Oglethorpe Hotel
The Oglethorpe Hotel, located in downtown Brunswick, Georgia, was designed in 1888 by architect J. A. Wood and named after James Oglethorpe. It was built on top of the previous Oglethorpe House, which was burned during the Civil War. It was constructed of brick and had three main levels. The building was capped by conical towers at the corners and in the center.
In Brunswick, Wood would go on to design the Mahoney-McGarvey House in 1891 continuing his Carpenter Gothic style of design. For the town of Brunswick, the Oglethorpe was a constant source of celebration and pride in southern traditions and values. It was built during a time of growing economic prosperity and increasing profits from global naval stores exports. The hotel remained in operation until 1958 when it was torn down and replaced with a Holiday Inn. Eventually the Holiday Inn would fall too and the empty lot in Brunswick's downtown would be called the "Oglethorpe Block."
History
Grand opening
On January 9, 1888 the Oglethorpe Hotel invited the city to see its grand opening. It opened to great fanfare as the city both economically benefitted from a luxury hotel for winter tourists and socially benefitted from a grand monument to the city's achievement. A newspaper report of the opening reads, "... all Brunswick's friends, well wishers, acquaintances and enemies as well as the world at large to come and see the house that we have built, and the prettiest and most prosperous town that the sun ever shown upon—'BRUNSWICK, THE CITY BY THE SEA'". The hotel represented the city's growing power and ability to invest in itself. Throughout the 1890s the hotel was installed with electricity and certain stairwells changed carpet.Growing notoriety
The hotel grew to be a part of the city's culture and it became one of Brunswick's identifiable landmarks. The celebrations and dances it held are often pointed to as a shining beacon in times of hardship. The social life of the city began to center around the Oglethorpe. Many of the city's important political meetings and dinners were held in the hotel's grand dining halls. However, the hotel was also used by many elite as a stop to Jekyll Island, some include J. P. Morgan, Joseph Pulitzer, William K. Vanderbilt, and William Rockefeller; they were able to use the proximity of both a train station and a harbor in order to avoid public attention.In 1913 Franklin Roosevelt dined in the Oglethorpe Hotel. He was an assistant secretary to the navy looking for a location to house small vessels on the Southern Atlantic coast. His wife and cousin accompanied him for a one night stay at the Oglethorpe Hotel. In 1925 he recalls of the event, "Brunswick, I remember chiefly, for the possum banquet they gave me-every known variety of possum- cooked in every known variety of style. I had them all."
In the 1950s the movie The View from Pompey's Head was filmed in the Brunswick area. Many of the movie's shots were taken around the hotel and Jekyll Island. The star of the film, Richard Egan even celebrated the premier in the city of Brunswick, visiting the Oglethorpe as well as local theaters. However, despite this the hotel was beginning to face hardship. Damage from the moist coastal air began to take its toll on the structure and larger structural damages began threatening the hotel's existence.
Eventual decline
In 1958 the fatal accident was a boiler in the hotel's basement bursting. This was due to blockages from pipes gradually becoming clogged over years of use. Without any money to repair the significant damages to the hotel, the owners were forced to close its doors. Plans for tearing down the hotel and building a more modern one were met with public outcry. When it became clear that the hotel was to be demolished hundreds of people poured in to collect everything they could. Thousands of pieces of memorabilia, the safe, the colored tiling, anything that could be removed and carried away before the demolition began was saved.With the loss of the Oglethorpe many within the town rushed to save its memory. The eventual construction of the Holiday Inn was met with major public criticism. Many found the new building to lack the grandiosity and culture the original Oglethorpe embodied. As the surrounding downtown area fell into financial decline, eventually the Holiday Inn meet the same fate, with most of it demolished except for a small section turned into a JCPenney.