Joplin Connor Hotel | |
Location: | 324 Main St., Joplin, Missouri |
Coordinates: | 37.0881°N -94.5136°W |
Built: | -1907 |
Architecture: | Classical Revival |
Added: | February 28, 1973 |
Refnum: | 73001042 |
The Connor Hotel was a beaux arts style hotel at 324 Main Street in Joplin, Missouri, United States. Built between 1906 and 1908, the structure is best known nationally because of its unexpected collapse in 1978 which killed two men.
The Connor Hotel was the brainchild of Thomas Connor, an early 20th century Joplin, Missouri millionaire. Before the Connor Hotel was built, Connor owned the Joplin Hotel. The Joplin had 3 stories and about 50 rooms. It sat where the Connor hotel would later be built.
Rumors went around that Connor would expand the Joplin Hotel. Instead, in 1906, Connor demolished the building to make a new hotel.[1]
The new hotel's construction began immediately after demolition, and it was going to be called the Joplin Hotel, like its predecessor. However, in 1907, Connor died at the age of 60. When the new hotel opened in 1908, the new hotel was named the Connor Hotel, in memory of Thomas Connor.
On November 11, 1978, one day before its scheduled demolition, the hotel collapsed with three workers inside it. Two of the men, Thomas Oaks and Frederick Coe, did not survive.
The third, Alfred Sommers, was rescued 82 hours after the collapse.[2] The hotel demolition was ultimately completed three days later[3] in order to repurpose the space for the new city library.[4]