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Ellis Hotel

Coordinates:33°45′30″N84°23′16″W/ 33.7583°N 84.3878°W/33.7583; -84.3878
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(Redirected fromWinecoff Hotel)

The Ellis Hotel
Ellis Hotel in 2020
Map
General information
Location176 Peachtree Street NW,
Atlanta
Opening1913
ManagementColwen Hotels
Technical details
Floor count15
Design and construction
Architect(s)William Lee Stoddart
Other information
Number of rooms127
Website
Ellis Hotel
The Ellis Hotel
Ellis Hotel is located in Atlanta
Ellis Hotel
Coordinates33°45′30″N84°23′16″W/ 33.7583°N 84.3878°W/33.7583; -84.3878
NRHP referenceNo.09000185
Added to NRHPMarch 31, 2009

TheEllis Hotel,formerly known as theWinecoff Hotel,is located at 176Peachtree StreetNW, indowntown Atlanta,Georgia, US.[1][2]Designed byWilliam Lee Stoddart,the 15-story building opened in 1913.[3]It is located next to200 Peachtree,which was built as theflagshipDavison's.It was listed on theNational Register of Historic Placeson March 31, 2009 and is a member ofHistoric Hotels of America(a program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation) since 2023. The Ellis Hotel is best known fora firethat occurred there on December 7, 1946, in which 119 people died.

Fire

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The Ellis Hotel (previously the Winecoff Hotel) is best known for a fire that occurred there on December 7, 1946, in which 119 people died. It remains the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history,[4]and prompted many changes inbuilding codes.Guests at the hotel that night included teenagers attending a Hi-Y and Tri-Hi-Y Youth-in-Government conference (Youth Assembly) sponsored by the State YMCA of Georgia, Christmas shoppers, and people in town to seeSong of the South.Arnold Hardy,a 24-year-oldgraduate studentatGeorgia Tech,became the first amateur to win aPulitzer Prizein photography for his snapshot of a woman in mid-air after jumping from the 11th floor of the hotel during the fire.[5]The jumper was Daisy McCumber, 41. She sustained multiple broken bones and eventually had a leg amputated.[6][7]Under these circumstances, she still worked until her retirement.[8]She died in 1992.[6][7]

Reopenings

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Ellis Hotel

In April 1951, the hotel reopened as thePeachtree Hotel on Peachtree,and was now equipped with bothfire alarmsand automated sprinkler systems. In 1967, it was donated to the Georgia Baptist Convention for housing theelderly,and then repeatedly sold to a series of potential developers.[citation needed]

The gutted lobby served as a souvenir shop during the1996 Summer Olympics.[citation needed]

After over two decades of vacancy, a $23 millionrenovationproject began in April 2006. The project restored the building into aboutiqueluxury hotel, called theEllis Hotelafter the street that runs along the north side of the building. It was reopened on October 1, 2007.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Darwin Porter; Danforth Prince (March 11, 2009).Frommer's The Carolinas and Georgia.John Wiley & Sons. p. 366.ISBN978-0-470-47782-3.
  2. ^Hilary Howard (March 2, 2009)."Hotel Review: The Ellis in Atlanta".The New York Times.RetrievedMarch 20,2015.
  3. ^Peachtree Burning
  4. ^"Historic Fires".University of Texas at Austin.Archived fromthe originalon October 9, 2011.RetrievedDecember 4,2010.
  5. ^"1947 Pulitzer Prize for Photography"
  6. ^ab"Amateur photographer won Pulitzer Prize for hotel fire photo".Los Angeles Times.The Associated Press. December 8, 2007.Archivedfrom the original on April 10, 2021.
  7. ^ab"Arnold Hardy, an amateur photographer who won a Pulitzer Prize for his gripping 1946 photo of a woman falling from a burning hotel, has died. He was 85".SouthCoastToday.The Associated Press. December 9, 2007. Archived fromthe originalon April 10, 2021.RetrievedApril 10,2021.
  8. ^""Death Leap From Blazing Hotel" – The Story Behind the Photo Taken by an Amateur Photographer That Won the 1947 Pulitzer Prize ".Vintage News Daily.May 21, 2018.RetrievedNovember 9,2021.The 'jumping lady' was Daisy McCumber, a 41-year-old Atlanta secretary who, contrary to countless captions, survived the 11-story jump. She broke both legs, her back, and her pelvis. She underwent seven operations in 10 years and lost a leg, but then worked until retirement. She died in 1992 aged 87, having never revealed even to family that she was the woman in Hardy's photo.
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