Fannie Chaffee Grant’s father
Jerome B. Chaffee, one of Colorado's first senators, purchased the hotel for his daughter as a gift. Women were not allowed to buy real estate at that time and her husband had no money of his own. Senator Chaffee purchased the Horton House in 1895. Fannie Chaffee Grant decided to tear it down in 1905. Her husband,
Ulysses S. Grant Jr. (son of President
Ulysses S. Grant), oversaw the building of the Grant Hotel, which opened in 1910 and was named after his father. Architect
Harrison Albright designed the hotel. San Diego voters helped finance $700,000 for the $1.5 million needed to construct the hotel after Grant lacked the funds to do so. The hotel opened on October 15, 1910 and included two swimming pools as well as a ballroom on the top floor. The Grant Hotel was, for nearly 35 years, until 1974, the site of the annual reunion dinner of the "Great White Fleet Association," a group of sailors who sailed on
the cruise of 16 white battleships from 1907-09. These dinners attracted a wide range of military officials and guests from all over the world. The inaugural
San Diego Comic-Con, which was then called "San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Con", was held at the U.S. Grant Hotel in 1970. The hotel was refurbished in the 1980s, but fell upon hard times in the subsequent decade due to a financial slump. The hotel changed hands several times during the 1990s. In 2003, the hotel was purchased by the
Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation as a tribute to the contributions of the former US President for the Native American community during his presidency. The new management closed the doors for 21 months to renovate the building and reopened in October 2006. The hotel is currently operated by
Marriott Hotels & Resorts as a part of its Luxury Collection. The official name of the property is The U.S. Grant, a Luxury Collection Hotel, San Diego. San Diego’s first radio station, KFVW, was housed on the hotel's 11th floor in the late 1920s and early '30s. Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave an address from the radio station, which also broadcast live orchestra music performed at the Grant. The U.S. Grant was also home to the local radio station KFSD for a long time between the early 1930’s and 1939 and carried radio towers on both the towers of the property. KFSD had a dedicated portion of the 11th floor to perform its operations and entertain the residents of San Diego. A floor plan indicating the design of KFSD during that time is still available in the basement of the property. == Grant Grill ==