Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hampton by Hilton, formerly (and still commonly called) Hampton Inn or Hampton Inn & Suites, is an American chain of hotels trademarked by Hilton Worldwide. [2] The Hampton hotel brand is a chain of moderately priced, budget to midscale limited service hotels with limited food and beverage facilities.
The History Center is located in the Historic Caddie House (1924). The High Hampton Inn Historic District encompasses 12 contributing buildings and 1 contributing site. They include the High Hampton Inn (1932-1933), a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, L-shaped, gable-roofed Rustic style structure sheathed in chestnut bark
Hilton returned to being a public company on December 12, 2013. This second IPO in the company's history raised an estimated $2.35 billion. [73] The Blackstone Group retained a 45.8% stake in the company. [7] The company announced in February 2016 that Hilton would turn its hotel holdings into a real estate investment trust. Prior to making the ...
The Hampton Inn, also known as The Maples Inn, is a historic former hotel property at 179 Oenoke Ridge in New Canaan, Connecticut.It is a three-story wood frame Colonial Revival structure, built in 1908 as a vacation boarding house.
The Waldorf Hilton is a historic hotel in the Aldwych, built by William Waldorf Astor in 1908. Despite its name and ownership, it is considered part of the Hilton brand, not the Waldorf Astoria one. [76] Hilton started managing The Trafalgar St. James London, a building that was used by the Cunard Steamship Company, from 2001. [77]
The Historic Hampton House Museum of Culture & Art in Brownsville presented “Gimme Shelter,” a show that pays tribute to the hotel’s history as a safe space for African Americans in the ...
Music was the theme at Hampton Heights' Porchfest on Sunday. Twelve diverse musical acts performed on porches of six historic homes in Spartanburg.
Col Alto is a historic home located at Lexington, Virginia. The original section was built about 1827, and is a two-story, double-pile, three-bay, Georgian style brick dwelling with a hipped roof. In the 1930s, the house was remodeled, enlarged, and modernized by architect William Lawrence Bottomley .