{{Short description|Hotel in Tulsa, Oklahoma}} {{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}} {{Use American English|date=February 2025}} {{Infobox NRHP | name = Mayo Hotel | nrhp_type = | image = Mayo Hotel Tulsa.jpg | caption = The Mayo Hotel | location = Tulsa, OK | coordinates = {{coord|36|9|3.2|N|95|59|31.16|W|display=inline,title}} | area = | built = 1925 | architect = George Winkler | architecture = | added = June 27, 1980 | refnum = 80003303<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|2007a}}</ref> }}
The '''Mayo Hotel''' is an historic hotel that opened in 1925 at 115 West 5th Street in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma.
==History== ===Early years=== The '''Mayo Hotel''' was built in 1925, designed by architect George Winkler, and financed by John D. and Cass A. Mayo.<ref name="milestone">Robert Evatt, [http://www.tulsaworld.com/business/article.aspx?subjectid=32&articleid=20090806_32_A1_Asuite516183 "A milestone for the Mayo"], ''Tulsa World'', August 6, 2009.</ref> The base of two-story Doric columns supports fourteen floors marked with false terracotta balconies, and a two-story crown of stone and a dentiled cornice<ref name="TPC">[http://www.tulsapreservationcommission.org/nationalregister/buildings/index.pl?id=25 Mayo Hotel] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091025033857/http://www.tulsapreservationcommission.org/nationalregister/buildings/index.pl?id=25 |date=2009-10-25 }} at Tulsa Preservation Commission website (retrieved October 29, 2009).</ref> At the time the 600-room hotel was the tallest building in Oklahoma. Ceiling fans in each room and Tulsa's first running ice water made the hotel a haven from summer heat.
thumb|Original luggage sticker from the Mayo Hotel- ca. 1930s
The Mayo hosted many of Tulsa's most notable 20th-century visitors, including President John F. Kennedy, Bob Hope, Charles Lindbergh, Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey, Will Rogers,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tulsaworld.com/archive/see-you-at-the-mayo/article_1e4a26f6-02ca-54ea-b60e-445e5f20ebc9.html|title = See You at the Mayo}}</ref> Charlie Chaplin and Mae West. It was also the residence of some notable oilmen of the era, including J. Paul Getty.<ref>[http://www.historichotels.org/hotel/The_Mayo_Hotel_and_Residences/2414 The Mayo Hotel and Residences] at National Trust for Historic Preservation Historic Hotels of America website (retrieved October 29, 2009).</ref> In William Inge's 1953 Pulitzer Prize winning play, ''Picnic'', the Mayo Hotel is where the lead character Hal intends to find work as a bellhop.<ref>Thomas L. Erskine, James Michael Welsh, John C. Tibbetts, ''Video Versions: Film Adaptations of Plays on Video'' (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000), {{ISBN|978-0-313-30185-8}}, p. 272 ([https://books.google.com/books?id=sJf79-EMnrQC&dq=Picnic+Inge+bellhop+Mayo&pg=PA272 excerpt available] at Google Books).</ref>
In 1951, the segregated hotel had its first black guest, when President Harry Truman personally phoned the hotel from the White House and asked that his daughter Margaret be allowed to bring her black maid into the hotel. She was still required to use the service elevator, however.<ref name="nr2_shpo.okstate.edu">{{cite web| url=http://nr2_shpo.okstate.edu/QueryResult.aspx?id=80003303 | title=Oklahoma's National Register of Historic Places}}</ref>
===Decline=== In 1955, the original two-story lobby was reduced to one floor, with a new function room, the Pompeian Court, created in the former lobby space on the mezzanine level.<ref name="nr2_shpo.okstate.edu"/>
In 1968, the Mayo family sold the hotel to Fairmont Hotels, which renamed it the '''Fairmont Mayo Hotel'''.<ref name="oklahoman.com">{{Cite web|url=https://www.oklahoman.com/article/1967146/new-proprietors-call-off-restoration-of-landmark-mayo-hotel-in-tulsa|title = New Proprietors Call off Restoration of Landmark Mayo Hotel in Tulsa|date = 13 December 1981}}</ref> Fairmont sold the hotel to Gateway Hotel Corp. in 1977, and it returned to its original name. In 1980, the hotel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. On January 9, 1981, Daon Corp, a Newport Beach subsidiary of a Vancouver-based firm, bought the hotel for $4.6 million, announcing plans to refurbish the property.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1981/01/09/Daon-Development-Corp-announced-Friday-its-American-subsidiary-has/3758347864400/|title = Daon Development Corp. Announced Friday its American subsidiary has}}</ref>
===Closure=== Daon closed the hotel in early 1981, for what they announced would be a 12 to 14-month renovation, which would involve restoring the original two-story lobby, combining and enlarging the guest rooms, and adding new dining options. They sold the hotel's fittings, laid off the hotel's staff, and began gutting the interior, tearing out the floors and walls. However, by November 1981, they had ceased work. Daon refused to comment publicly, but put the now shuttered and partially-stripped structure up for sale in December 1981.<ref name="oklahoman.com"/>
The abandoned, incomplete renovation left the building unoccupied and missing many of its original fixtures and its interior ornamentation. In 1987, Bruce Robson, Joe Robson and Jack Neely purchased the Mayo, announcing plans to reopen it as a luxury hotel.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.newson6.com/story/5e3683c12f69d76f62098b28/future-of-mayo-hotel-uncertain|title=Future of Mayo Hotel Uncertain}}</ref> They proposed various restoration concepts over the 13 years they owned the property, but eventually put it up for sale after Tulsa voters rejected a measure in November 2000 to finance a new convention center, which would have brought more guests to a reopened hotel.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tulsaworld.com/archive/mayo-hotel-is-sold-redevelopment-planned/article_83cbd483-1b8a-5b35-840f-c0cd555f84f9.html|title = Mayo Hotel is sold; redevelopment planned}}</ref>
===Restoration=== thumb|Mayo Hotel lobby
Vacant for 20 years, the Mayo seemed destined for demolition until June 2001, when John Snyder purchased it for $250,000 and began renovation. Initial efforts focused on restoring the lower floors. The partially-flooded basement was drained of water and renovated as a public parking garage, which opened in 2002. The revenue from the garage financed the renovation of the historic ground floor public rooms, which reopened in 2003 and quickly became a popular venue for galas, proms, receptions and meetings.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tulsaworld.com/archive/mayo-hotel-opens-quietly/article_18f7d8aa-0986-5807-a809-bf7b678f1ba9.html|title=Mayo Hotel opens quietly}}</ref> An $11.2 million project to convert seven upper floors into 76 loft apartments began in 2008.{{citation needed|date=October 2009}}.
$4.9 million in public funds were allocated to the project from the Tulsa County development package known as "Vision 2025"<ref name="loan">Kirby Lee Davis, [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4182/is_20080701/ai_n27885214/ "Tulsa's Mayo Hotel renovation scores $23.5M from IBC Bank"], ''The Journal Record'', July 1, 2008.</ref> approved by voters in 2003. The hotel owners provided an additional $6.3 million.{{citation needed|date=October 2009}} The total cost of the renovation was reported to be $40 million.<ref name="milestone" /><ref name="loan" /> As part of this renovation, the Mayo also became the first Oklahoma building to complete environmental remediation under a new brownfields program sponsored by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission.<ref>[http://www.cnhi.com/muskogee/statenews/local_story_128175451.html "Mayo Hotel gets environmental cleanup"]{{dead link|date=June 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, AP in ''Muskogee Phoenix'', May 8, 2009.</ref> The renovation project paid special attention to restoring the hotel's noted Crystal Ballroom (so named because of its crystal chandeliers) to return it to its 1920s grandeur.<ref name="Hood">[http://www.newson6.com/story/10741743/revitalizing-tulsas-mayo-hotel Terry Hood. "Revitalizing Tulsa's Mayo Hotel." News on 6. July 17th 2009.] Accessed October 4, 2018.</ref>
Apartment tenants began moving into the restored building in late August 2009.<ref>Robert Evatt, [http://www.tulsaworld.com/business/article.aspx?subjectid=32&articleid=20090805_298_0_Foryea313449 "Mayo Hotel preparing for September opening"], ''Tulsa World'', August 5, 2009.</ref> The 102-room hotel portion opened privately for its first guest, Britney Spears, who booked 80 rooms for her tour stop in Tulsa on September 15, 2009. The hotel opened for business in late September 2009.<ref>Michael Overall, [http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=298&articleid=20090916_298_0_hrimgs704150&archive=yes "Downtown's historic Mayo Hotel open again"], ''Tulsa World'', September 16, 2009.</ref> A formal grand reopening was held in December 2009.<ref>Kim Brown, [http://www.tulsaworld.com/scene/article.aspx?subjectid=370&articleid=20091107_41_D1_Thedow266162 "The Mayo returns to early magnificence"], ''Tulsa World'', November 7, 2009.</ref> Since then, the hotel has hosted numerous famous guests, including OneRepublic, Lady Gaga, James Taylor, Justin Bieber, Bob Seger, Fleetwood Mac, and Josh Groban.
== In popular culture == In the 2022 Paramount+ television series ''Tulsa King'', main character Dwight "The General" Manfredi, portrayed by Sylvester Stallone, resides in the Mayo Hotel.<ref>{{cite web|title = 'Tulsa King': The Mayo Hotel Is a Real Place in Oklahoma|url =https://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/tripideas/tulsa-king-the-mayo-hotel-is-a-real-place-in-oklahoma/ar-AA146Yp8|publisher=Showbiz Cheatsheet| access-date =2022-12-25 }}</ref>
==See also== *List of tallest buildings in Tulsa
==References== {{reflist}}
==External links== *[http://www.themayohotel.com Mayo Hotel Official Site] *[http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=4415 Mayo Hotel at Skyscraper Page] *[http://www.voicesofoklahoma.com/interview/bird-margery-mayo/ Voices of Oklahoma interview with Margery Mayo Bird.] First person interview conducted on December 9, 2009, with Margery Mayo Bird, daughter of the founder of the Mayo Hotel. *[http://www.tulsahistory.org/hall-of-fame/cass-a-mayo-john-d-mayo/ Tulsa Historical Society Honorees]
{{Tulsa skyscrapers}} {{NRHP in Tulsa County}}
{{s-start}} {{succession box | before=Cosden Building | title=Tallest Building in Tulsa | years=1925—1927<br /><small>77m</small> | after=Philtower Building }} {{s-end}}
Category:Skyscrapers in Tulsa, Oklahoma Category:Economy of Tulsa, Oklahoma Category:1925 establishments in Oklahoma Category:Hotel buildings completed in 1925 Category:Hotels established in 1925 Category:Hotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Oklahoma Category:National Register of Historic Places in Tulsa, Oklahoma Category:Skyscraper hotels in Oklahoma Category:Residential skyscrapers in Oklahoma Category:Chicago school architecture in Oklahoma