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Six o'clock closing was introduced during the First World War, partly as an attempt to improve public morality and partly as a war austerity measure. Before this reform, most hotels and public houses in Australia had closed at 11 or 11:30 pm. [1] Support for changing hotel closing times originally came from the temperance movement, which hoped that implementing restrictions on the sale of ...
Cleveland is located in central Blount County at 33°59'31.326" North, 86°34'33.823" West (33.992035, -86.576062). [3] The Locust Fork of the Black Warrior River flows past the northwest side of the town. The National Register-listed Swann Covered Bridge, which spans the river, lies just west of Cleveland.
The Cleveland Allerton greatly echoes the style of the Allerton in Chicago though that building stands over 120 feet taller. The Allerton company at one time owned hotels in New York City and Detroit as well. [3] The Allerton featured a swimming pool, rooftop patio, large coffee shop and several recreational features. [4]
Pages in category "Hotels in Cleveland" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C. Cleveland Arcade; H.
The Tudor Arms Hotel is a historic hotel in the University Circle neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio. It was designed by Cleveland architect Frank B. Meade in 1929 and opened in 1933 as the Cleveland Club. The 12-story Gothic revival building sits at the corner of Carnegie Avenue and Stokes Boulevard. [1]
The Crowne Plaza Cleveland at Playhouse Square is a mid-sized, 14-story Crowne Plaza hotel in downtown Cleveland's Playhouse Square district, located at the intersection of Huron Road and Euclid Avenue. Originally known as the Wyndham Cleveland at Playhouse Square, the structure helped to complete the revitalization of Playhouse Square. It ...
The Hotel Statler opened at Euclid and East 12th on October 12, 1912, and contained 700 rooms. [5] The success of the Cleveland entity soon led to the opening of Statlers in Washington, D.C. , Detroit , St. Louis , New York City , Hartford , Dallas , and Los Angeles .
Among the colonial-era hotels, now lost to development, were the Bellevue Hotel in Brisbane (demolished in 1979) [1] and two of Sydney's pub-hotels – the Hotel Australia, which formerly stood on the corner of Castlereagh St and Martin Place (demolished c. 1970 to make way for the MLC Centre) and the Tattersall's Hotel in Pitt St.