The Hotel Van Cleve was named after William Van Cleave, who had established a hotel and tavern in Dayton in 1812. The hotel was financed by the Stranahan, Harris and Otis Company of
Toledo and built in 1927 by Hill Smith and Company for $1.2 million. The hotel opened in January 1928 in the presence of Ohio
Governor Vic Donahey,
Columbus Mayor James J. Thomas, and prominent hoteliers from across the United States. The first general manager was C.C. Schiffler, a German-born hotelier who had managed the
Ritz-Carlton in New York. In 1932, the hotel was acquired and run through the 1930s by hotel industry pioneer
Ralph Hitz's National Hotel Management Company. In the fall of 1939, the Van Cleve hosted
Bob Chester's orchestra for a dance music program, aired nationally on
CBS radio. On 21 October 1948, Boeing engineers
George S. Schairer, Art Carlsen, and Vaughn Blumenthal presented the design of a four-engine turboprop bomber to the
U.S. Air Force's chief of
bomber development at nearby
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, who expressed disappointment and asked if the Boeing team could produce a proposal for a four-engine turbojet bomber. Joined by Ed Wells, Boeing's vice president of engineering, the engineers worked that night in the Van Cleve, redesigning Boeing's proposal as a four-engine turbojet bomber. On Friday, the Air Force looked over the information and asked for a better design. Returning to the hotel, the Boeing team was joined by Bob Withington and Maynard Pennell, two top Boeing engineers who were in town on other business. By late Friday night, they had laid out what was an essentially new airplane with 35-degree
swept wings and eight engines. After a trip to a hobby shop for supplies, Schairer set to work building a model. The rest of the team focused on weight and performance data. Wells, who was also a skilled artist, completed the aircraft drawings. On Sunday, a stenographer was hired to type a clean copy of the proposal. On Monday, Schairer presented a neatly bound 33-page proposal and a scale model. The aircraft became the famed
B-52 Stratofortress. Through the 1960s, the Van Cleve faced a steady decline in business due to newer more modern hotels and motels being built in the area. In 1967, the shareholders authorized the board to dissolve the hotel corporation and put the building up for sale. The city attempted to buy the hotel for apartments, but an anonymous donor purchased the hotel in November 1967 for between $750,000 and $1,000,000 and gave it to the Christ Episcopal Church next door. The hotel closed on December 31, 1967, but the Mayfair restaurant and the Wagon Wheel bar remained open until October 1968. The empty building was supposed to be converted into a home for the elderly, but the cost for renovation proved to be too high. The hotel's furnishings were auctioned off in March 1969, and demolition was completed in June 1969. Parking Management, Inc. opened a parking lot on the vacant site. This was supposed to be temporary, until Christ Church could decide what to do with the site. However, Parking Management, Inc. still operates a parking lot on the site today. ==References==