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Page 25 text:
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been arranged and rearranged to house Tampa University's growing student population 1 and 2. Mrs. Plant's interior decorating has 3- The main lobby ot the Tampa Ray Hotel the completed extravaganza, the New York Journal of Com- merce and the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette referred to Aladdin and The Arabian Nights. Some 15,000 people received engraved invitations to the opening celebration: Tampa Bay Hotel will open for guests Saturday, January 31. 1891, and the opening ball will take place Thursday. Febru- ary 5, to which you are respect- fully invited. Flagler wired in answer to this. Where's Tampa Bay? Plant wired back, “Fol- low the crowd.” When Plant brought his rail- | road to Tampa in 1884, the little -------—---------------------------- town held 700 people and two or three shops. Now its popula- tion totaled 7,000, and there were several city blocks of bright brick shops. The fabulous Tampa Bay Hotel drew worldwide attention. Cabinet men, kings' ambassa- dors made their winter homes there. It was not unusual for 20 multimillionaires to gather at a single dinner. Celebrated artists appeared there frequently — to perform or to vacation — Sarah Bernhardt, Pavlowa, Minnie Maddern Fiske, Modjeska, Southern, Ada Rehan, Emma Calve, Sembrich, Nordica. Receptions and conventions kept the hotel filled for years; then rival hotels sprang up nearby. Friends joked about Plant’s Folly when half the suites stayed empty. He would answer silently with a gallant wave of his hand. Then in 1898, when the destruction of the U S. battle- ship Maine touched off the war with Spain, Tampa became a natural port of embarkation of troops to Cuba. American offi- cers, expecting to trudge through alligator swamps and rattlesnake hideouts, found themselves basking instead in a sumptuous palace in a jewel- like setting while waiting for the ships that would take them to Cuba. 21
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Page 24 text:
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The old Tampa Bay Hotel began as all great creations with a vision. Henry Plant had seen the possibilities of Tampa's deepwater port as a trade link with South and Central America and Europe. He vowed to build Florida's west coast in similar fashion to Henry M. Flagler's development of the state’s east coast. To attract attention to the then unknown village of cigar factories, Plant declared, I’ll build in this port of Tampa the richest, most magnificent hotel in the world. And so it was. The materials used in construction would have been enough to erect a small city: 7.576 barrels of shell, 452 carloads of bricks, 3,041 barrels of lime. 2,949 barrels of cement, 2,244 tons of steel, 69Vz tons of iron, 232 boxes of tin, 242 kegs of nails. 5,050 feet of iron cornices. 689,500 feet of lumber, 1,700 square feet of stone dressing, 28 polished granite columns and tons of other materials. Upon completion, the dark red brick building, spanning a square mile, had sixteen mas- sive columns flanking each of three main entrances. Stone steps led to two rambling ter- races, each as long and wide as a village street. Moorish arches supported balconies. Domes and minarets towered above the building’s five stories. Atop each of the 13 minarets was a crescent moon, one for each month of the Moslem year. Plant wanted his furnishings to equal the splendor of the building. He gave his wife unlim- ited sums to travel to Europe and the Orient with secretaries and art collectors in search of suitable treasures. Among the acquisitions were former pos- sessions of Marie Antoinette, Louis XIV, Louis Philippe, Napo- leon, Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain, Queen Elizabeth I, Queen Victoria, and Mary Queen of Scots. In describing
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Page 26 text:
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I More and more officers, staffs, military attaches, and later, wives, daughters and sweethearts swarmed through Tampa Bay Hotel’s 500 rooms scuffing up the fine Turkish rugs and carpets without a pang. Generals Shatter, Howard, Wade, Fitzhugh, Lee, Leonard Wood, Joe Wheeler, Captain Sigsbee of the ill-fated Maine, Miles Black. Theodore Roose- velt — all were there. And Ira Sankey, singing to the men. ' Clara Barton with her Red Cross volunteers. And laughing, weeping refugees from Cuba asking. “How can we dance till you make Havana free?” The pageantry drew titles, - warlords from afar. Thrillseekers offered sums for hotel suites so outrageous that many disgusted officers left their rooms to sleep with their troops outdoors. In one of his letters to his chil- dren, Theodore Roosevelt wrote: ... Mother stays at a big hotel about a mile from camp. There are nearly 30,000 troops here now besides the sailors from the warships on the bay. At night the corridors and piazzas are thronged with offi- cers of the Army and Navy; the older ones fought in the great Civil War a third of a century ago. and now they are all going to Cuba to war against the Spaniards. Most of them are in blue, but our rough riders are in brown. Our camp is on a great sand flat, sandy soil without a tree, though round about are pines and palmettos. It is very hot, indeed, but there are no mosquitos. . .. In the intense heat, the heavy dark uniforms gave way to white trousers and straw hats. Young wives and sweethearts plucked red and yellow tropical flowers screening the porches to fasten in their high-piled hair. Porch chairs rocked to the tinkling of gallons of iced tea, to the telling of scores of Far-Eastern adven- tures. 22
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