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Cosmopolitan Hotel may refer to: Cosmopolitan Hotel Tribeca in Tribeca, New York City; Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas ("The Cosmo"), a resort casino and hotel in Paradise ...
The Cosmopolitan Hotel and Restaurant in Old Town San Diego State Historic Park is an American registered national historic landmark, built in the early 19th century by Juan Bandini and later purchased by Albert Seeley to serve as a stagecoach hotel. In 2010, restorations and added fine dining restaurants revived the hotel to its 1870s charm ...
As of July 2021, COMO Hotels and Resorts operates 18 hotels in nine countries in Asia, Europe, North America, and Oceania. [13] COMO Shambhala Estate in Ubud, Bali is the group's flagship. [14] Asia-Pacific. COMO Uma Paro, Bhutan; COMO Uma Punakha, Bhutan; COMO Shambhala Estate, Bali, Indonesia; COMO Uma Canggu, Bali, Indonesia; COMO Uma Ubud ...
Cosmo, a band formed by Fran Cosmo and his son Anton Cosmo in 2006; Doug Clifford (born 1945), American rock drummer and member of the rock band Creedence Clearwater Revival, nicknamed "Cosmo" Cosmo Jarvis, stage name of English singer-songwriter and filmmaker Harrison Cosmo Krikoryan Jarvis; Cosmo (Doug Clifford album), 1972; Cosmo (Ozuna ...
In May 1953, the Schimmel brothers purchased the 175-room Lincoln-Douglas Hotel in Quincy, Illinois. [10] The hotel was acquired from another in-state hotel family, C. Hayden Davis, his son, J. Hayden Davis, and their wives, of Springfield, Illinois. The Davis family owned the Abraham Lincoln Hotel in Springfield and the Hotel Quincy. [11]
The Frederick Hotel, previously the Cosmopolitan Hotel Tribeca, is a historic hotel located at 95 West Broadway in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York City. The building was built in 1844-45 by a tobacco merchant James Boorman. [1] Early on it was called the Girard House and it was renamed the Cosmopolitan in the 1860s.
Hotels proliferated throughout Western Europe and North America in the 19th century. Luxury hotels, including the 1829 Tremont House in Boston, the 1836 Astor House in New York City, [7] the 1889 Savoy Hotel in London, and the Ritz chain of hotels in London and Paris in the late 1890s, catered to an ever more-wealthy clientele.