Guests dancing at the Tea Party in the Biltmore Contry Club. Coral Gables, Florida

Material Information

Title:
Guests dancing at the Tea Party in the Biltmore Contry Club. Coral Gables, Florida
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
8 X 10 in.

Notes

General Note:
Recognizing the importance of having a luxury resort hotel in the city, George Merrick turned to John McEntee Bowman, President of the Biltmore Hotel chain. The New York firm of Leonard Schultz and S. Fullerton Weaver was selected by Bowman to design the hotel and ground was broken in 1925. At cost of $10 million, The Miami-Biltmore Hotel and Country Club, boasting a golf course and 350 rooms, officially opened on January 15, 1926. At the time, the hotel's pool was the largest hotel pool in the United States. The magnificent tower is modeled after the Giralda Tower from the Cathedral of Seville in Spain. In November of 1942, The Miami-Biltmore Hotel and Country Club was turned over to the United States of America for use as a hospital that opened in March of 1943. In 1946 the hotel became an Army general hospital and the Veterans Administration (VA) took over in July of 1947. The VA Hospital was closed in 1968 with ownership eventually being transferred to the City of Coral Gables in 1973. A grand re-opening of The Biltmore took place in December 31, 1987, 61 years after it first opened.
General Note:
Caption on verso: "Donated by Bob Campbell; Tea Dance, c.1930s, Biltmore Hotel terrace; The Biltmore Hotel, Coral Gables, Property of the Biltmore; Please return to: Stephanie Hofmeister, The Biltmore; 1200 Anastasia, Coral Gables, Florida 33134; 194, Tea Party / Dance on rear patio of Biltmore Country Club. Given by Mrs. Chas. M. Moon-1931"
General Note:
(Ownership) Coral Gables Historical Resources Department

Record Information

Source Institution:
Florida International University
Holding Location:
City of Coral Gables
Rights Management:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/UND/1.0/
Resource Identifier:
FI12073107

dpSobek Membership

Aggregations:
Coral Gables Memory