Statler Hotel

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The Statler Hotel chain was founded by Ellsworth Statler (October 26, 1863 - April 16, 1928) in 1907 in Buffalo, New York.

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In 1901, Buffalo was the host city for the Pan-American Exposition. Statler envisioned and built a hotel on the Exposition grounds and called it "Statler's Hotel." It was a temporary wooden structure built only to last the life of the Exposition. With 2084 rooms, it could accommodate 5000 guests. Although the Exposition was deemed an overall failure due to a number of factors (bad weather and the assassination of President William McKinley included), Statler made a small profit--one of the few vendors to actually do so.

His next venture was the Inside Inn, built for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, Missouri. Another temporary wooden structure, it was the world's largest hotel with 2257 rooms. A grand success, the hotel made Statler a net profit of $361,000 and laid the groundwork for his first permanent hotel. The hotel and its fittings were then sold for scrap and dismantled. The Inside Inn was located near the edge of Forest Park in St. Louis, with traffic from the modern day Highway 64/40 running through the location of the hotel.

Built in Buffalo, New York, his first hotel was built with 300 rooms and bathrooms (later expanded to 450 rooms and baths), and it was very successful, leading to a chain of hotels located in other cities. Statler's intent was not to compete with other luxury hotels, but rather to provide, clean, comfortable and moderately priced rooms for the traveler. His was the first major hotel to have a bathroom in every room. His innovative Statler Plumbing Shaft is still used in modern construction. From providing paper and ink pens for correspondence (prominently bearing the Statler name) to a light in the closet, Statler brought the average traveler a level of luxury otherwise unaffordable.

Rooms were originally available at what seemed a very cheap price, leading many other hoteliers to predict the failure of this first hotel. The opening night price was as low as $1.50 for a guest room, leading to the slogan "A Room and a Bath for a Dollar and a Half." Statler's first permanent hotel had a line of credit available of $500,000, but the hotel was so successful from the beginning that the line of credit was never touched.

Each of the subsequent Statler Hotels built upon this formula for success. After Statler's death in 1928, the company built hotels in Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, California, Hartford, Connecticut. and Dallas, Texas. Each was more innovative than the last, and a testimony to the founder of the company.

The Hotels Statler Company, Inc., was sold to Conrad Hilton (Hilton Hotels) in 1954 for $111,000,000 in what was then the world's largest real estate transaction.

City Built Name Notes
Buffalo 1907 The first Buffalo Statler was renamed The Hotel Buffalo in 1922 upon completion of the new Hotel Statler. It was sold in the 1930s by the Hotels Statler Company, and it was closed and torn down in 1967.
Cleveland 1912 The Statler in Cleveland has been converted to apartments, and it is now known as The Statler Arms.
Detroit 1915 Demolition of the 1000-room Detroit Statler Hotel in Detroit began in August 2005 and was completed before the Detroit-hosted Super Bowl in 2006.
Saint Louis 1917 The St. Louis Statler was sold by Hilton in 1968 and renamed The Gateway Hotel. It was closed in 1987, and it underwent a mysterious and oft-litigated arson fire the following year. It was expanded, renovated and reopened in 2004 as the St. Louis Renaissance Grand Hotel, operated by the Marriott Corporation.
New York 1919 Hotel Pennsylvania

The Hotel Pennsylvania, across the street from Penn Station, was built by the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1919 and managed by Ellsworth Statler's company.

The hotel has had the distinction of having the oldest continuous phone number in New York still in use today. The number, Pennsylvania 6-5000, is the inspiration for the Glenn Miller song of the same name. Many big band names played in the hotel's Cafe Rouge including the Dorsey Brothers, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, and the Glenn Miller Orchestra.

The hotel was acquired by the Hotels Statler Company in 1948 and renamed the New York Statler Hotel, operated as The Statler Hilton, then as the New York Penta, until it reverted to the Hotel Pennsylvania. As of January 2007, the 1700 room hotel is slated to be demolished for an office tower planned for completion in 2011.[1]

Buffalo 1923 The second Buffalo Statler was converted to offices in 1984 and renamed Statler Towers, although three of its public rooms are open to the public for catered events and banquets. In June 2006, British businessman Bashar Issa bought the building, and it is being converted into a mix of condominiums on the top 14 floors of the 18 floor building, partly back to its original use as a luxury hotel with office/retail space on the first floor and basement.
Boston 1927 The Boston Statler is still a hotel, now called the Boston Park Plaza Hotel & Towers, owned in part by Starwood Hotels.
Washington 1943 The only hotel bought by and still owned by Hilton Hotels is the Washington, D.C. Statler, now called The Capital Hilton.
Los Angeles 1952 The Los Angeles Statler operated for many years as the Statler Hilton, then the Omni Los Angeles and is now known as The Wilshire Grand Hotel.
Hartford 1954 The Hartford Statler was eventually closed and was imploded in 1990.
Dallas 1956 The Dallas Statler Hilton was closed in 2001 and is (as of January 2007) awaiting a new owner.

  • The Hotel William Penn in Pittsburgh, built in 1938, was merely managed by Statler and never owned by the company.

  • Miller, Floyd Statler: America's Extraordinary Hotelman
  • Hotel Pennsylvania, New York, NY
  • The Boston Park Plaza, Boston, MA
  • Jarman, Rufus A Bed for the Night
  • Trower, Timothy, Hotels Statler historian

Statler_and_Waldorf are two Muppet characters and were named after the New York Statler Hotel (now the Hotel Pennsylvania) and the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.

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