- Hotel Florence
The Hotel Florence is a former
hotel located in thePullman Historic District on the far south side ofChicago, Illinois . It was built in 1881. Since 1991, it has been owned by theIllinois Historic Preservation Agency .cite web |url= http://www.pullmanil.org/hotelflorence.htm |title= Hotel Florence |author= Historic Pullman Foundation ]The hotel yesterday
The years following the
American Civil War saw the growth of a new profession - that of "drummer" ortraveling salesman . The traveling salesman was often assigned a "territory" or quota of sales calls to make that necessitated traveling day and night bytrain when in the field. In order to meet the needs of traveling salesmen and other nighttime travelers, Chicago inventorGeorge Pullman helped to invent thesleeping car , a railroad passenger car whose seats could be converted into sleeping bunks.The Pullman sleeping car was enormously successful. Many railroads preferred the Pullman design to other sleeping cars because of the efforts George Pullman and his employees put into standardizing their manufacture. A railroad could be confident that many Pullman cars were interchangeable with each other. This helped railroads borrow and lend sleeping cars to each other, and create sleeping-car trains that used the tracks of two or more railroads.
Starting in 1880, George Pullman led the design of a company town that was to be the climax of his career - Pullman, Illinois. The land by the
Illinois Central Railroad tracks nearLake Calumet had not yet been annexed by Chicago, and Pullman could build and run it himself. And he did.The Pullman factories soon themselves became the focus of attention by salesmen from all over the world. Suppliers of iron, steel, upholstery, and many other commodities needed for the manufacture of sleeping cars descended upon Pullman. The industrial magnate designed the 50-room Hotel Florence to rent rooms to them, and built the hotel at a cost of $100,000. George Pullman named the hotel after his oldest daughter, Florence Pullman. The most luxurious
suite in the hotel, the Pullman Suite, was designed for the personal use of George Pullman and his family. The hotel could also offer first-class accommodations to railroad CEOs who came to Pullman to do business with the firm. The hotel opened to guests on November 1, 1881.The hotel was off limits to Pullman workers. George Pullman did not want his laborers to drink, and banned the sale of alcohol within town limits. An exception was made for guests of the Hotel Florence, however. A bar served
whiskey and other beverages inside the hotel.The hotel today
George Pullman's control over his company town began to come apart in 1889 when the city of Chicago annexed Pullman and its surroundings and began to extend its ordinances over the neighborhood. Another blow was the bitter strike in 1894 led by labor leader
Eugene Debs . George Pullman died in 1897.Under Pullman's successor,
Robert T. Lincoln , the sleeping-car business continued to expand into the twentieth century, and the Hotel Florence built a major addition, the "Annex", in the 1910s. This was, however, the decade that marked a peak for the American passenger railroad industry. With the growth of theautomobile industry, travelers and salesmen began to drive themselves around. Almost all of the American railroads still offering night train services relinquished them toAmtrak in 1971. The sleeping-car business died.The Historic Pullman Foundation purchased the hotel in 1975 to save it from demolition; the
Illinois Historic Preservation Agency took title in 1991. The Hotel is open for tours to individuals and groups and is often open for special events.References
External links
* [http://www.pullman-museum.org website]
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