Bismarck Hotel Co.
Bismarck Hotel (1894–1956) Following the successful operation of their restaurant on the 1893 World's Fair, Emil and Karl Eitel bought an existing hotel, rebuilt it and renamed it the Bismarck Hotel. This hotel was replaced in 1926 by the construction of a large luxury hotel under the same name. A chronology of the Bismarck Hotel:
Fair hotel (1893) Chicago, Cottage Grove Avenue / Sixty-Third Street, . Due to the strong demand of its German and Austrian suppliers for accommodation for the first Chicago World's Fair 1893 (
World's Columbian Exposition), the Eitel brothers rented an apartment house near the fairgrounds and converted it to a hotel with 150 beds.
Old Bismarck Hotel (1894–1924) Chicago, Randolph Street / Wells Street, . After the huge success of their fair hotel the brothers decided to set up a permanent hotel. They purchased the four-story Germania Hotel with 50 beds in Chicago's
Loop district, at Chicago's formerly Broadway in Randolph Street and close to the financial district. Within one year they increased the bed capacity through the purchase of adjacent buildings to 100 beds. With the permission of the German Chancellor
Otto von Bismarck they were allowed to call the hotel Bismarck Hotel. Due to the anti-German sentiment during the First World War the hotel was renamed temporarily to Randolph Hotel.
New Bismarck Hotel (1926–1956) Chicago, Randolph Street / LaSalle Street / West Court Place / Wells Street, . In 1922, the Eitels realigned their property to the so-called Eitel Block, which covered the northern part of the block between Randolph and Washington Street and Wells and LaSalle Street. In 1924, they razed the buildings in the Eitel Block and built a skyscraper in 1925 and 1926. It consisted of the 22-story Metropolitan Office Building and the 19-story hotel wing which hosted the Hotel Bismarck with its 600 beds and the Palace Theater, which held 2500 seats. The famous Walnut Room ballroom hosted numerous big bands and orchestras during the late 1930s and 1940s including Art Kassel and his Kassels in the air whose performances were carried live every Saturday night on WGN radio in Chicago. The orchestra featured singer, Marion Holmes, who recorded several songs with them including one on Blue Bird Records that became immensely popular, "I'm a Little Tea Pot" in 1941. Marion met her husband to be during one such performance, Broadway/film/television star,
Don DeFore. He was touring in Chicago starring in Broadway's number one comedy of the year, "Where Do We Go From Here." ["Growing Up in Disneyland" Waldorf Publishing 2019 by Ron DeFore ISBN 1643166263] In 1956,
Otto K. Eitel sold the hotel to the hotel and sports entrepreneur
Arthur Wirtz. After a period of slow decline, the hotel was closed in 1996, and reopened in 1998 by the
Kimpton group under the name Hotel Allegro. File: Bismarck Hotel, Chicago, 1894-1924.jpg | Old Bismarck Hotel (until 1924), picture vor 1925. File: Bismarck Hotel, Chicago, 1894-1924, 01.jpg | Same, Main Dining Room, postcard 1905. File: Bismarck Hotel, Chicago, 01.jpg | Same, Main Dining Room (Walnut Room), picture 1926.
Marigold Gardens (1895–1923) Chicago, 3760 North
Halsted Street, . In 1895, Emil and Karl Eitel bought the popular beer garden DeBerg's Grove in the north of Chicago, rebuilt it, and called it Bismarck Gardens in line with their hotel's name. The gardens was themed after a typical German beer garden of the time, with daily outdoor music shows and the largest outdoor wooden dance floor in Chicago. Also built was the Marigold Room was used as a concert hall during winter. Reportedly, President
William Howard Taft described the Marigold Gardens even as a "national institution". Because of anti-German sentiment, the Bismarck Gardens were renamed during the First World War as Marigold Gardens. In 1923, the brothers sold the Marigold Gardens, due to
Prohibition. File: Marigold Gardens, Chicago, 01.jpg | Beer garden with dance floor, picture before 1924. File: Marigold Gardens, Chicago, 02.jpg | Marigold Room, picture before 1924. File: Marigold Gardens, Chicago, 03.jpg | Beer garden with Swiss Chateau and Electric Fountain, picture before 1924. == Eitel Incorporated ==