Eppley Hotel Company













Eppley Hotel Company
Type
Privately held
IndustryHospitality
Founded1917
FounderEugene C. Eppley
Headquarters
Omaha, Nebraska
,
United States

The Eppley Hotel Company was located in Omaha, Nebraska. At the time of its acquisition by the Sheraton Corporation in 1956, it was the largest privately held hotel business in the United States.[1]




Contents





  • 1 About

    • 1.1 Properties



  • 2 Merger


  • 3 See also


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links




About


Owned by hotel magnate Eugene C. Eppley, the company was established in 1917. There were 22 hotels spread across six states.[2]



Properties


The 22 hotels in the Eppley Hotel Company's portfolio included Pittsburgh's William Penn Hotel, the Seelbach Hotel in Louisville, Kentucky and Hotel Fontenelle in Omaha, Nebraska.


Other properties included the West Hotel in Sioux City, Iowa, which was built in 1903 and became part of the Eppley chain of hotels in the mid-1930s. The West Hotel was razed in 1953.


Sioux City's Warrior Hotel was built in 1930. Eppley built the Warrior in 1929 with the Grand Opening being December 20th 1930. Eppley Hotels sold the Warrior to the Sheraton Corporation of America in 1956.[3]


Omaha's Hotel Fontenelle was built in 1914. An exquisite venue, the Fontenelle hosted dignitaries and luminaries of all sorts, including Presidents Harry S. Truman and John F. Kennedy. After Eppley sold it to the Sheraton corporation, the hotel eventually went to ruins, closing in the 1970s. It was demolished in 1983.


In 1927, Eppley commissioned four murals by Grant Wood for his hotels in Council Bluffs, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo and Sioux City. The original piece painted for Eppley's Martin Hotel dining room in Sioux City, one of the Corn Room series, is now located in the Sioux City Art Center.[4]




The Hotel Fontenelle, located from 1915 to 1983 in Downtown Omaha, Nebraska.





































































Hotels in the Eppley chain
Name
City
Notes

Hotel Norfolk

Norfolk, Nebraska


Hotel Lincoln

Lincoln, Nebraska


Hotel Capital
Lincoln, Nebraska


Hotel Lindell
Lincoln, Nebraska


Hotel Fontenelle

Omaha, Nebraska
Built in 1914, this hotel was Omaha's prominent hotel for more than 50 years. It was demolished in 1983.

Hotel Rome
Omaha, Nebraska


Logan Apartment Hotel
Omaha, Nebraska


Hotel Cataract

Sioux Falls, South Dakota


Hotel Carpenter
Sioux Falls, South Dakota


Hotel Warrior

Sioux City, Iowa


Hotel Martin
Sioux City, Iowa


Hotel West
Sioux City, Iowa


Hotel Tallcorn

Marshalltown, Iowa


Hotel Chieftain

Council Bluffs, Iowa


Hotel Montrose

Cedar Rapids, Iowa


Hotel Magnas
Cedar Rapids, Iowa


Hotel Seelbach

Louisville, Kentucky


Hotel Fort Pitt

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania


Hotel William Penn
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania


Hotel Alexandria

Los Angeles, California


Elms Hotel

Excelsior Springs, Missouri


Merger


Eugene Eppley sold the company to Sheraton Hotels in 1956 for $30 million. The hotel chain's sale was, at the time, the second largest hotel sale in United States history.[5]



See also


  • History of Omaha

  • Economy of Omaha, Nebraska


References




  1. ^ "Closing the Gap", Time magazine. June 4, 1956. Retrieved 2/3/08.


  2. ^ "Closing the Gap", Time magazine. June 4, 1956. Retrieved 2/3/08.


  3. ^ Take a step back in time: Nebraska Street walking tour. Sioux City Museum. Retrieved 2/3/08.


  4. ^ "Introduction", Sioux City Art Center. Retrieved 2/2/08.


  5. ^ "Closing the Gap", Time magazine. June 4, 1956. Retrieved 2/3/08.




External links



  • Restaurant Ware Pattern & Other Ephemera from the hotel chain


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