Denver Brown Palace Hotel

The Brown Palace Hotel, now The Brown Palace Hotel and Spa, Autograph Collection, is a historic hotel in Denver, Colorado, United States.

It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is the second-longest operating hotel in Denver. It is one of the first atrium-style hotels ever built. It is now operated by HEI Hotels and Resorts, and joined Marriott's Autograph Collection Hotels in 2012. The hotel is located at 321 17th Street between 17th Street, Broadway and Tremont Place in downtown Denver behind the Republic Plaza. The main entrance door is on Tremont Place.

Brown Palace Hotel
Denver Brown Palace Hotel
The Brown Palace Hotel, with the 1959 annex tower visible behind it on the left
Brown Palace Hotel (Denver) is located in Colorado
Brown Palace Hotel (Denver)
Brown Palace Hotel (Denver) is located in the United States
Brown Palace Hotel (Denver)
Location17th St. and Tremont Pl., Denver, Colorado
Coordinates39°44′39″N 104°59′14″W / 39.74417°N 104.98722°W / 39.74417; -104.98722
Area9.5 acres (3.8 ha)
Built1892
Built byGiddes & Seerie
ArchitectFrank Edbrooke
Architectural styleItalian Renaissance Revival
NRHP reference No.70000157
CSRHP No.5DV.110
Added to NRHPApril 28, 1970

History

The hotel was built in 1892 of sandstone and red granite, one year later than the Oxford Hotel. It was named for its original owner, Henry C. Brown, who had homesteaded the Capitol Hill area, and was designed with its distinctive triangular shape by architect Frank Edbrooke, who also designed the Oxford Hotel. The interior and the exterior of the building are considered to be the "finest extant example" of Edbrooke's work.

Built with an iron and steel frame covered with cement and sandstone by the Whitehouse & Wirgler Stone Company, the building was "one of America's first fireproof structures, according to a May 21, 1892 cover story in Scientific American." Upon its completion it was Denver's tallest building.

In the early 1930s Colorado muralist Allen Tupper True began discussing the possibility of creating two murals for the hotel with then owner Denver financier Charles Boettcher and after some delay the two works, Stage Coach and Airplane Travel were unveiled in the hotel's lobby in 1937.

In 1935, as a celebration of the Repeal of Prohibition in the United States, Denver architect Alan Fisher designed "Ship Tavern"; one of four restaurants inside The Brown Palace.

Annex

The 22-story, 231-room tower directly across Tremont Place was built as a new wing of the hotel in 1959, known as the Brown Palace West. For many years it operated as a budget wing of the hotel, until the Brown Palace's owners branded the guest rooms in the annex as a Comfort Inn in 1988, and then as a Holiday Inn Express in December 2014. The lower levels of the tower are shared with the Brown Palace, including the Grand Ballroom and executive offices. The tower is connected to the main building by a skybridge over Tremont Place and a service tunnel running under the street.

Past guests

Past guests include the "Unsinkable" Molly Brown (she stayed at the hotel only a week after the Titanic disaster), infamous Denver crime boss Jefferson "Soapy" Smith, Dr. Sun Yat Sen (just before becoming the president of the new Republic of China), Denver Socialite Louise Sneed Hill, Queen Marie of Romania, John Wayne, and The Beatles. Presidential guests include William Taft, Warren Harding, Harry S. Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton. John Galen Locke passed away there 1935 while at a political meeting.

Murders of 1911

The hotel was the site of the high-profile 1911 murders in which Frank Henwood shot and killed Sylvester Louis "Tony" von Phul, and accidentally killed an innocent bystander, George Copeland, in the hotel's "Marble Bar." Henwood and von Phul were rivals for (or shared) the affections of Denver socialite Isabel Springer, the wife of wealthy Denver businessman and political candidate John W. Springer. The murders culminated in a series of very public trials.

The hotel features in the 2017 Jane Fonda and Robert Redford film Our Souls at Night.

It features in the time travel novel “Warm Souls” - Part 2 of the “Wealth of Time” series by Andre Gonzalez. The Brown Palace is featured on many of Denver's cultural tours.

References

Tags:

Denver Brown Palace Hotel HistoryDenver Brown Palace Hotel AnnexDenver Brown Palace Hotel Past guestsDenver Brown Palace Hotel Murders of 1911Denver Brown Palace Hotel Popular cultureDenver Brown Palace Hotel GalleryDenver Brown Palace HotelAtrium (architecture)Autograph Collection HotelsDenver, ColoradoDowntown DenverMarriott InternationalNational Register of Historic PlacesRepublic Plaza (Denver)United States

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

CatMurder trial of O. J. SimpsonKobe BryantOpinion polling for the next United Kingdom general electionAlexander the GreatStellar BladeJacob FatuEminemLa LigaC (programming language)Kannauj Lok Sabha constituencyEuropean UnionDune MessiahMyanmarList of countries and dependencies by populationAbdul FatawuOperation CottageCailee SpaenyMinouche ShafikList of Indian Premier League seasons and resultsMari EmmanuelArnold Schwarzenegger2024 World Snooker ChampionshipCrystal Palace F.C.Michael DouglasYandexLuke PerrySnapchatAmerican Horror StoryDarién GapElizabeth IStephen CurryGAZ SobolIshida MitsunariGary GlitterAriana GrandeMandisaWilliam Adams (sailor, born 1564)XHamsterMrBeastAnthony Ashley-Cooper, 10th Earl of ShaftesburyKim Jong UnC. S. LewisChennai Super KingsJesse PlemonsMeta PlatformsSunny LeoneMichael J. FoxAnthony Edwards (basketball)Main PageValerie BertinelliStripchatKevin DurantHarry PotterBruce WillisEarthIndonesiaTheo JamesBarry KeoghanAssassination of William McKinleyGallipoli campaignCanvaIsraeli–Palestinian conflictAtomic bombings of Hiroshima and NagasakiWilliam ShakespeareElla PurnellTesla, Inc.Franklin D. RooseveltWilliam, Prince of WalesCanadaGeneration XList of United States cities by populationBlack holePhilippinesSwitzerlandJamie Vardy🡆 More