Perry Estate / St. Mary's Academy | |
Location | 701 E. 41st St Austin, Texas, USA |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°18′03″N97°43′21″W / 30.30083°N 97.72250°W |
Built | 1928 |
NRHP reference No. | 01000874 [1] |
Added to NRHP | August 8, 2001 |
The Commodore Perry Estate Hotel is a hotel operated by Auberge Resorts in the Hancock neighborhood of Austin, Texas.
The property on which the hotel sits was listed in the National Register of Historic Places as Perry Estate / St. Mary's Academy on August 8, 2001 [1] and, on September 12, 2024, the hotel operating on the site received two Michelin Keys, one of only three such hotels in Texas and the only two key hotel in Austin, Texas. [2]
The 10-acre (40,000 m2) property, located at 4100 Red River Street, originally featured guest houses, a triangular elevator, a bowling alley, and a sunken garden. The home features a Mediterranean villa style that somewhat resembles buildings at the nearby University of Texas. Waller Creek flows through the back part of the property. [3] [4]
Built, originally, as the private residence of cotton entrepreneur E. H. Perry and his family in 1928, the property was sold to Herman Heep in 1944 who, in turn, sold the property to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Austin who turned the property into a school - Saint Mary's Academy, which operated on the property until 1972. [1]
The property continued to host various schools until 2011 when Clark Lyda, who went to high school on the property when it was the Christian Academy of Austin, purchased the lot. [5] In 2020, after years of renovations, the Commodore Perry Estate Hotel opened. [6] [7] [8]
Edgar Howard (E. H.) Perry and his colleagues "were responsible for the majority of the growth and development of downtown and suburban Austin from the 1920's to the 1950's." [1] When E. H. Perry sold the estate to Herman Heep in 1944 he moved into the Driskill Hotel, which he co-owned with others. [1]
In 1948 Texas Governor Beauford H. Jester named E. H. Perry a Commodore in the newly reconstituted Texas Navy, although E. H. Perry had already been going by the nickname "Commodore" for some time prior to that. [9]
In 1949 plans were presented for what would eventually become the Commodore Perry Hotel at 8th and Brazos. [9] This hotel would continue to operate until 1974, after which the property was redeveloped as condominiums. [10]
On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was scheduled to attend a brief reception at the Commodore Perry Hotel immediately after his planned 3:15pm arrival at Bergstrom Air Force Base, however, those plans never came to fruition due to his assassination earlier that day [11] [12]
The Commodore Perry Estate Hotel's Lutie's restaurant is named after E. H. Perry's wife, Lutie Perry [1]
Saint Mary's Academy was the first parochial school in Austin and can trace its origins back to 1874. [13] From 1944 to 1972 Saint Mary's Academy operated on the grounds of the former E. H. Perry Estate. [14]
From 1972 to 1995 the school changed hands numerous times, serving variously as the Athens Montessori School, Austin Ballet Theatre, Christian Academy of Austin, Town and Country School, The Perry School, St. Francis School and Holy Cross High School. [1]
Folk singer Nanci Griffith attended school on the property when it was Holy Cross High School [15] together with her friend, Margaret Mary Graham, the subject of Griffith's early song "There's a Light Beyond these Woods (Mary Margaret). [16]
From 1995 to 2011 [5] the Sri Atmananda Memorial School operated on the property as a branch location of Sri Adwayananda Public School in Malakkara, Kerala, India. [17] [18] [19]
The Sri Atmananda Memorial School hosted the Fantastic Magic Camp in the summers of 1997, 1998 and 1999 [20] [21] [22] [23]
William Joel Bryan was a Texas soldier and planter.
KEYE-TV is a television station in Austin, Texas, United States, affiliated with CBS and Telemundo. Owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, the station maintains studios on Metric Boulevard in North Austin and a transmitter on Waymaker Way on the city's west side.
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The 1906 Texas Longhorns football team was an American football team that represented the University of Texas as a member of the Southwestern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SWIAA) during the 1906 college football season. In their first year under head coach H. R. Schenker, the Longhorns compiled an overall record of 9–1, with a mark of 4–0 in conference play, and outscored opponents by a total of 201 to 60.
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The 1914 Southwest Texas State football team used to be an American football team that represented Southwest Texas State Normal School—now known as Texas State University–as an independent during the 1914 college football season. The team was led by first-year head coach C. Spurgeon Smith and finished the season with a record of 2–6. The team's captain was Raydo Leonard, who played halfback.
John W. Brady was an American lawyer. He served as a county attorney from 1902 to 1910, the assistant attorney general for the state, and a judge on the Texas Third Court of Civil Appeals. In 1929 he was convicted of murder, and sentenced to three years in prison.
William Paul Brady was an American lawyer. From 1909 to around 1914, he served as the first district attorney for Texas' 70th judicial district, and from 1917 to 1919 he was the judge for the newly created El Paso County Court at Law. Brady prosecuted several high-profile murder cases as a district attorney, including of Agnes Orner, and in a death-penalty case that has since been termed a "legal lynching" of a Mexican boy charged with killing a white woman.
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Waller Creek is a stream and an urban watershed in Austin, Texas, United States. Named after Edwin Waller, the first mayor of Austin, it has its headwaters near Highland Mall and runs in a southerly direction, through the Commodore Perry Estate, the University of Texas at Austin and the eastern part of downtown Austin, including the Red River Cultural District, to its end at Lady Bird Lake.
George James Austin Sr., was an American military officer, educator, and insurance salesman. He was a Black military officer in the United States, who served in the Spanish-American War and World War I. He worked for Black representation in the U.S. military during a time of racial segregation. Austin served on-campus as a military educator at historically Black colleges, including Prairie View College, Tuskegee Institute, and St. Paul Normal and Industrial School.
Linda Suzanne Shelton Buckley is an American historian and journalist. Born in Wichita Falls, Texas, she initially worked for media outlets like the Houston Post, Texas Monthly, Dance Magazine, and KLRU, she obtained her PhD from the University of Texas at Austin with a dissertation later published as a book, and later taught at UT Austin and became a 1986 Guggenheim Fellow. She later moved to India after her husband's death, and she eventually became general secretary of Alliance Educational Foundation, which operates Sri Adwayananda Public School.
All sessions are held on the campus of Sri Atmananda Memorial School; 4100 Red River; (Behind Hancock Center)
The Magic Camp; 4100 Red River; Austin
For three years we enjoyed the beautiful indoor and outdoor facilities of the Sri Atmananda Memorial School campus at 4100 Red River in central Austin
Venue was not the Sri Atmananda Memorial School, therefore if the Sri Atmananda Memorial School hosted Magic Camp for three years (prev citation) it would have needed to have been in 1997