Gregg Hotel | |
Start Date: | 1928 |
Completion Date: | 1930 |
Additions: | 1936: Additional Rooms --> |
Map Type: | Texas |
Map Alt: | Location in Texas |
Building Type: | Hotel |
Location: | 215 E. Methvin St. Longview, Texas United States |
Coordinates: | 32.4934°N -94.7291°W |
Status: | Demolished |
Demolition Date: | 1995 |
Floor Count: | 5 |
Room Count: | 1929–1936: 64 1936–1978: 128 |
Elevator Count: | 1 |
Architect: | Edward F. Neild (1936 Annex) |
Alternate Names: | Downtowner Hotel |
Gregg Hotel is a former hotel in Longview, Texas, built in 1930 and demolished in 1995.
Brick laying on the new Hotel Gregg began in early November, 1929.[1]
When the Hotel Gregg officially opened, the Longview Daily News called the event "one of the most auspicious occasions in the history of the city."[2] Guest from all over East Texas including Shreveport, Louisiana attended.
In late spring of 1931, due to the oil boom, hotel occupancy was over 100%. The dining room was converted to guest quarters with temporary partitions between the beds to handle the number of guests.[3]
On March 29, 1934, nearby Hotel Longview caught fire and burned to the ground with a loss of three lives. This left Longview with a shortage of hotel rooms which prompted a proposal to enlarge the Gregg Hotel.[4]
In 1935 Conrad Hilton purchased the Gregg Hotel. He started immediate plans to enlarge the hotel making the existing Gregg Hotel the annex to a much larger new hotel building.[5] Construction started in March, 1936 for the new addition.[6]
On August 14, 1936, the expanded hotel was opened with construction ongoing. It was at this time the name of the Gregg Hotel was changed to Hilton Hotel.[7]
In mid-1947 Tom Young and Associates purchased the building from Conrad Hilton and renamed the facility "Hotel Longview".[8]
In June, 1954, Earl Hollandsworth and Lee Travis bought the hotel. In addition to the Longview building they also owned the Carlton Hotel in Tyler and Hotel Marshall in Marshall.[9]
On May 14, 1964, the new Downtowner Motor Inn sign was erected. A new addition along the front of the hotel was constructed to add new meeting rooms and a location to house Jackson Travel Agency. The official opening date of the newly renovated Downtowner Motor Inn was June 1, 1964.[10]
In 1974, the hotel building was given to LeTourneau College (now LeTourneau University) by Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hollandsworth. The college continued commercial operations of the hotel and dining room. Due to an increase in enrollment in the fall of 1977 and a lack of living space on campus, the college housed approximately 40 men on the third floor of the hotel. On May 15, 1978, permanent guests and staff of the Downtowner Motor Inn were notified the hotel would cease commercial operations on July 15, 1978. The college planned to have the hotel converted to a dormitory and ready to house 180 men in the fall of 1978.[11]
Beginning with the 1978 autumn semester at LeTourneau College (Now University), the former Downtowner Motor Inn building was converted completely to a dormitory and renamed LeTourneau College Residence Hall. It housed men who attended LeTourneau College. Shuttle buses were provided throughout the day to transport them between the downtown dorm and the campus located on South Mobberly Ave.
Due to new dormitories constructed on campus the Residence Hall was closed and put up for sale following the 1984 spring semester signalling the end of an era.
After graduation the men moved out and the hotel building was shuttered, except for one tenant, the Hilton Barbershop. The barbershop continued for another two years as the sole tenant in the vacant hotel building. It finally closed its doors on July 19, 1986.[12]
The old Downtowner was demolished in 1995.