Difference between revisions of "Anthony House"
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− | The '''Anthony House''' was the first public inn on [[Markham Street]] in downtown Little Rock. The Anthony House opened in 1841. | + | The '''Anthony House''' was the first public inn on [[Markham Street]] in downtown Little Rock. The Anthony House opened at the southwest corner of Markham and Scott streets in 1841 under Major [[James C. Anthony]]. The three-story hotel held twenty-eight bedrooms, two parlors, and a sixty foot dining room. The hotel advertised "accommodations unsurpassed by any establishment west of the Alleghanies." The hotel also advertised that it had ice year-round. [[David Skelton]] managed a brickwork stable for the hotel nearby. |
− | Anthony House had twenty-two rooms, a dining hall measuring sixty feet in length, as well as meeting space. The inn was destroyed by fire in 1876. | + | It was also the headquarters of the [[General Stage Office]]. The hotel is famous as the headquarters of Governor [[Elisha Baxter] during the [[Brooks-Baxter War]] of 1874. |
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+ | Anthony House had twenty-two rooms, a dining hall measuring sixty feet in length, as well as meeting space. The inn was destroyed by fire in 1875 or 1876. | ||
Other early hotels included the [[City Hotel]] operated by [[C.L. Jeffries]], the [[Eagle House]], the [[National House]], [[Franklin House]], and the [[Washington and Rock Hotel]]. | Other early hotels included the [[City Hotel]] operated by [[C.L. Jeffries]], the [[Eagle House]], the [[National House]], [[Franklin House]], and the [[Washington and Rock Hotel]]. | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
+ | *Tom W. Dillard, "Early Arkansas Hotels Would Appall Today's Travelers," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette,'' February 10, 2008. | ||
*Ira Don Richards, ''Story of a Rivertown: Little Rock in the Nineteenth Century'' (1969), 56. | *Ira Don Richards, ''Story of a Rivertown: Little Rock in the Nineteenth Century'' (1969), 56. | ||
Revision as of 18:33, 23 May 2009
The Anthony House was the first public inn on Markham Street in downtown Little Rock. The Anthony House opened at the southwest corner of Markham and Scott streets in 1841 under Major James C. Anthony. The three-story hotel held twenty-eight bedrooms, two parlors, and a sixty foot dining room. The hotel advertised "accommodations unsurpassed by any establishment west of the Alleghanies." The hotel also advertised that it had ice year-round. David Skelton managed a brickwork stable for the hotel nearby.
It was also the headquarters of the General Stage Office. The hotel is famous as the headquarters of Governor [[Elisha Baxter] during the Brooks-Baxter War of 1874.
Anthony House had twenty-two rooms, a dining hall measuring sixty feet in length, as well as meeting space. The inn was destroyed by fire in 1875 or 1876.
Other early hotels included the City Hotel operated by C.L. Jeffries, the Eagle House, the National House, Franklin House, and the Washington and Rock Hotel.
References
- Tom W. Dillard, "Early Arkansas Hotels Would Appall Today's Travelers," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, February 10, 2008.
- Ira Don Richards, Story of a Rivertown: Little Rock in the Nineteenth Century (1969), 56.