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Essential
Architecture- Washington D.C.
Willard Hotel Willard
InterContinental Washington |
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architect
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Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, FAIA |
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location
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Washington, DC |
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date
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1901 |
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style
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quasi French chateau |
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construction
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limestone cladding |
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type
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hotel |
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Willard & Treasury with clouds |
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The main facade of the Willard InterContinental
The Willard InterContinental Washington is a historic luxury hotel
located equidistant from the White House and the National Mall in
Washington, DC. Among its facilities are numerous luxurious guest rooms,
several restaurants, the famed Round Robin Bar, and voluminous function
rooms. It is two blocks from the Metro Center station of the Washington
Metro.
History
The hotel's site, 1401 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, has
accommodated guests since 1816, but the Willard was formally founded by
Henry Willard when he bought the property in 1850. The present
twelve-story structure, designed by famed hotel architect Henry Janeway
Hardenbergh, opened in 1901. It was for many years the only hotel from
which one could easily visit all of downtown Washington, and has
consequently hosted innumerable dignitaries in its history.
The Willard family sold its share of the hotel in 1946, and due
to mismanagement the hotel closed in 1968. A lengthy legal battle
ensued, at the end of which the Pennsylvania Avenue Development
Corporation purchased the property, held a competition and ultimately
awarded it to the Oliver Carr Company and Golding Associates NY Times.
The two partners then brought in the InterContinental Hotels Group to be
a part owner and operator of the Hotel. The Willard was subsequently
restored to its turn of the century elegance and an office-building
contingent was added. The Hotel was thus re-opened amid great
celebration on August 20, 1986 which was attended by several Supreme
Court Justices and distinguished Senators such as Edward Kennedy. In the
late 1990s the hotel once again underwent significant restoration.

Famous guests
The first group of three Japanese ambassadors to the
United States stayed at the Willard with seventy-four other delegates in
1860, where they observed that their hotel room was more luxurious than
the U.S. Secretary of State's house. It was the first time an official
Japanese delegation traveled to a foreign destination, and many tourists
and journalists gathered to see the sword-carrying Japanese.
From February 4 to February 27, 1861, the Peace Congress,
featuring delegates from 21 of the 34 states, met at the Willard in a
last-ditch attempt to avert the Civil War. A plaque from the Virginia
Civil War Commission, located on the Pennsylvania Ave. side of the
hotel, commemorates this courageous effort. Later that year, upon
hearing a Union regiment singing "John Brown's Body" as they marched
beneath her window, Julia Ward Howe wrote the patriotic "Battle Hymn of
the Republic" to the same tune.
On February 23, 1861, amid several assassination threats,
detective Allan Pinkerton smuggled Abraham Lincoln into the Willard
during the weeks before his inauguration; there Lincoln lived until his
inauguration on March 4, holding meetings in the lobby and carrying on
business from his room.
On March 27, 1874, the Northern and Southern Orders of Chi Phi
met at the Willard to unite as the Chi Phi Fraternity.
Many United States presidents have frequented the Willard, and
every president since Franklin Pierce, including George W. Bush, has
either slept in or attended an event at the hotel at least once; the
hotel is hence also known as "the residence of presidents". It was the
habit of Ulysses S. Grant to drink brandy and smoke a cigar while
relaxing in the lobby. Folklore, additionally promulgated by publicists
for the hotel, holds that this is the origin of the term "lobbying", as
Grant was often approached by those seeking favors. However, this is
probably false, as the verb to lobby is found decades earlier and did
not originally refer to Washington politics. Plans for Woodrow Wilson's
League of Nations took shape when he held meetings of the League to
Enforce Peace in the hotel's lobby in 1916. Calvin Coolidge lived at the
hotel for a month in 1923 while Warren G. Harding's widow vacated the
White House.
The first recorded meeting of the American Association for Cancer
Research was convened at the Willard on May 7, 1907[1]
Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote his famous "I Have a Dream" speech
in his hotel room at the Willard in 1963 in the days before his March on
Washington.
Among the Willard's many other famous guests are P. T. Barnum,
Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, General Tom Thumb, Samuel Morse, the Duke of
Windsor, Harry Houdini, Gypsy Rose Lee, Gloria Swanson, Emily Dickinson,
Jenny Lind, Charles Dickens and Mae West.

References
^ Triolo V (1961). "The American Association for Cancer
Research, 1907–1940: Historical Review.". Can Res 21 (2): 137-167. PMID
13778091.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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