Hotels: Fairmont Hotel
The Fairmont Hotel atop Nob Hill was in the final stages of construction when the 1906 earthquake/fire struck.
The first three of these pre-quake images look west up California Street,
while the fourth looks northwest from Sutter/Grant; two have added post-earthquake captions.
California Street Hill shows earlier images, predating the 1903 onset of Fairmont construction.
The Fairmont remained structurally sound after the earthquake
but was heavily damaged by the ensuing fire.
The common misspelling "Fairmount" for "Fairmont" appears on all three of these cards
and on two other cards above.
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Mitchell 5017, looking southwest from Sacramento and Powell,
is postmarked 12/16/1905, so it predates the earthquake and the hotel's completion.
- Rieder-Cardinell looks north on Powell from Pine.
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Souvenir Post Card 4631F, postmarked New Haven Conn. 10/23/1910,
looks southwest from Stockton toward the Sacramento St. side of the hotel.
The Fairmont opened in 1907 after repair of earthquake/fire damage.
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Weidner 680, postmarked SF 10/13/1908.
The steps on the Powell St. side appear to still be under construction.
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Britton & Rey 1083, caption "under the Management of Palace Hotel Company".
The Palace Hotel Co. leased the Fairmont starting in July 1907
while it constructed a replacement for the Hotels: Palace Hotel on Market Street.
The new Palace opened in December 1909,
so this card must date from between 1907 and 1909.
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Britton & Rey 1083, the same image but with later "unsurpassed Scenic Panorama" caption
and with added vegetation.
Anthony Bourdain called the Fairmont's Tonga Room
"the greatest place in the history of the world".
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Fairmont, postmarked SF 10/06/1951: Ella writes
that she's lonesome being stuck in her room all day
while her husband plays golf with his boss and co-workers.
Upside: her hives are about gone and she got to eat dinner at the Tonga Room.
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Fairmont, postmarked 7/07/1966:
Ken tells Pa that "Frisco is good but not as good as New York City was in 1964."
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Fairmont shows the Fairmont's Crown Room cocktail lounge, 29 floors above the city
and reached by the glass-enclosed Sky Lift. Check out the costumes on the waitresses.
Steve's SF postcard pages: