Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
6200883
label
Newspaper Clippings: Pantlind Hotel
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
Source extras
naId
6200883
levelOfDescription
fileUnit
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
document
mediaId
522de760f9f1fd60
ocrText
THE FLINT JOURNAL A teach then fol By CHRIS CHRISTOI Journal staff writer Gym teacher Patti 1 plain the constant dizzy fatigue that nagged he: gan last fall at Grand ] Wiles had seen doctors headaces. But now th worse. She broke out in un Her speech became S would blur and she wot classes. Finally, in Dec glands swelled so much mended a cancer test. "He told me I mig 'disease," said the 26-1 and gymnastics coach. was wrong with me. I've ly person. I thought I was going to kill me." THE MYSTERY un Wiles learned from do probably suffered a to rine. Tests ordered by school's west campus that-chlorine had leak storage room under t and filtered into other Wiles' office was ne Engineering inspec air circulation in the Reag from From Washington reports WASHINGTON dent Reagan decided to trim his planned in JOURNAL PHOTO DANIEL GEARINO defense spending 01 the next three fiscal The refurbished Amway Grand Hotel, viewed from the $13 billion, a figure end of the Monroe Street Mall considerably short 0 fice of Management et Director David A. Soap, God credited recommended an means new, larger ( mestic programs. Last month, p in a downtown rescue chief of staff James III said the president pared" to cut defen for 1983 and 1984 by old matron that has gotten a new trousseau to $30 billion, and W EDITOR'S NOTE: With the after a $20-million facelifting. spokesmen have opening of Flint's Hyatt Regency THE AMWAY GRAND is the finishing those figures on a Hotel less than two months piece. In Grand Rapids' effort to become occasions since. away, a Journal reporter traveled Michigan's No. 2 convention city, behind But Saturday, W to Grand Rapids for the opening Detroit. Adjacent to the hotel is the city's of a similar - and to Flint, a civic and cultural complex, the Grand Cen- competitive - convention hotel, ter. Across the river from the hotel is the the Amway Grand Plaza. Related new Ford Presidential Museum. Behind story G1. the hotel, a 28-story, 300-room addition is being built. It makes a nice package. In fact, if the By DANIEL GEARINO business of building convention hotels was Journal staff writer a horse race, Flint just got beat out of the GRAND RAPIDS - Pity this poor city. gate. Defens Here it sits in the west of the state, "I personally think (Amway) saved away from major league sports, away from downtown," said a leading Grand Rapids Detroit's big-city culture, away from all businessman of the Amway hotel invest- ment. It. is an opinion shared by many of paying the appurtenances of auto-industrial life. that city's polltical and business leaders - Here it sits, governed by a bevy of Amway has become to Grand Rapids what failu Dutch burghers whose primary business the Mott Foundation has been to Flint. Scanned from Box 1 of the Frederica Pantlind Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library A VINTAGE of DISTINCTION Five Generations of LEDYARD DESCENDANTS Photo by Maurice Curnes La Claire MRS. GEORGE A. WHINERY MRS. C. L. LOCKWOOD, JR. MRS. J. BOYD PANTLIND MRS. QUEEN L. WONDERLY Miss KATHERINE PANTLIND WHINERY W ILLIAM B. LEDYARD was one of the early Jessie A. (Mrs. J. Boyd) Pantlind, his granddaughter, settlers of Grand Rapids coming here in 1858 and a daughter of Mrs. Moses V. Aldrich who was Mr. immediately becoming interested in the affairs of the Ledyard's daughter. growing community. He established a private bank in Katherine Pantlind (Mrs. C. L.) Lockwood, Jr., 1861 and in 1865 assisted in the organization of the City daughter of Mrs. Pantlind and great granddaughter of National Bank, forerunner of what is today the National Mr. Ledyard. Bank of Grand Rapids. He was associated with this institution until his death in 1890. Katherine Pantlind (Mrs. George A.) Whinery, daughter of the late Fred Z. Pantlind, granddaughter of The group which is shown here represents five genera- Mrs. J. B. Pantlind and great-great granddaughter of tions, all direct descendants of Mr. Ledyard. They are: Mr. Ledyard, and little Katherine Pantlind Whinery, daughter of Mrs. Whinery, great granddaughter of Mrs. Queen L. (Mrs. Joseph H.) Wonderly, daughter of Pantlind and great-great-great granddaughter of Mr. Mr. Ledyard. Ledyard. The GRAND RAPIDS Mirror March-April, 1934 15 PantlindHoyel Before the advent of the automobile and suburb living, the central business district of a city th size of Grand Rapids was the hub of many activities. These included government, entertainment, commerce, banking, and professional services. Essential to a thriving downtown was a healthy hotel business. By 1890 there were more than forty hotels that could accommodate over three G.A.I thousand people. In those days before mass communication and speedy transportation, it \ often necessary for commercial and other visitors to stay in Grand Rapids more than on day to complete their business. By no means the first hotel, but certainly the m. enduring, was the Sweet (Pantlind) Hotel. In 1868 Martin L. Sweet built his hotel on the northwest corner of Monroe and Pearl. It was purchased by J. Boyd Pantlind in 1902, who quickly turned it into the leading hotel in tow A "new", completely rebuilt, Pantlind was finished in 1924. With 750 rooms it became the host of many conventions, including a 1920's Grand Army of the Republic gathering With the completion of the Civic Auditorium across the street, the Pantlind has continued 1 thrive as a regional convention center. The photographs on this page, from top to botton were taken in 1910, mid-1920's and 1930. DADS BACK ROOM The physical structure of the city is a constantly changing mosaic which has a profound influence on our work and on our leisure-time activities. The decisions of government officials, businessmen, and social leaders are the driving force which sustains the continual modification of the urban structures. The result is a pattern of continuity and change that compels a city to keep recreating itself in a new image to meet the needs of each succeeding generation of citizens. The central business district, for example, is a mixture of decline and hopeful signs of a new revitalization. Despite the fact that downtown Grand Rapids is no longer a center for hotels, due.to the automobile and decentralization, the Pantlind Hotel carries on in its proud tradition. Increasingly dependent on the convention trade, this single remaining full-service hotel continues to be successful. In the photograph above, conventioneers of the Order of the Eastern Star gather in the lobby of the Pantlind. For those who wish to return to the past during a lunch hour or for an evening, the Pantlind offers the Back Room Saloon (below left). Its decor reminds one of an 1890's drinking establishment. The Pantlind also hosts many banquets each year in its Grand Ballroom and other halls. In the photograph at right below, Richard VanderVeen, Congressman from Michigan's 5th District, attends a political fund-raising dinner. UPSTAIRS *SALOON BACK ROOM The physical structure of the city is a constantly changing mosaic which has a profound influence on our work and on our leisure-time activities. The decisions of government officials, businessmen, and social leaders are the driving force which sustains the continual modification of the urban structures. The result is a pattern of continuity and change that compels a city to keep recreating itself in a new image to meet the needs of each succeeding generation of citizens. The central business district, for example, is a mixture of decline and hopeful signs of a new revitalization. Despite the fact that downtown Grand Rapids is no longer a center for hotels, due to the automobile and decentralization, the Pantlind Hotel carries on in its proud tradition. Increasingly dependent on the convention trade, this single remaining full-service hotel continues to be successful. In the photograph above, conventioneers of the Order of the Eastern Star gather in the lobby of the Pantlind. For those who wish to return to the past during a lunch hour or for an evening, the Pantlind offers the Back Room Saloon (below left). Its decor reminds one of an 1890's drinking establishment. The Pantlind also hosts many banquets each year in its Grand Ballroom and other halls. In the photograph at right below, Richard VanderVeen, Congressman from Michigan's 5th District, attends a political fund-raising dinner. UPSTAIRS *SALDON Pantlind Skaff Hotels and restaurants employed a diversified work force. Substantial numbers of black workers found employment in downtown restaurants and hotels, as is apparent in the picture above of the Pantlind Hotel staff in the 1940's. Both male and female workers found the newly developed opportunities in white-collar work to their liking. The 1920's photograph below of a secretarial school illustrates this increasingly viable alternative to traditional factory work. Many chose this type of training and employment as Grand Rapids emerged as a regional center in the economy of western Michigan. 44 The Grand Rapids Press, Thursday, Sept. 11, 1980 Proud hotel's history relived The history of the Pantlind Hotel has been written and rewritten. But it's the future that's most intriguing now - a fu- ture of beauty and class promised by new owners. Amway Corp. bought the Pantlind two years ago to create a first-class hotel com- plex that, combined with the new civic center, would transform that part of downtown into a major convention cen- ter, similar to Detroit's Renaissance Cen- ter. Presently, the old Pantlind is undergo- ing a restoration slated to return the The old Sweet's Hotel, predecessor to the-Pantlind, was raised four "grand old lady" to its post-World War I bring it above the flood level. Rooms went for $2 a day. elegance. In addition, Amway has plans to build a 28-story hotel along the river. The hotel, which will be about twice the height of McKay Tower, will have a wall of tinted glass facing the river. The old and new hotels are to be con- nected by a large registration area where Campau Avenue is, between Pearl and Lyon streets. "The entry will be a covered motor lob- by on Peari Street," explains Jack Wilkie, an Amway spokesman. "All guests will register in the lobby being built where Campau Street is." Plans for the Amway Grand Plaza Ho- tel, a complex that will include both the tower and the old hotel, call for two glass- enclosed skywalks connecting it to the civic center and to a 750-car parking ramp being built south of Pearl Street. The complex also will be connected to the Exhibitors Building on Lyon Street. "The interiors will be tied in together," says Marvin DeWinter, project architect. "You could, for example, enter the front door of the Exhibitors Building on Lyon and walk all the way through one megas- tructure." The site of the old Pantlind has a rich history. When Louis Campau first arrived here, the river was much wider at this spot. There were four islands. The first stood about where the new hotel is being built. The others trailed down the river. The hotel run by J. Boyd Pantlind, right, and his son, Fred, was knowr In 1833, Campau sold the land where out the world as a first-rate establishment. the Pantlind would one day stand to a millwright, Luther Lincoln, to build a saw- mill. rooms for $2 a day. The time when J. Boyd Pantl There was a stipulation to the sale, how- The grand opening of Sweet's Hotel on son ran the establishment was ever. Lincoln had to promise not to sell Sept. 23, 1869, according to an invitation of hotel life in Grand Rapids. the land to one of Campau's competitors, found a few years ago, featured a grand Katherine Pantlind Whin a government surveyor and land specula- ball with music by "Prof. Thomas' cornet Pantlind's daughter, rememl tor by the name of Lucius Lyon. band." days fondly. She also remembe Lincoln started his mill and stuck by his Five years later, the entire building grandfather, J. Boyd Pantli agreement, but a year later, sold the land was raised four feet when Canal Street "natty dresser" with tailored : to Abram Wadsworth, who finished the was filled in to bring it above flood level. by white percale, spats, a bow mill. Wadsworth, in turn, promptly sold Hundreds of jack screws were placed on glasses attached to a grosgrair the parcel to Lyon, engendering Cam- the foundation and turned at the signal of An avid collector with dozer pau's wrath. a whistle. of memorabilia from the ol The sawmill was washed away a few During the four days it took to raise the Whinery lives in East Grand I years later in the flood of 1838. building, the hotel operated normally. her husband, George Whinery By 1852 there was a warehouse on the Not a dish was broken. She is the oldest living desc spot and Daniel Ball, a banker who rose to Sweet's name lasted until 1902. An Boyd Pantlind and, at 70, refei the heights of wealth and success only to Ohio-born businessman of Scottish ances- as "the matriarch of the Pantli die in poverty, bought the property and try, J. Boyd Pantlind, had bought the busi- "He was the most vivid char erected a bank there in 1859. ness in 1898. He finally renamed it after knew," she says of her grar Two years later, Martin L. Sweet, a his uncle, A. Vorhis Pantlind. was the first grandchild and I New York native who made a fortune A few years later, with the furniture special treatment. here in the grain business, bought the industry dominating downtown Grand "He was a great horsem bank and ran it as a very successful enter- Rapids, a group of Grand Rapids busi- bought me my first pony. He prise. nessmen formed the Pantlind Hotel pride in my riding." In 1868, Sweet branched out into the Building Co. and erected the present ho- Whinery recalls that her hotel business. He closed the bank and tel. was short, "rather round," filled in the river between the shoreline J. Boyd Pantlind was made manager kling brown eyes." He was 8 and Island Number One. and, during his reign and that of his son story teller with a gift for usi On this newly created land, he erected Fred, the hotel was known throughout the "He always had a smile an four-story hotel around the bank and let world as a first-rate establishment. ous sense of humor," she say: The Grand Rapids Press, Thursday, Sept. 11, 1980 45 Pantlind watching wide-eyed from front row seats Fuller Avenue NE, about where Kent happy opinion of Grand Rapids than any on the hotel's balcony overlooking Mon- Community Hospital is, and Ellis com- other single citizen who ever gave it the roe Avenue," Whinery says. "What excite- plained that the Pantlind should be turn- benefits of a long and fruitful career." Continued ment - clowns, elephants and bands and ing the hotel's garbage over for city use. After the Pantlinds died, the hotel bareback riders, and the calliope bring- Pantlind refused and the entire matter passed into other hands. It was owned by lind came during Prohibition. That was ing up the rear." ended up in court where Pantlind lost his Jack, Ted and Charles Roberts when Am- not an easy period for the hotel or its The elder Pantlind had a 250-acre farm case. way bought it. owners. Tony, the bartender, became where Woodlawn Cemetery on Kalama- "J. Boyd always felt he'd been shafted," When the hotel closed last year, it Tony, the soda jerk. zoo Avenue SE is today. Pantlind would Whinery says. boasted a long list of dignitaries and ce- "Granddad used to say, 'You lose mon- feed his pigs from the hotel's garbage. J. Boyd Pantlind died Christmas Day, lebrities who'd stayed there, including ey on the food and make it on the liquor.' This profitable arrangement lasted un- 1922. When recalling his death, Whinery William Jennings Bryan, Babe Ruth, One of the more exciting times for a til the city's mayor of the time, George refers to a newspaper article that ap- James Cagney, Queen Juliana of the child in the Pantlind came whenever a Ellis, complained that the city was being peared in the old Grand Rapids Herald, Netherlands, Boris Karloff, Spencer Tra- circus arrived in town. shortchanged. that stated: cy, John and Robert Kennedy and, of "When there was a parade, we'd be The city maintained its own piggery on "He contributed more to the nation's course, President Gerald R. Ford. People Are Saying CITIZENS INDUST Downtown Just Isn't Like the Old Days M A Y S