Geiser Grand Hotel

Geiser Grand Hotel
Location Main and Washington
Baker, Oregon, U.S.
Built 1889
Architect John Bennes
Architectural style Italianate Victorian architecture
Part of Baker Historic District (#78002277[1])
Added to NRHP December 14, 1978

The Geiser Grand Hotel is a historic hotel in Baker City, Oregon, that opened in 1889. It received a restoration and reopened in 1993 after closing in 1968. Decorations include mahogany columns up to a high ceiling, Victorian-style chandeliers, and a stained glass ceiling. It was known as "the Queen of the Mines" during Gold Rush times and described as being the finest hotel between Portland, Oregon and Salt Lake City with the third elevator built west of the Mississippi River.[2]

Architecture

The hotel was built in an Italianate Victorian architecture style designed by architect John Bennes,[3][4] and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a contributing property within the Baker Historic District.[5] Originally named Hotel Warshauer for hotel proprietor Louis F Cook. the hotel opened in November 1889. According to Oregon Encyclopedia, Bennes made "modifications" to the hotel and didn't arrive in Baker until 1900. An original postcard of the hotel states that the hotel was built and owned by the Baker Brothers. According to the Oregonian newspaper, Mr. Geiser bought the hotel in 1900 and in 1901 planned "another story" (which obviously was not built), a reconstructed interior, and the installation of all the latest conveniences and appliances. The hotel was renamed and reopened on January 1, 1902 with the name Geiser Grand Hotel. Information on what modifications Bennes made has not been found, all sources give Bennes complete credit for the building.

Hotel occurrences and stories

A 1906 story in the Reading Eagle titled Baker City Has No Poor gave an account with the hotel as a setting, with the story concluding that "Baker City was the most fortunate place in the country."[6]

In 1959 a clerk helped apprehend a pair of robbers at the hotel by complaining of arthritis and getting the robbers to tie her up loosely and then freeing herself to call the police as they left.[7] Country music singer Presley Wayne Spriet gave his last performance at the hotel the night before his death in 1997.[8]

Based on various reported sightings, the hotel may be haunted.[9][10]

Bennes is believed to have come from Bohemian stock, although he may have been born in Peru, Illinois, and came to Baker City from Chicago ca. 1900[11] and designed several other buildings in the area before moving to Portland.

References

  1. National Park Service (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. Joseph B. Frazier Town Hopes Its Past Ushers in New Gold Rush; Baker City, Ore., harkens back to its rough-and-tumble roots. Officials are spending millions to restore it. [BULLDOG EDITION] August 1, 2004 page B.7 Los Angeles Times
  3. Lisa Britton A grand tour from a history buff Baker City Herald July 01, 2009
  4. http://heritagedata.prd.state.or.us/historic/index.cfm?do=v.dsp_siteSummary&resultDisplay=28026
  5. Baker City Has No Poor Reading Eagle - Dec 23, 1906 page 5
  6. Clerk's Thinking in Baker Foils Hotel Holdup December 13, 1959 Eugene Register-Guard page 3
  7. Country singer's Dad suffers similar fate August 25, 1998 Tri City Herald
  8. Ann Terry Hill Haunted hotels; These famous inns host a 'whooo's who' of otherworldly guests (or do they?) Lifestyles Northwest, Sep 30, 2006
  9. Leslie Rule Coast to coast ghosts: true stories of hauntings across America pages 156-158
  10. Oregon State University Historic District section 8, page 22 U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service
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