Lovejoy's Hotel | |
Location: | Park Row & Beekman Place, Manhattan, New York City, U.S. |
Coordinates: | 40.7115°N -74.0071°W |
Completion Date: | 1830s |
Demolition Date: | 1889 |
Lovejoy's Hotel was a New York City hotel from the 1830s through 1870. It was located at the corner of Park Row and Beekman Street in a six-story building in the Civic Center neighborhood of Manhattan.[1] The Astor House hotel was opposite it.
Jonathan Lovejoy was the original proprietor. John P. Huggins later purchased the hotel.[2] Huggins ran the hotel for approximately twenty years before purchasing the Cosmopolitan Hotel with his two brothers.[3] [4]
In 1852, Alvan E. Bovay, a future founder of the United States Republican Party, dined with Horace Greeley at Lovejoy's during the 1852 Whig National Convention. They discussed the need for a new national party, and Bovay suggested it be called the "Republican" party.[5] [6]
The hotel was among those the "Confederate Army of Manhattan" attempted to burn down in November 1864.[7]
Horatio Alger, Jr. mentions Lovejoy's in his 1868 novel Ragged Dick.
The hotel closed in 1870 and was converted into offices.[1] By now Park Row was dominated by newspapers, and subsequent tenants of the building included the New York Evening Mail and the Rural New Yorker.[8]
The building suffered some damage in the January 1882 fire that destroyed the former Potter Building (and former home of the New York World).[9] But it remained standing until around 1888 or 1889.[10] [11]