St. Petersburg Beach had a lot of empty space when the Don Cesar opened in the 1920s. Photo credit: Florida Memory |
The Great Depression swept across the nation in 1929. In Florida, it started earlier - in 1926 with the collapse of the Florida Land Boom. So I was surprised to learn that the famous Don Cesar resort in St. Petersburg Beach first opened its doors in 1928.
Developer Thomas J. Rowe was already building the massive hotel when the Florida boom crashed. He'd also sold lots in a subdivision he was creating around the hotel and had started building the Spanish-style houses so popular then. But he wouldn't admit defeat.
In June Hurley Young's The Don Ce-Sar Story, she describes Rowe as a man of poor health but an astute businessman with a high tolerance for risk. He had to be, to continue pursuing such a dream in a time of shaky finances. A combination of savvy business dealings, partnerships, loans and mortgages saw him through.
The 300-room hotel was completed in December 1927. It featured towers and wings and other Mediterranean and Moorish design elements.
The official opening took place January 16, 1928 with a gala attended by 1,500 people. Hurley provides details about the event, the kind that add color to dates and other numbers. Picture a Gatsby-style evening:
- Women in gowns and men in tuxedos arrived in LaSalles, Chryslers, Marmons and other upscale cars.
- The entrance was canopied in red fabric.
- Dancing in the large ballroom cost $2.50 per person. I guess people were able to skip the dinner and attend just the dancing portion of the evening.
- No word on the type of food or cost of the dinner, which was served in the fifth-floor dining room and eaten on Black Knight china from Germany.
- Flowers filled the rooms.
- The Don Ce-Sar Orchestra provided music.
- Nella Erickson and Helen Ford sang a Brahms duet.
- Guests toured the rooftop gardens.
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