Hotel Tuller Explained

Hotel Tuller
Location:Adams Avenue West, Bagley Street, and Park Avenue
Detroit, Michigan
Coordinates:42.3361°N -83.0522°W
Status:Demolished
Completion Date:1906, 1910 (first addition), 1914 (second add.), 1923 (third add.)
Demolished Date:1991
Building Type:Hotel
Floor Count:14
Architect:William H. Adams (third addition)
Hotel Tuller
Embed:yes
Nrhp Type:cp
Nocat:yes
Partof:Grand Circus Park Historic District
Partof Refnum:83000894
Designated Nrhp Type:February 28, 1983

The Hotel Tuller once stood at Adams Avenue West, Bagley Street, and Park Avenue across from Grand Circus Park in downtown Detroit, Michigan. It was one of the largest luxury hotels in Detroit, and the first one to be erected in the Grand Circus Park Historic District.[1] The hotel was known as the "grand dame of Grand Circus Park."[2] The site is now the location of a parking lot next to the United Artists Theatre Building.

Composer Gerald Marks' band, the Gerald Marks's Hotel Tuller Orchestra, was based at the hotel. The band made several commercially successful recordings for Columbia Records in the mid-1920s.[3]

History

The Hotel Tuller was originally constructed in 1906[2] by Lew Whiting Tuller.[4] The hotel originally had nine floors; five additional floors were added in 1910.[5] A fourteen-story annex was added to the southeast of the original building in 1914,[5] and it was a popular site for conventions and banquets.[6] A final addition to the west was made in 1923,[5] bringing the room count to 800, each with a private bath.[1] The hotel's Arabian Room was the largest ballroom in Detroit, with a capacity of 600 people.[7]

Starting in the early 1920s, the Tuller had a difficult time competing with other Detroit hotels, most notably the Statler Hotel and the newly built Book-Cadillac Hotel.[7] In 1927 the Tuller went bankrupt; a 1928 plan to demolish the structure and replace it with a 35-story, 1,500-room Biltmore hotel was abandoned due to the Great Depression.[7] In 1940, the former boxer Kid McCoy was found dead in his room in the hotel.[8] The Tuller was purchased by new owners in 1944, and experienced a complete makeover; the lobby was renovated by the architectural firm of C. Howard Crane.[5] In 1959, a fire at the hotel killed 3 people, who were trapped in an elevator when a fire broke out in the lobby.[9] [10]

The hotel fell into disrepair and was shuttered in 1976 after having been a low-end, extended-stay property. The city of Detroit deemed this building beyond repair, demolished it in 1991,[7] and the site has remained a parking lot ever since.

Lew Tuller

Lew Whiting Tuller was born in Jonesville, Michigan in 1869.[4] His father was an architect and builder, and when he finished his schooling, Lew joined his father in business.[7] He moved to Detroit in 1894, and built a number of apartment houses and other buildings in the city.[4] Tuller built the hotel that bears his name in 1906, and, being unable to lease the building, he began running it as a hotel himself.[4] His foray into hotel management was successful,[4] and he built three other hotels in Detroit: the Eddystone, Park Avenue, and the Royal Palm.[11]

The increasing competition among Detroit hotels, combined with the financial instability of the late 1920s and with a series of unsuccessful real estate deals operated by Tuller, caused him to lose his empire: the Eddystone and the Royal Palm Hotels were foreclosed in 1928, and Lew Tuller went so far as to conceal himself, in a desperate attempt to prevent the Hotel Tuller from entering receivership.[11]

Lew Tuller died in Pontiac, Michigan in 1957, at the age of 88.[7]

Gallery

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/hhh.mi0247 Historic American Buildings Survey
  2. Book: Ibbotson, Patricia. Detroit's Historic Hotels and Restaurants. 2007. Arcadia Publishing. 978-0-7385-5080-0. 17–24.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=cFxZRg_Z24kC Jon Milan
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=FTTiAAAAMAAJ Clarence Monroe Burton, William Stocking, Gordon K. Miller
  5. Austin, Dan. Tuller Hotel. Historic Detroit. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
  6. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=oEsyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=aa8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=3843,913057&dq=hotel-tuller+detroit&hl=en Owosso Argus-Press - Sep 14, 1961
  7. Book: Austin, Dan. Forgotten Landmarks of Detroit. 2012. The History Press. 978-1-60949-828-3. 149–64.
  8. https://www.nytimes.com/1940/04/19/archives/kid-mcoy-a-suicide-in-detroit-hotel-norman-selby-in-private-life-he.html New York Times
  9. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=wa0yAAAAIBAJ&sjid=KOwFAAAAIBAJ&pg=736,741045&dq=hotel-tuller+detroit&hl=en Miami News
  10. https://web.archive.org/web/20110604134152/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/493877582.html?dids=493877582:493877582&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Jan+18,+1959&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&desc=3+Die,+200+Rescued+in+Detroit+Hotel+Fire&pqatl=google Los Angeles Times
  11. Austin, Dan. Lew W. Tuller (Jan. 4, 1869 - Jan. 5, 1957). Historic Detroit. Retrieved May 1, 2016.