BYGONES & OBSOLETE STORIES: HOTEL NEWHOUSE …BY CLARK PHELPS

 

Jimi Hendrix, Grace Slick & The Jefferson Airplane were guests

Judge Willis Ritter was a resident

I was an interloper.

The Hotel Newhouse was an elegant 12-story Salt Lake hotel built in 1912 on the southwest corner of 400 South and Main Street. Mining magnate Samuel Newhouse built the luxury hotel with his riches from local silver mines. In 1896 he had already struck it rich in the mines of Ouray, Colorado before moving to Salt Lake.

 

Jefferson Airplane with Taj Mahal and War of Armageddon

Terrace Ballroom – Salt Lake – 2/10/1968.

By 1968, I had done my best to take Dr. Timothy Leary’s advice of “tuning in and turning on.” I had yet to take the more extreme step of “dropping out.” I enjoyed the hippie music that came out of San Francisco and by the summer of that year I found myself in Haight-Ashbury.

In February, while I was a senior in high school, I bought tickets at The White Rabbit–one of the early head shops in the Salt Lake Avenues. At that time the historic lower Avenues of Salt Lake were run down. The once opulent Victorian homes were cut up into small apartments. The rent was cheap and the local Bohemian culture gathered there.

The Freed family was progressive in both civil rights and in the new music scene. They owned the Lagoon Amusement Park that hosted The Doors, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, The Rolling Stones and many other great talents in the ’60’s. They also owned what was left of the 1930’s big band dance hall known as the Terrace Ballroom.

The Freeds sponsored concerts at their Terrace Ballroom as well. Just across the street from the Terrace was the once-elegant Freed family-owned Hotel Newhouse. It was the natural and convenient choice to put up the traveling rock bands while they were here in Salt Lake City.

With tickets secured for the Jefferson Airplane concert, I caught wind that the band was staying at Hotel Newhouse. Security seemed nonexistent. My friend and I figured out that Grace Slick and her band were staying on the 12th floor. Like the adolescent groupies we were, we waited down the hall from their room to get a glimpse, or better yet an interaction with the real deal San Francisco Hippies. We did have a sighting. It was brief. Grace gave us a friendly and seemingly understanding nod as she and the band retreated to their hotel room. After about an hour and a half we were politely asked to leave by a hotel employee. Later that night we saw Grace and the band again at their live performance at the Terrace.

Jimi Hendrix at Hotel Newhouse

On August 30, 1968, I had just returned to Salt Lake from Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco. My future wife Jeanette and I attended the Jimi Hendrix concert at Lagoon Amusement Park. The Freed Family owned Lagoon as well as Hotel Newhouse. It was common for the artists of the Freed-promoted concerts to stay at their once-elegant Hotel. Jimi Hendrix was their guest. It appears from his surviving notes, shown here, that he was working out the playlist and other ideas for his upcoming album ELECTRIC LADYLAND on Hotel Newhouse’s stationery. He produced the double album and released it in October. By mid-November, it charted number one. Electric Ladyland was his most successful record.

 

Tournament Bridge at the Hotel Newhouse

I entered Westminster College [SLC] as a freshman in the fall of 1968. I was 18, confused, afraid and facing involuntary military conscription at the height of the Vietnam War. I saw the confusion of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. I was immature but still identified with the resistance movement. I became involved in the antiwar movement, not just with commitment but for survival. I had no long-term goals. When I settled into my regular 15 hours of freshman college credit classes, I would waste time and socialize in the coffee shop by playing the great card game of Bridge. I was pretty good at it. Or at least I was proficient against other students in the college coffee shop.

Poker and card games are a family tradition. My father once operated a discrete card room in the back of his pool hall. My oldest brother taught me to play poker and chess before I was in 1st grade. After Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners, the uncles, an aunt, and the grandparents would break out a small-change poker game that seemed to aid in the digestion of the large holiday meals. Some families watch football after a holiday dinner. Our family played poker. Being old enough and smart enough to sit in on the family poker game was a rite of passage into adulthood.

I became somewhat obsessed with Bridge. My favorite partner was Roman Piotrowski, a student direct from Italy. His English communication skills were limited.

Our conversations were usually shallow because of that limitation. But in a card game like Bridge, which does not require talking, communication is done subtly through the bidding. At that level we were simpatico. One day, over our regular coffeehouse card game, we were encouraged to try our hand at tournament Bridge, sanctioned by the American Contract Bridge League [ACBL]. Both of us were excited to test our skills against older, more practiced, card players.

At the time I was driving an interesting wreck of a car: a 1961 Saab Gran Turismo with a 3 cylinder, 2 cycle engine. The engine required that a quart of oil to be added to the gas tank with every 8 to 12 gallons of gas. It sounded like a two cycle motorcycle:

Ring – ping ping ping – – – Ring – ping ping ping ping. It barely ran but it was groovy, with its wooden steering wheel, bar in the backseat, and factory installed rally clock.

Married and broke, with tuition paid for by grants and a work-study program, my wife and I lived in the northern foothills of Salt Lake in the rundown 1969 Bohemian neighborhood of the lower Avenues. We lived on 3rd Avenue in a two story Victorian home that had been cut up into 6 one bedroom apartments. Our rent was $60 a month and that included utilities and a coveted garage,

Roman lived with his host family much higher on the northern foothills, on the more gentrified 16th Avenue. The Gran Turismo could barely make it up the hill. On tournament nights we would dress up slightly and go to the luxurious Hotel Newhouse to play cards. The lobby was spacious, well appointed, and, being with my Italian friend, it seemed to have the feel of a European hotel. I was familiar with the hotel as just two years earlier I had snuck in to get a glimpse of Grace Slick and the Jefferson Airplane. Back then I had also found their elegant and almost empty lobby bar called The Embassy. The neighborhood was no longer popular, and the nearly empty bar was a delight for me, as they would serve me underage without question while I enjoyed their flamed mahogany paneling of a bygone elegance.

The bridge tournament was on the mezzanine. We would walk up the stylish staircase shown in the old postcard and turn to the left to a banquet room that was dedicated for the tournament. The hostess, who ran the tournament, wore formal floor-length gowns resembling Salt Lake’s own Loretta Young. The whole thing had a spectacular look until almost everybody pulled out cigarettes, desecrated the air, grabbed mugs of coffee, or not so discrete flasks or brown bagged bottles, furled their brows, and took to the cards with the seriousness of open heart surgery.

In stark contrast to the elegance of the mezzanine of the grand old hotel, we also played tournament bridge at The Perky Poodle Parlor, a dog grooming business by day, and, oddly, a card room at night. Because Roman was allergic to dogs, we curtailed our competition at the Perky Poodle Parlor. We came to a humbling surprise that our expertise in the college coffee shop did not translate to the seriousness of sanctioned tournament bridge. We were, at best, middle of the pack. We continued to play in a couple of dozen tournaments and both of us are listed in the official ACBL register with a few master points.

I can be obsessive. Bridge had me hooked. The tournaments kept me out late, away from my bride, jacked up on coffee, and they completely occupied my brain. After one tournament and a troubled caffeine-restricted sleep, I dreamt about how to finesse the Jack of diamonds to be able to make the winning trick. Upon awakening I swore the game off. I haven’t played a hand of bridge for nearly 50 years. But I remember it as fascinating.

 

 

Judge Willis Ritter – COLORFUL CHARACTER

Ritter was a US District Judge until his death in 1978. He lived at the Hotel Newhouse and would stagger across the street to his court room in the Federal Building. He was a famous advocate of the underdog, but capricious and might turn against anyone for unknown reasons. He was a womanizer, and hung out at the Manhattan Club, also across the street. He was the subject of a 60 Minutes TV expose.

> He issued restraining orders against Salt Lake Mayor Jake Garn from issuing parking tickets.

> Disturbed that he couldn’t see the University of Utah basketball game on TV he ruled that the NCAA couldn’t prevent a blackout.

> I had a straight-laced Mormon friend that I learned was a felon and had spent a year in prison – it seemed so unlikely – because once he had harvested a Christmas tree without a permit in a national forest. It was a federal crime and Ritter, an environmentalist Mormon hater, condemned him to a year in prison.

> The County Attorney of Grand County Utah and friend of mine Bill Benge joked that when he went before Judge Ritter he had a toothbrush in his pocket in case he was found to be in contempt of court and had to spend the night In jail.

> Ritter ordered a stay in the execution of Gary Gilmore. The U.S. Court of Appeals overruled him.

> If Ritter thought a jury member was a Mormon he was hard on them.

> There was an attorney that used to law clerk for Judge Ritter. The clerk was sent over to the liquor store with Ritter’s personal check made out to the liquor store. The employee told him “We don’t accept personal checks.” He told her “You’ll take this one!” When she saw Ritter’s signature, she told him “Why, yes I will!!”

The LDS church tried unsuccessfully to have a bar shut down because it was too close to a Ward House. The Judge asked which was there first, the bar or the church?. The attorney for the church stated that the bar was there first. Ritter had seen this case in front of his bench before, only the church’s attorney was trying a different tactic to have the bar shut down, claiming the bar had been remodeled and therefore couldn’t be grandfathered into being too close to the ward house . Ritter informed the attorney for the church that if this case came before him again, he would have the church torn down and moved 200 feet further from the bar.

 

The demolition of Hotel Newhouse

During the 1980s, the hotel was becoming unsafe and expensive to maintain. Ownership of the Hotel had passed to Little America Hotel Corp., a company owned by Earl Holding. Behind the LDS Church, Holding was the 2nd largest landholder in Salt Lake. He was an interesting man who made his wealth in Little America Wyoming and Sinclair Oil. Holding owned many things, including the ski resort of Sun Valley Idaho and the competitor Inn: Salt Lake’s Little America Hotel just south of the Hotel Newhouse.

Soon after he acquired the grand old Hotel Newhouse he made plans to destroy it.

On Sunday June 26,1983, the widely advertised demolition took place. I staked out a position catty-corner from the doomed building near the popular Manhattan Nightclub where Judge Ritter used to hang out. After several explosions and a monstrous cloud of dust, the once elegant grand hotel was reduced to rubble. It was a sight to behold if you like that kind of thing. Weeks later I hooked up with the man who had salvage rights. Before the demolition, he had gone through and saved lighting fixtures, bathroom fixtures, some doors, and even yards of heavy wool carpeting. I loaded up on fantastic lighting and bathroom fixtures for resale. I have two lamps in my kitchen, and two towel bars in my bathroom that occasionally remind me of bygones and obsolete buildings.

Clark Phelps lives in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Click Here to Read Clark’s Previous Installment of “Bygones & Obsolete Stories…”

To comment, scroll to the bottom of the page.

 

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7 comments for “BYGONES & OBSOLETE STORIES: HOTEL NEWHOUSE …BY CLARK PHELPS

  1. June 4, 2017 at 9:56 pm

    Clark really paints a picture in this article. I was a twenty something when that hotel came roaring down and I didn’t pay much attention to the news those days. As a child my folks would often talk about the Terrace Ballroom and I didn’t realize, ( until reading this story), that it was across the street! I particularly enjoyed the part about Jimi Hendrix scratching out his album liner notes on The Hotel Newhouse stationary. Now that is interesting! I was 6 years old at the time, but have matured into a professional guitarist and to think Jimi was only 10 miles north of Midvale writing credits on his album. Well done Clark Phelps, you’ve captured a Midvale’s girl attention. ( ps I’m glad you let the Jack of Diamonds go). Peace,to you my brother’s friend and mine.

  2. Eddy Smith
    October 6, 2017 at 11:38 am

    When I was a kid,my mom ran a snack bar in the basement of the old post office directly across the street opposite the Newhouse. Many a night,I remember sitting out on the post office lawn,and gazing up at the awesome reddish-orange roof top neon HOTEL NEWHOUSE sign.I remember the day they brought that grand old hotel down. A friend of mine drove down to the site the next day,and asked permission to grab a few souvenir memento bricks from the old girl. My buddy Dave even snagged a nearly perfect numbered, concrete section of the pinkish tan colored decorative upper moldings from the building. For years I kept it for a conversation piece.

  3. Denise Knighton
    June 27, 2019 at 11:07 am

    I worked at the hotel as a housekeeper for about 3 weeks in 1979. By that time, a couple of the floors were low income housing but we still cleaned the rooms as if they were hotel guests. The day I quit was fairly normal. I knocked on doors and said house keeping. Most people were not there and I would go in and clean the rooms. Sometimes, someone was there and I would ask them if they wanted the room cleaned or if they wanted me to come back. This day, I knocked on a door on the low income housing floor and was told to let myself in with my pass key. I did and found a man naked on the bed. I turned around, took my cart down to the basement and quit. I didn’t have an issue cleaning up vomit but as a 17 year old girl, I realized how dangerous this job could be for a girl alone on a floor with a man like that. He could have been a rapist or serial killer and no one would notice I was gone until the end of the day when I didn’t bring my cart back. I did however, cry like a baby the day the hotel was imploded. I still watch the Christmas show Mr Krueger’s Christmas because Jimmy Stewart’s character was a janitor who lived in the basement of the Hotel Newhouse and I still remember that lobby. I would have really liked to see the hotel when it was in it’s prime.

    • Germaine Odonnell
      June 19, 2022 at 10:54 am

      Ah, Denise, your letter caught my attention!! You worked at The Newhouse just a year before I was working there, I believe; same job position, at about the same age…lol! I remember being written up, by the supervisor, because I hadn’t changed the sheets in a stay- over room; she’d put lipstick marks at the bottom of the sheet, is how she caught me! But I also learned how to totally change the sheets on any size bed, from one side, so I wasn’t scurrying around and tiring myself out. I still use that knowledge in my own home! As well as the automatic turn down of the sheets at the top of the bed…ha!! But it’s so classy…lol!
      Yeah, the walking in to clean an occupied room, and finding a nude man on the bed… happened a few times, working in different hotels, (housekeeping at high rate hotels is a good fall back when you need a job, and I learned how to do that right, at the Newhouse!), both times it happened to me, they were either the complete band of very well known rock stars, that was interesting, and they were all still asleep… on the same bed… my, must have been a killer show, the night before, at Red Rocks… or a rocking brass band, playing at the symphony hall… he saw me in the hall, later, and gave me tickets to the show, that was sweet…lol!
      A decent job, good exercise, can’t complain; I attended college and became a school teacher, later, but working in public schools is actually a bit more dangerous, currently, so not doing that anymore either… life, y’know..!
      Not sure what made me think of the Newhouse, this morning, and I didn’t know it had been demolished, how sad, but I’m glad I read this article, and glad I also read your letter! How cool! High five to a sister from the Newhouse!!
      Have a great day!

  4. carole malkogiannis
    June 2, 2020 at 8:40 am

    Growing up my Dad worked at Dee’s hamburgers a little hole in the wall diner across the street from the Newhouse he had a sister who would come into town and would stay there, we attend many wedding receptions there. It was a beautiful and stately place I loved the marble floors and columns. Almost cried the day they took it down, now we have a beautiful empty weed filled lot where it used to stand, sorry I guess it is paved now, but for many years it was a weed filled lot.

  5. Jennifer Marie Warren
    October 11, 2021 at 4:21 am

    My Grandpa and my father worked for this hotel in the 1960s. I have a brick from the demolition! Love your story!! Thanks!

    Jennifer Hansen

  6. Germaine Odonnell
    June 19, 2022 at 11:05 am

    Clark, thanks for the great story on The Newhouse! And what a history it had, I was just a child when I worked there, and had no idea…. Grace Slick is an artist now, fabulous work, and sweet and sarcastic as ever!
    The other things you pointed out about the hotel, dare I say, made me feel nostalgic? Scary, I’m getting old!! And I was into Flock of Seagulls, Styx, and Van Halen, at the time I worked there, but am a total Deadhead now, so knowing I worked at a hotel that Janis, and Jimi had stayed at…wow, would have blown my mind, had I known it, then… Again, great recounting of history, Thank You!!
    Have a fabulous day!

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