Lamoine Hotel Explained

Lamoine Hotel
Coordinates:40.46°N -90.67°W
Built:-27
Architect:F.E. Berger and R.L. Kelley
Builder:Charles Van Etten
Architecture:Classical Revival
Added:September 16, 2010
Refnum:10000760[1]

The Lamoine Hotel is a historic hotel located at 201 North Randolph Street in Macomb, Illinois. The hotel was built in 1926-27 to be the city's first large modern hotel, a necessity for a city with a busy railroad station and a state university. Architects F.E. Berger and R.L. Kelley of Champaign designed the Classical Revival building; it is the tallest building in downtown Macomb and the most prominent Classical Revival building in the city. In addition to hosting visitors to Macomb, the hotel housed several local businesses and hosted community meetings and the Macomb Chamber of Commerce. The hotel was the city's preferred hotel and community meeting place until the 1950s, when the automobile's rise took away the railroad traffic which gave the hotel much of its business. The hotel became an apartment hotel and ultimately closed for good in the following decades; the Macomb Journal later moved into the building's ground floor.[2]

The hotel was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 16, 2010.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 9/13/10 Through 9/17/10. National Park Service. August 30, 2015. September 24, 2010.
  2. Web site: Basch. Ed. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lamoine Hotel. Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. August 30, 2015. February 8, 2010.