Pabst Hotel
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The Pabst Hotel occupied the north side of
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in
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,
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, between 7th Avenue and
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, in Longacre Square, from 1899 to 1902. It was demolished to make room for the new headquarters of ''
The New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', for which Longacre Square was renamed
Times Square Times Square is a major commercial intersection, tourist destination, entertainment hub, and Neighborhoods in New York City, neighborhood in the Midtown Manhattan section of New York City. It is formed by the junction of Broadway (Manhattan), ...
. To the
Pabst Brewing Company The Pabst Brewing Company () is an American company that dates its origins to a brewing company founded in 1844 by Jacob Best and was, by 1889, named after Frederick Pabst. It outsources the brewing of over two dozen brands of beer and ma ...
, the hotel and its restaurants were part of a nationwide program for promoting its beer. This facility, however, conflicted not only with the ''Times'', but also with plans for New York's new subway system.


Pabst

In the 1890s the Pabst Brewing Company of
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embarked upon a program of acquiring restaurants and hotels—at one time controlling nine of them in
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,
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,
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, and New York—giving the resorts its name and serving only its own products. It subleased the properties to professional facilities operators. In New York, Pabst came to control: *the Pabst Loop Hotel in
Coney Island Coney Island is a neighborhood and entertainment area in the southwestern section of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. The neighborhood is bounded by Brighton Beach to its east, Lower New York Bay to the south and west, and Gravesend to ...
, which opened in 1900. It burned down in 1908. *the Pabst Harlem Music Hall and Restaurant, which opened in September 1900 opposite the
Harlem Opera House Harlem Opera House was an opera house located at 211 West 125th Street, in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S. Designed by architect John B. McElfatrick, it was built in 1889 by Oscar Hammerstein; it was his f ...
on 125th Street. It was billed as the largest restaurant in the world, seating 1,400 patrons. It became an S.H. Kress store after prohibition closed it in 1919; the Harlem riot of 1935 began there. *the Pabst Grand Circle Hotel and Restaurant on 58th Street, which opened in February 1903, together with the
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, with which it was built. ("Grand Circle" was an earlier name for
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.) It was demolished in 1954 and replaced by the
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and later the
Time Warner Center Deutsche Bank Center (also known as One Columbus Circle and formerly Time Warner Center) is a mixed-use building on Columbus Circle in Manhattan, New York City, United States. The building occupies the western side of Columbus Circle and strad ...
.


The building

Pabst itself leased the building from Charles Thorley, who built it on ground leased from Henry Dolan for five 21-year terms. Thorley leased it to the brewing company for the remainder of the first term in 1899; Pabst leased it to Jame B. Regan, who ran it as proprietor. It stood on the south end of the slender triangular block formed by the intersection of 7th Avenue and Broadway, the rest of which belonged to the estate of Amos R. Eno (November 1, 1810February 21, 1898) and was occupied by an older group of five four-story brick buildings, also Eno's, which tapered in width from south to north to fit the block. The principal architect, Henry F. Kilburn, designed a nine-story tower with a
steel frame Steel frame is a building technique with a "skeleton frame" of vertical steel columns and horizontal I-beams, constructed in a rectangular grid to support the floors, roof and walls of a building which are all attached to the frame. The develop ...
and limestone cladding—still a new construction method at the time. Floors 3 through 9 each had five bedrooms. Construction began in October 1898, and the opening was November 11, 1899. The building cost $225,000 and Pabst made additional improvements for $50,000. An advertisement on the back wall read: "The 'Pabst' / Ladies' & Gentlemen's Restaurant /
Rathskeller Ratskeller (German: "council's cellar", pl. ''Ratskeller'', historically ''Rathskeller'') is a name in German-speaking countries for a bar or restaurant located in the basement of a city hall (''Rathaus'') or nearby. Many taverns, nightclubs, b ...
/ Bachelor's Hotel." The building's footprint was small, 58 feet wide by 25 feet deep, but the restaurant, on the second floor, and the rathskeller, in the basement, were not confined by the property lines. The rathskeller used space under the sidewalks, which was common and lawful, and the restaurant extended over the 42nd Street portico, which had been built on the sidewalk without authorization. This was common, too, but not lawful.


The portico

In July 1900, ''The New York Times'' criticized city officials for allowing the illegal portico, which it called "a gross and insolent encroachment upon a public highway", to remain; however, city officials were no more inclined to move against this encroachment than any of the others. Regan was defiant; the ''Times'' was relentless. For two years, in dozens of articles and frequent editorials, the ''Times'' informed its readers about its battle to get city officials to enforce the law by removing the portico, while the officials, according to the ''Times'', resisted every way they could—e. g.: they claimed confusion over their legal authority; they filed an unnecessary lawsuit against Regan and Thorley, claiming the city lacked the funds to carry out the removal; bills were introduced in the Municipal Assembly and the State Legislature to legalize the portico, but did not become law; and a spurious ''
mandamus A writ of (; ) is a judicial remedy in the English and American common law system consisting of a court order that commands a government official or entity to perform an act it is legally required to perform as part of its official duties, o ...
'' lawsuit was filed as a delaying tactic. Some people questioned the ''Times motive for singling out this one violation, when there were so many others. After many delays, a judge decided against the hotel on November 18, 1901. The portico, he ordered in strong words, must be removed, by the city if necessary, at the hotel's expense. Regan and Thorley appealed, and the ''Times'' reported that although city officials could lawfully have acted on the order at once, they chose to delay, pending the outcome. If the portico was eventually removed, it wasn't reported. Longacre Square, New York City, 1898 (No. 3).jpg, The site in 1898, from the southeast Pabst Hotel and Restaurant, 42nd Street, New York City - jpg version.jpg, Similar angle Pabst Hotel, 42nd Street, Manhattan (04) (light-adjusted).jpg, From the southwest Pabst Hotel, Manhattan, from the north.jpg, From the north, with Eno buildings Pabst Hotel, 42nd Street, Manhattan (03).jpg, Subway construction Pabst Hotel, 42nd Street, Manhattan (05).jpg, Second-floor restaurant Pabst Hotel, 42nd Street, Manhattan (06).jpg, Rathskeller Pabst Hotel, 42nd Street, Manhattan (07).jpg, Guestroom Pabstdemo crop.jpg, Demolition The New York Times Building at One Times Square.jpg, Successor


The subway

New York City's first subway lines were constructed in sections from 1900 to 1904. The main line ran north from the
City Hall In local government, a city hall, town hall, civic centre (in the UK or Australia), guildhall, or municipal hall (in the Philippines) is the chief administrative building of a city, town, or other municipality. It usually houses the city o ...
under the East Side, across town under 42nd Street, north again under 7th Avenue from 43rd to 44th Street, and then under Broadway. The route therefore included a wide curve directly under the Eno property. The Subway Realty Company, an arm of the company building the subway, purchased it from Amos F. Eno (son of Amos R. Eno), demolished the buildings, and excavated an opening for the work. Construction noise was loud, which must have hurt the hotel's business. Though the Pabst Hotel would be able to remain, on April 15, 1902, the subway company took possession of the entire cellar room beneath the Broadway side of the building and about half of the space beneath the sidewalk on 42nd Street, for tunnel purposes—a large part of the rathskeller and storage room. Regan and Pabst claimed this nullified the lease with Thorley. Regan at the time was proprietor of the Woodmansten Inn, the Bronx, and arranged to become proprietor of the grand Knickerbocker Hotel, planned for the southeast corner of 42nd Street and Broadway. On September 24, 1902, the Pabst Brewing Company filed suit in federal court to recover damages from Thorley.


The ''Times'' and the demolition

On August 4, 1902, ''The New York Times'' announced that it would give up its long-time home on Park Row near City Hall and move to a neighborhood it predicted would soon be the commercial center of the city: Longacre Square. Its publisher, Adolph S. Ochs, had purchased the former Eno ground from the Subway Realty Company and obtained a long-term lease from Charles Thorley on the ground under the Pabst. The company would build a skyscraper on the triangular block for its own occupancy. Demolition of the hotel began November 24, 1902. It was the first building completely supported by a steel skeleton ever demolished. The ''Times'' reported that professional builders were keen to discover whether the structural members had begun to corrode, which might threaten the structural integrity of the building and the future of the construction method, but nothing alarming was discovered. On April 8, 1904, Longacre Square was renamed Times Square. The subway, including the
Times Square Times Square is a major commercial intersection, tourist destination, entertainment hub, and Neighborhoods in New York City, neighborhood in the Midtown Manhattan section of New York City. It is formed by the junction of Broadway (Manhattan), ...
station, opened to the public on October 27. The newspaper moved into its new building Sunday, January 1, 1905,This means the first issue published from the new location was that of January 2. although the building wasn't quite complete.


See also

* List of former hotels in Manhattan


References

Notes Citations


External links

* *''Museum of the City of New York'' website
Woodmansten Inn
{{Coord, 40, 45, 23, N, 73, 59, 11, W, display=title Defunct hotels in Manhattan Hotels established in 1899 Pabst Brewing Company Times Square buildings 1899 establishments in New York City 1902 disestablishments in New York (state) Skyscraper hotels in Manhattan Buildings and structures demolished in 1902 Demolished buildings and structures in Manhattan Demolished hotels in New York City