N 85.7578028°W / 38.2466000; -85.7578028Coordinates: 38°14′47.76″N 85°45′28.09″W / 38.2466000°N 85.7578028°W / 38.2466000; -85.7578028
Area Downtown Louisville, KY
Built 1923
Architect Preston J. Bradshaw
Architectural style English Renaissance
NRHP Reference # 78001346 [1]
Added to NRHP February 17, 1978

The Brown Hotel is a historic 16-story hotel in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, U.S., located on the corner of Fourth and Broadway. It contains 293 rooms and over 24,000 ft² of meeting space. It also contains special amenities, such as a fitness center and three restaurants. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The Brown Hotel is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.[2]

History

The hotel which featured 600 rooms, ballrooms, shoppes, meeting rooms, and restaurants, was designed by Preston J. Bradshaw and opened in 1923, only 10 months after construction began. The hotel cost $4 million, and was funded and owned by James Graham Brown, a local entrepreneur who wanted to compete with The Seelbach Hotel just a few blocks down the street. The hotel quickly became a central part of the growing downtown Louisville economy and the social lives of the locals.

In 1926 the hotel chef Fred K. Schmidt introduced the Hot Brown sandwich, consisting of an open-faced turkey sandwich with bacon with a delicate Mornay sauce. The Hot Brown became rather popular among locals and visitors alike. The sandwich was featured on the 2002 PBS documentary Sandwiches That You Will Like.

Many famous people have visited the hotel in the past and present. David Lloyd George former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom was the first person to sign the guest register, and Queen Marie of Romania also visited. The famous soprano Lily Pons was allowed to bring her pet lion along with her, and it roamed free in her room. Actor Victor Mature was an elevator operator at the hotel before becoming famous, he lost his job after leaving his post at the elevator and leaving a simple note so that he could go dance with a girl during one of the hotel's many roof-top parties.

The Broadway entrance to the Brown Hotel.

The combination of Prohibition and the Great Depression led to hard times for the hotel in the early 1930s. The Brown defaulted on its loan, and the bank threatened foreclosure. Employees were asked to work for periods without pay, and the Brown was only able to stay open due to the employees' willingness to do so.

When the 1937 Flood hit Louisville, the Brown's first floor was flooded. Although there was no electricity, the hotel stayed open, and many people whose homes were submerged stayed at the hotel. One resident recalled: "We were rowing down Broadway and there was The Brown Hotel. The doors were open and the place was filled with water so we just rowed our boat in one door, went through the lobby and rowed out another." A worker is recorded to have caught a two-pound fish in the lobby. WAVE radio, located on the 15th floor, was the only radio station to remain in operation in its own facilities during the flood.

Like much of the rest of the nation, economic recovery began in the buildup to World War II. Thousands of soldiers passing through from Fort Knox would stay in the area, and the hotel would frequently be filled to capacity. The week of the Kentucky Derby was and still is the most successful week of every year, celebrities such as The Duke of Windsor, Harry Truman, Elizabeth Taylor, Joan Crawford, Gene Autry, Eva Marie Saint, and Muhammad Ali have stayed here during this exciting time. Derby continues to draw many people to the hotel from those involved in the horse industry to celebrities for the Greatest Two Minutes in Sports.

As the city declined in the 1960s and 1970s, the fortunes of The Brown declined as well. Though $1.5 million was spent in 1965 to modernize the Brown and another downtown hotel, attendance remained low. Then on March 20, 1969, James Graham Brown died, this in turn led to the further decline of the hotel and in 1971 after financial shortfalls The Brown closed its doors. The building was sold to the Louisville Public Schools and became the headquarters for the city school system. When Louisville and Jefferson County schools merged in 1975 the new school system used the county schools' VanHoose Education Center as its headquarters and the Brown Education Center housed other school administrative offices.

The city of Louisville began to make many moves to revitalize the downtown area in the 1980s. As part of this project the "Broadway Group" was formed, which acquired The Brown from Jefferson County Public Schools and began its renovation in 1983. The schools took a toll on the building, however, the grand public rooms were spared and were able to be saved. After the restoration of the hotel it was reopened as a Hilton Hotel. In 1993 the hotel was purchased by the Camberley Hotel Company who furthered the restoration and returned the hotel to its former glory with the exception of the roof-top patio which remains closed to the public and the once two story Bluegrass room becoming a single story room with three other meeting rooms overhead. Another alteration made to the hotel was the demolition of the dividing wall in every other room thus doubling the size of each guest room and taking the hotel from 600 rooms to its present 293 guest rooms. After the restorations and alterations were completed, Camberley sold the hotel to its present owner, 1859 Historic Hotels LTD based out of Galveston, Texas in 2006. 1859 has continued to update and modernize the hotel while also preserving it for many people to enjoy as much as others did in the past. For personal stories of guests and staff members of the hotel in years past visit this link, www.brownhotel.com/files/290/HistoryoftheBrownHotel.pdf

The hotel has also been featured in films such as Elizabethtown, starring actor Orlando Bloom and Kirsten Dunst.

It was also seen on a Louisville-themed episode of Man v. Food Nation, where host Adam Richman tried the Hot Brown.

The hotel also recently completed another $4,000,000 renovation on all of its guest rooms.

See also

References

  1. National Park Service (2007-01-23). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. "The Brown Hotel, a Historic Hotels of America member". Historic Hotels of America. Retrieved January 28, 2014.

External links

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