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Marvin Boland Photographs 742-50 PACIFIC AVE, TACOMA Image With digital objects
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BOLAND-B6593

This is E.N. Dugan's, of the architectural firm Sutton & Whitney, 1922 drawing of the proposed hotel on the Donnelly Hotel site. The Donnelly location, on Pacific at South 9th & Commerce, was one of the 18 sites to be voted upon by the stockholders in the Citizens Hotel Corporation. One site would be chosen to have a long-desired hotel constructed upon it and competition was fierce. The proposed plan by the Sutton & Whitney firm envisioned a 12-floor building with main lobby (44' X 60') entered directly from Pacific Avenue. There would be a ballroom and seven private dining rooms. Various shops would be located at lobby level. To make the site more enticing, Hugh G. Wallace, owner of the Donnelly Hotel site, agreed to purchase the adjoining property from the Loyal Order of Moose. This would add 50 feet on Pacific and Commerce to the site and Mr. Wallace would lease it to the Hotel Corporation. After two votes, the Donnelly site came in third after the Tacoma Hotel and Rhodes sites. The Donnelly Hotel would be demolished in 1925 to make room for the Motoramp Garage. (TNT 9-19-22, p. 22; TNT 9-30-22, p. 1-article; TDL 10-4-22, p. 1-article)


Architectural drawings; Hotels--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B10462

Harry's Billiard Parlor. Two employees stand ready to assist customers at the refreshment bar located within Harry's Billiard Parlor, in the 700 block of Pacific Avenue, on July 11, 1924. Vases filled with flowers are placed on the wood countertop. The open doorway invites entry into the establishment. Harry's Billiard Parlor was celebrating its grand opening in the Donnelly Hotel. Harry Winesburg was the proprietor. TPL-7183; G53.1-095


Harry's Billiard Parlor (Tacoma); Bars (Furniture)--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND G61.1-023

On a hot summer evening in August of 1919, a visitor to Tacoma could stand at the intersection of Pacific Avenue and 9th, looking north, and see the names of two of the city's hotels and a theater light up the sky in electric signs suspended over the street. On the left is the Hotel Donnelly, 742-50 Pacific Ave. The hotel was built in 1887 and leased to John Donnelly, who gave it his name, ten years later. It was demolished in 1925 to make way for the Motoramp Garage. On the right is the Hippodrome Theater at 821-23 Pacific Ave., an office building at 819 Pacific and the Olympus Hotel at 815-17 Pacific. In 1978, the Olympus was converted to apartments. Pedestrians who became weary from walking could hire a taxi at the corner stand or catch a ride the Pacific Avenue streetcar. TPL-4446, BU-13429, Boland-B2166


Hotel Donnelly (Tacoma); Hotels--Tacoma--1910-1920; Street railroads--Tacoma--1910-1920; Streets--Tacoma--1910-1920; City & town life--Tacoma--1910-1920; Hippodrome Building (Tacoma); Olympus Hotel (Tacoma);