Arlington Hotel | |
Location of building in Oregon | |
Location | 131 W. Main St. Echo, Oregon |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45°44′33″N119°11′43″W / 45.74250°N 119.19528°W |
Area | 0.2 acres (0.081 ha) |
Built | c. 1882 |
Built by | J.H. Koontz |
Architectural style | Late Victorian, Vernacular |
MPS | Echo and The Meadows MPS [1] 64500503 |
NRHP reference No. | 97000897 |
Added to NRHP | 28 August 1997 [2] |
The Arlington Hotel also known as the Echo Tavern and the Echo Hotel, Restaurant and Lounge is a historic building in Echo, Oregon.
The 2+1⁄2-story wood-frame building is of vernacular construction. The 28-by-66-foot (8.5 by 20.1 m) main mass of the building has a rectangular plan with a gable roof and simple details. There have been two additions to the structure one historic and another recent. It originally operated as saloon and hotel. Originally called the Louvre Saloon rooms included "sample rooms" for salesmen to display their goods. An undertaker used the top floor who left behind coffins that were found decades later. The hotel also operated under the name Arlington House. [3]
Built between 1882 and 1886 by James H. Koontz, founder of Echo, the Arlington Hotel is one of the oldest extant buildings in town and one of the few large historic wood-frame buildings that remain in Umatilla County. The time of the construction coincides with the primary period of development for the Echo. Koontz moved there in 1880 and filed the first plat for Echo that year with W.D. Brassfield. In 1884 there were 15 businesses in town. Koontz, a merchant, had moved to the location anticipating the shift from river to rail transport. [3]
The property was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 28, 1997. [3] [4] In 2008 Echo Saloon LLC held a liquor license for the Echo Saloon. [5]
The Pendleton Center for the Arts is an arts center located in the historic former Umatilla County Library building, also known as Pendleton Public Library in Pendleton, Oregon, United States.
Koontz House may refer to:
The Umatilla Masonic Lodge Hall is a Masonic building in Echo, Oregon. It is one of the oldest edifices in Umatilla County and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The hall was built in Umatilla City in 1868 and disassembled and moved by railroad to its present location in Echo in 1901, after Umatilla City declined economically due in part to railroad development. It was deemed significant for association with development of rail transportation in Echo and Meadows area. And it was deemed significant as "an excellent example of an Italianate False Front style building".
The Costanzo Family House is a house located in southwest Portland, Oregon, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The James H. and Cynthia Koontz House, also known as Koontz House, is an Italianate house in Echo, Oregon that was built in 1881. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.
New Cliff House, also formerly known as the Hotel Gilmore and now known as the Sylvia Beach Hotel, is a historic hotel building in Newport, Oregon.
Methodist Episcopal Church South is a historic former church in Roseburg, Oregon. It was completed in 1922 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.
Echo Methodist Church is a church and historic church building in Echo, Oregon, Oregon, United States. Originally built in 1886 a simple New England vernacular style, it was expanded and transformed into the Gothic Revival style in 1910. It is the best example of Gothic Revival construction in the Echo area. As Echo's only Protestant church, built two years after the railroad arrived in town, its history also reflects changes in transportation and agriculture in the area.
St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church is a historic church building in Echo, Oregon, United States. The church was built by the Portuguese immigrant community in Echo.
The former United States Post Office in The Dalles, Oregon, United States, is a historic building constructed in 1916. Executed from standardized federal plans in the Greek Revival style, it was the first federal building in The Dalles and one of a set of nine built in Oregon in the 1910s. It remained in operation as a post office longer than seven of the other eight in that group. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.
The Elk Mountain Hotel, also known as the John S. Evans Hotel, Mountain View Hotel and Grandview Hotel was built in 1905 in Elk Mountain, Wyoming on the bank of the Medicine Bow River. The two-story wood-frame building was built next to the 1880 Garden Spot Pavilion, a dance hall that was a social center in an otherwise isolated portion of Wyoming. The hotel was built by John Evans, the owner of the Elk Mountain Saloon, who in 1903 had acquired the Pavilion. Evans catered to the mining trade through the 1930s. By that time better roads allowed tourism to increase, and the hotel provided accommodation to hunters and tourists. Evans sold the property in 1947 to Mark and Lucille Jackson, who remodeled the hotel and the pavilion.
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