Astor House, Shanghai
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In 1867 the Astor House Hotel was the earliest in Shanghai to use coal gas to provide lighting. About that time the Astor House Hotel received a more favourable evaluation: "Several hotels or taverns exist in the different settlements, but the only establishment of high pretensions is the Astor House, situated in the [[Hongkou|Hong-kew]] Settlement, close by the bridge crossing the [[Suzhou Creek|Soochow Creek]]. Good apartments and tolerable accommodation can be found here by strangers. Charges, about $3 ''[[per diem]]''.<ref>Nicholas Belfield Dennys, William Frederick Mayers, and Charles King, ''The Treaty Ports of China and Japan: A Complete Guide to the Open Ports of Those Countries'' (Trübner and co., 1867):407.</ref> Egerton Laird indicated in 1875: "I am stopping at the Astor House, which seems clean and comfortable,"<ref>Egerton K. Laird, ''The Rambles of a Globe Trotter in Australasia, Japan, China, Java, India, and Cashmere'' (Chapman & Hall, 1875):241.</ref> while American travel writer [[Thomas Wallace Knox]] (1835-1896) recorded this description of the Astor House Hotel after his stay in 1879. He found it |
In 1867 the Astor House Hotel was the earliest in Shanghai to use coal gas to provide lighting. About that time the Astor House Hotel received a more favourable evaluation: "Several hotels or taverns exist in the different settlements, but the only establishment of high pretensions is the Astor House, situated in the [[Hongkou|Hong-kew]] Settlement, close by the bridge crossing the [[Suzhou Creek|Soochow Creek]]. Good apartments and tolerable accommodation can be found here by strangers. Charges, about $3 ''[[per diem]]''.<ref>Nicholas Belfield Dennys, William Frederick Mayers, and Charles King, ''The Treaty Ports of China and Japan: A Complete Guide to the Open Ports of Those Countries'' (Trübner and co., 1867):407.</ref> Egerton Laird indicated in 1875: "I am stopping at the Astor House, which seems clean and comfortable,"<ref>Egerton K. Laird, ''The Rambles of a Globe Trotter in Australasia, Japan, China, Java, India, and Cashmere'' (Chapman & Hall, 1875):241.</ref> while American travel writer [[Thomas Wallace Knox]] (1835-1896) recorded this description of the Astor House Hotel after his stay in 1879. He found it |
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<blockquote>a less imposing fare than the [[Astor House]] of New York, though it occupied more ground, and had an evident determination to spread itself. A large space of [[greensward]] was enclosed by a [[Quadrangle (architecture)|quadrangle]] of one-story buildings, which formed the hotel, and consequently it required a great deal of walking to get from one part of the house to the opposite side....Some rooms were entered from a [[veranda]] on the side of the court-yard....On the other side there was a balcony...As this balcony was well provided with chairs and lounges, it was a pleasant resort on a warm afternoon. The house was kept by an American, but all his staff of servants was Chinese.<ref>Thomas Wallace Knox, ''The Boy Travellers in the Far East, Part First: Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Japan & China'' (New York: Harper, 1879):319-320.</ref></blockquote> |
<blockquote>a less imposing fare than the [[Astor House]] of New York, though it occupied more ground, and had an evident determination to spread itself. A large space of [[greensward]] was enclosed by a [[Quadrangle (architecture)|quadrangle]] of one-story buildings, which formed the hotel, and consequently it required a great deal of walking to get from one part of the house to the opposite side....Some rooms were entered from a [[veranda]] on the side of the court-yard....On the other side there was a balcony...As this balcony was well provided with chairs and lounges, it was a pleasant resort on a warm afternoon. The house was kept by an American, but all his staff of servants was Chinese.<ref>Thomas Wallace Knox, ''The Boy Travellers in the Far East, Part First: Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Japan & China'' (New York: Harper, 1879):319-320.</ref></blockquote> |
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Revision as of 23:38, 27 June 2009
The Astor House Hotel (礼饭店), (known as the Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店) in Chinese since 1959), which has been described as "once the most luxurious hotel in the world",[1] was the first Western hotel established in China.[2] Established in 1846 as Richards Hotel and Restaurant (礼饭店) on The Bund in Shanghai, it has been in its present location at 15 Huangpu Lu, Shanghai, near the confluence of the Huangpu River and the Suzhou Creek in the Hongkou District, near the northern end of the Waibaidu (Garden) Bridge, since 1857.[3][4]
Location
The Astor House Hotel has been located on the North Bund of Shanghai, near the northern end of the Waibaidu Bridge (Chinese: 外白渡; pinyin: Wàibáidù Qiáo) (the Garden Bridge in English),[5][6][7] since its relocation from The Bund in 1857. It is near the confluence of the Huangpu River and the Suzhou Creek, near "the point where the Soochow Creek poured its silt into the river's clouded yellow waters."[8] It is sited at the intersection of Huangpu, Daming (formerly Broadway), Changzhi, Bei Suzhou, and Zhongshan dong yi roads.[9] Its mailing address is 15 Huangpu Road.[10] For many years, the Hotel was the best known landmark in the Hongkou District and the centre of foreign social life before the opening of the Cathay Hotel.[11] The Hotel occupies an entire block, and is across the road from the Russian Consulate, and previously the embassies of Germany, the United States and Japan.[12] The Hotel is located near Huangpu Park (simplified Chinese: 黄浦公园; traditional Chinese: 黃浦公園; pinyin: Huángpǔ Gōngyuán), which opened in 1886 as Public Garden; across the road from the Broadway Mansions since its construction in 1935; the Hongkou market, "Shanghai's biggest market, where farmers brought their fowl and produce to sell every day";[13] and Little Tokyo, the Japanese part of Shanghai.[14]
History
Richards Hotel and Restaurant (1846-1860)
Peter Felix Richards (1846-1856)
In 1846, four years after the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing which declared Shanghai an open treaty port, and established the British Settlement in Shanghai, an American sea captain, Captain Peter Felix Richards and his wife, Rebecca,[15][16][17] opened the first western hotel in Shanghai,[18] on The Bund facing the Huangpu River.[19] Named after its founder, Richards Hotel and Restaurant (礼饭店), initially it targeted the seafaring clientele that made up the bulk of travelers to 19th century Shanghai. It was a two storey East India style building. One contemporary account describes corridors and floors whose color and design echoed those on ships. [20] Almost a century later, John B. Powell recounted the origins of the Hotel: "The Astor House Hotel ... had grown from a boarding house established originally by the skipper of some early American clipper, who left his ship at Shanghai.[21] A string of sea captains followed the original as managers of the hotel.[22] The very first public meeting of the newly established British Settlement was in the newly opened Richard's Hotel on 22 December 1846.[23]
Wills and Vacher (1856)
On 16 April 1855 Richards purchased a ship, the Margaret Mitchell, which had run aground off Woosung and required extensive repairs to make it seaworthy.[24] However, on 15 May 1856 Richards was declared insolvent by decree of the British Consular Court in Shanghai, and all of his assets (including the Margaret Mitchell and the Astor House Hotel) were assigned to his creditors, including Charles Wills and William Herbert Vacher.[25][26]
Wills, a British trader, was a representative of Jardine, Matheson & Co., while Vacher, an American, was a member of the Shanghai Municipal Council from 1855-1856, and represented Gilman and Bowman, a British hong established as a tea trader in 1840. In 1856 Wills built a wooden bridge crossing Suzhou creek,[27][28] to link the British Settlement in the south and the American Settlement in the north.
Relocation (1857)
Probably 'because of an unbeatable combination of lower priced land and convenient access",[29] in 1857 the hotel was relocated to its present location in the Hongkou District, the former unofficial American settlement (before it joined with the British in 1863 to form the International Settlement).[30] Originally the Hotel was "four large neo-Renaissance brick buildings linked together by stone passageways."[31] On 24 September 1857 the Shanghai Literary and Scientific Society,[32] which in 1858 became the North-China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, met at the Hotel from its earliest years until it relocated to its own premises on Huqiu Lu (formerly Museum Road) in 1871.[33][34][35][36]
The Astor House Hotel (1859-1959)
Henry Smith (1859)
In 1859 the Richards Hotel and Restaurant was sold to Englishman Henry Smith, who changed the name to the Astor House Hotel.[37][38] According to John B. Powell, "He christened his establishment in honor of the then most famous hotel in the United States, the Astor House in New York; however, he was compelled to add the designation "hotel," as the fame of the New York hostelry had not yet reached the China coast. Aside from the name, the two establishments had little in common."[39] According to actress Grace Hawthorne, who stayed at the Astor House in 1894, the year of long-time owner, DeWitt Clinton Jansen's death:
The man who named it, some thirty years ago or so, had been to New-York and found in the Astor House a model of elegance and hotel excellence. He returned to Shanghai, and forthwith named his hotel the Astor House.[40]
DeWitt Clinton Jansen (1860-1894)
In 1860 DeWitt Clinton Jansen (born at Shawangunk, New York on 8 November 1840; died 6 November 1894 in Shanghai),[41][42][43], a former American merchant sailor, and colporteur in China's interior, purchased the Astor House Hotel. Jansen was to own the Hotel and reside there with his wife, Ellen McGrath Jansen (died 1919),[44] and their six children,[45] until his death in 1894.[46][47][48][49] Jansen was a polyglot, fluent in a number of Chinese dialects.[50]
In 1860, the Astor House Hotel was "still a single and ordinary building".[51] Under Jansen's ownership, there was increased foreign patronage due to his innovations such as a billiard room, and a public bar, and organising dances and plays to be held at the Hotel. However, despite being one of the better hotels in Shanghai, the lack of internal plumbing was known to cause death to some guests, including members of the Japanese ship Senzaimaru who stayed at the Astor House Hotel for ten weeks in 1862: "Three crew members died, at least one from dysentery contracted as a result of inadvertently imbibing the filthy waters of the Wusong River in which everything they consumed had been washed.[52]
In 1867 the Astor House Hotel was the earliest in Shanghai to use coal gas to provide lighting. About that time the Astor House Hotel received a more favourable evaluation: "Several hotels or taverns exist in the different settlements, but the only establishment of high pretensions is the Astor House, situated in the Hong-kew Settlement, close by the bridge crossing the Soochow Creek. Good apartments and tolerable accommodation can be found here by strangers. Charges, about $3 per diem.[53] Egerton Laird indicated in 1875: "I am stopping at the Astor House, which seems clean and comfortable,"[54] while American travel writer Thomas Wallace Knox (1835-1896) recorded this description of the Astor House Hotel after his stay in 1879. He found it
a less imposing fare than the Astor House of New York, though it occupied more ground, and had an evident determination to spread itself. A large space of greensward was enclosed by a quadrangle of one-story buildings, which formed the hotel, and consequently it required a great deal of walking to get from one part of the house to the opposite side....Some rooms were entered from a veranda on the side of the court-yard....On the other side there was a balcony...As this balcony was well provided with chairs and lounges, it was a pleasant resort on a warm afternoon. The house was kept by an American, but all his staff of servants was Chinese.[55]
Benjamin David Benjamin, a Sephardic Jew, and colleague of Elias David Sassoon, in his efforts to acculturate to the prevailing British society in Shanghai, frequently entertained his friends at the Astor House from 1879 to 1883, "running up bills of as much as $70-90 for the evening".[56][57] In its desire to be the premier hotel in Shanghai, "the Astor House was eager to be the first in Shanghai with the latest mod cons."[58] On 26 July 1882, when Shanghai lit its first fifteen electric street lamps, seven were installed in the Astor House Hotel, making it the first building in China to be lit by electricity. Also in 1882 the Astor House hosted the first Western circus in China. In 1883 the Hotel was the first building in Shanghai to install running water. At this time accommodation was $3 a day.[59] The Astor House Hotel was "a landmark of the white man in the Far East, like Raffles Hotel in Singapore."[60] By 1890, "For foreigners the Astor House was the center of social activity....At the Astor House bar tradespeople gathered every morning for an eleven-o'clock drink. It was at the Astor House that the important foreign balls were always held, in the banquet hall, but the Chinese at that time did not join in these revels.[61] By 1892 Frederick J. Buenzle, an American sailor, rescued from assault by Jansen, became the night manager at the Ascot House for two years until "the sudden and untimely death" of Jansen.[62][63] Mr U. Videau also assisted in managing the hotel by 1894.[64]
On 6 November 1894, during an installation meeting of the lodge,[65] Jansen "suddenly fell back in his chair, gave one or two gasps for breath" and died.[66][67]
The Astor House Hotel Company (1895-1915)
By 1897 the Hotel was managed by Lewis M. Johnson (born Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada), who was responsible for booking the first motion picture to be shown in Shanghai (if not China) on 22 May 1897, in Astor Hall in the Astor House Hotel. The Animatoscope, then considered "Edison's greatest invention",[68] was presented by Harry Welby Cook, and accompanied by pianist Albert Linton.[69] On 5 November 1897, China's first prom was hosted at the Astor House, which celebrated the 60th birthday of Cixi, the Emperor Dowager, thus "ending the social stricture that women should not attend social events";[70] In 1899, Cyrus Foss described the Astor House as "the best hotel in Shanghai, and quite good. All the servants are sleek, neatly dressed Chinamen."[71] In 1901 the first telephones were installed in Shanghai, with the Astor House having the first telephone used. In the first Yellow Pages telephone directory published in Shanghai, its number was "200". By 1904 Mr A. Haller was the manager.[72]
Renovation (1907-1911)
The 1904 announcement of the rebuilding of the Central Hotel (reopened in 1909 as the Palace Hotel) as a luxury hotel on the Bund, [73] and the demolition of the nearby Garden Bridge, and construction of the current Garden Bridge in 1907, which involved the resumption of part of the Astor House Hotel's property, forced the owners of the Astor House Hotel to begin extensive renovations in 1907.[74] At that time, the Hotel was described as "the leading hotel of Shanghai...., but has an unpretentious appearance, and is about to be reconstructed."[75] By this time, Captain John Davies had become manager of the Astor House and "a more genial and hospitable gentleman never carried out the duties of that position."[76] Room rates were between $7 and $10 per day (Mexican).[77] The hotel employed 254 people, with each hotel department "under special European supervision".[78] Prior to the reconstruction and renovations, the Astor House was described in glowing terms:
Leading straight from the entrance to the main residential portion of the house is a long glass arcade. Upon one side of this are the offices, where the clerks and commissioners will attend promptly and courteously to every want; upon the other is a luxuriously furnished lounge, and, adjoining this, the reading, smoking, and drawing rooms. The dining room has accommodations for five hundred persons. It is lighted with hundreds of small electric lamps, whose rays are reflected by the large mirrors arranged around the walls, and when dinner is in progress, and the band is playing in the gallery,the scene is both bright and animated. There are some two hundred bedrooms, each with a bathroom adjoining, all of which look outward, facing either the city or the Whangpoo River. Easy access is gained to the various floors upon which they are situated by electric elevators. The hotel...generates its own electricity and has its own refrigerating plant."[79]
Architects and civil engineers Davies & Thomas (established in 1896 by Gilbert Davies and C.W, Thomas), were responsible for the re-building of the three principal wings of the Astor House Hotel.[80][81][82] The Astor House Hotel was restored to a neo-classical Baroque structure,[83] making it once again "the finest hotel in the Far East".[84] Construction commenced in 1907. The new addition (the Annex) was based on plans drawn by "Shanghai’s leading architects of the time",[85] British architects and civil engineers, Brenan Atkinson and Arthur Dallas (born 9 January 1860 in Shanghai; died 6 August 1924 in London), established as Atkinson & Dallas in 1898.[86][87][88][89] After the death of principal architect Brenan Atkinson in 1907,[90] he was replaced by his brother, G.B. Atkinson.[91] The intention was to rebuild the hotel "on modern lines". Included in the plans were: "the dining room, facing the Soochow Creek, is to be extended along the whole front of the building. Winter gardens are being constructed, the writing and smoking rooms, and the private bar and billiard room will be enlarged and the kitchen placed upon the roof."[92]
During the renovation period, future US President William Howard Taft, then US Secretary of War, and his wife, Helen Herron Taft,[93] were honoured at a banquet organised by the American Association of China in the large dining room at the Astor House Hotel in Shanghai on 8 October 1907, with over 280 in attendance, at that time "the largest affair of the kind ever given in China."[94] During the dinner, Taft made a significant speech on the relationship between the United States and China, and supporting the Open Door foreign policy previously advocated by John Hay.[95][96] Organized Sunday School work in China was born at Shanghai on 4 May 1907. "This beginning of Sunday-school history in China took place in Room 128 of the Astor House, Shanghai, occupied at that time by Mr. [Frank A.] Smith."[97] The opening of a tram line in March 1908 over the new Garden bridge along Broadway (now Daming Lu) past the Astor House Hotel by the Shanghai British Trolley Company,[98] greatly increased both access and business.[99] Also in this period, the first western movies shown in China were shown at the Astor House Hotel.[100] On 9 June 1908, a motion picture with some sound was first shown in China in the open air in the hotel's garden. By May 1908 the manager was Mr. W. Brauen.[101]
Re-opening (1911)
The restoration was completed in December 1910.[102] Advertising itself as the ‘Waldorf Astoria of the Orient’, its new 211-room building, with a 500-seat dining room, opened in January 1911.[103] Another advertisement described the Astor House Hotel in even more glowing terms:
"Largest, Best and Most Modern Hotel in the Far East. Main Dining Room Seats 500 Guests, and is Electrically Cooled. Two hundred Bedrooms with Hot and Cold Baths Attached to Each Room. Cuisine Unexcelled; Service and Attention Perfect; Lounge, Smoking and Reading Rooms; Barber and Photographer on the Premises. Rates from $6; Special Monthly Terms."[104]
According to Shanghai historian Tess Johnston, at the time of its re-opening in January 1911, the refurbished Astor House Hotel was described as follows:
The grand staircase, with marble dado and red panels on white background, leads upward to passenger lifts [elevators], a ladies cloak room, a very prettily furnished ladies' sitting room, a reading room with several comfortable sofas and easy chairs upholstered in leather, a private buffet with a polished teakwood bar, and a large billiard room. Farther up the grand staircase is the main dining hall, almost the whole length of the building with a gallery and verandah on the second floor and well lighted by a barreled ceiling of glass. On the Astor Road side is a handsome banqueting hall and reception rooms, both decorated in ivory and gold, and six private dining rooms. There were six service elevators, bedrooms with private sitting rooms, and luxury suites under the dome. An advertisement in Social Shanghai in 1910 bragged, "The Astor House Hotel is the most central, popular and modern hotel in Shanghai.[105]
Additionally, the Hotel now had a 24 hour hot water supply, some of the earliest elevators in China, and each of the 250 guest rooms had its own telephone, as well as an attached bath. It also had "the most commodious ballroom in Shanghai, [was] renowned for its lobby, special dinner-parties, and balls."[106] In 1911 John H. Russell, Jr. told his daughter, the future Brooke Astor, that the Hotel offered "the finest service in the world", and that in response to her question about "a man dressed in a white skirt and blue jacket beside every second door", was told by Russell: "They are the 'boys.' ... When you want your breakfast or your tea, just open the door and tell them."[107]
On 3 November 1911, during the Xinhai Revolution that would lead to the collapse of the Qing dynasty in February 1912, an armed rebellion began in Shanghai, which resulted in the capture of the city on 8 November 1911, and the establishment of the Shanghai Military Government of the Republic of China, which was formally declared on 1 January 1912. Business as usual proceeded for the Astor House Hotel. On 11 December 1913 the Astor House Hotel hosted a banquet for both the New York Giants of John McGraw and Chicago White Stockings of Charles Comiskey baseball teams, which included Christy Mathewson and Jim Thorpe, who were touring the world playing exhibition games.[108] This transnational tour was led by Albert Goodwill Spalding, owner of the White Stockings, "professional baseball's most influential figure."[109] At that time
No hotel in Shanghai, and few in the world, surpassed the Astor House Hotel. A handsome and impressive stone edifice of arched windows and balconies, the hotel stood six stories high and sprawled over three acres of land near the heart of the city.[110]
On 29 December 1913 the first sound film in China was shown at the Hotel. Around the end of World War I, the Sixty Club, a group of sixty men-around-town (a mixture of actors and socialites), and their dates would meet at the Astor House each Saturday night.[111] While praise for the renovations was almost universal, they strained severely the Hotel's finances. According to Peter Hibbard, "[D]espite their architectural bravura and decorative grandeur, the formative years of both the Palace and Astor House Hotels were overshadowed by an inability to cater for the fast changing tastes of Shanghai society and her visitors".[112]
Central Stores Ltd. (1915-1917) and The Shanghai Hotels Limited (1917-1923)
Edward Isaac Ezra and the Kadoorie Family
In 1915 the Hotel was bought by Central Stores Ltd. (renamed The Shanghai Hotels Limited in 1917), which was owned primarily by Edward Isaac Ezra (1883-1921),[113] the largest stockholder[114] and the managing director of Shanghai Hotels Ltd., and its major financier,[115] who had made his fortune through the importation of opium and real estate investments. The Kadoorie family, Iraqi Sephardic Jews from India,[116] who also owned the Palace Hotel at number 19 The Bund, on the corner with Nanjing Road, had a minority share holding in the Astor House Hotel. American journalist John B. Powell, who first arrived in Shanghai in 1917 to work for Thomas Franklin Fairfax Millard, the founder of what later became The China Weekly Review, described his new accommodation at the Astor House Hotel:
the Astor House in Shanghai consisted of old three- and four-story brick residences extending around the four sides of a city block and linked together by long corridors. In the center of the compound was a courtyard where an orchestra played in the evenings. Practically everyone dressed for dinner, which never was served before eight o'clock.[117]
According to Powell, "Since most of the managers of the Astor House had been sea captains, the hotel had taken on many of the characteristics of a ship."[118] By 1917 the Hotel was managed by Captain Henry "Harry" E. Morton (died 2 October 1923, aged 53 in Manila)[119] of the Royal Navy,[120][121] "a retired ship captain who ran it as a ship, the hotel had corridors painted with portholes and trompe l'oeil seascapes and rooms decorated like cabins; there was even a "steerage" section with bunks instead of beds at cheaper rates."[122] While at that time the Hotel charged about $10 a day Mexican for accommodation,[123] "a room in the "steerage" ... [cost] $125 a month, including meals and afternoon tea. That figured out at about $60 in United States currency."[124] According to Powell,
the "steerage" section ... consisted of single rooms and small suites at the back of the hotel. The section resembled an American club, because practically all of the rooms and suites were occupied by young Americans who had come out to join the consulate, commercial attache's office, or business firms whose activities were undergoing rapid expansion. Sanitary arrangements left much to be desired. There was no modern plumbing. The bathtub consisted of a large earthenware pot about four feet high and four feet in diameter....The Chinese servant assigned to me would carry in a seemingly endless number of buckets of hot water to fill the tub in the morning.[125]
Shanghai was considered the "Paradise of Adventurers", and the "ornate but old-fashioned lobby" of the Astor House was considered its hub.[126] The lobby was furnished with the heavy mahogany chairs and coffee tables.[127] By 1918 the lobby of the Astor House, "that amusing whispering gallery of Shanghai",[128] was "where most business is done" in Shanghai.[129] After China signed the International Arms Embargo Agreement of 1919, "sinister-looking German, American, British, French, Italian, and Swiss arms dealers appeared in the lobby of the Astor House . . . to dangle fat catalogs of their wares before the eager eyes of any buyers."[130][131] In 1920 the lobby "with its convivial atmosphere, presents to the visitor a welcome oasis, where congregate travelers from afar to chat pleasantly."[132] Another recorded: "The effervescence at the Astor is more tangy than elsewhere. All the latest scandal of the town is an old story in its lobbies almost before it occurs."[133] Powell added: "At one time or another one saw most of the leading residents of the port at dinner parties or in the lobby of the Astor House. An old resident of Shanghai once told me, "If you sit in the lobby of the Astor House and keep your eyes open you will see all of the crooks who hang out on the China coast."[134] According to Ron Gluckman, "Opium was commonplace, says one woman who lived in Shanghai before World War II. 'It was just what you had, after dinner, like dessert.' Opium and heroin were available via room service at some of the old hotels like the Cathay and Astor, which offered drugs, girls, boys, whatever you wanted."[135]
In 1919, Zhou Xiang (周祥),[136] "an Astor House bellboy, rewarded for recovering a Russian guest's wallet with its contents, spent a third of it on a car. That car became Shanghai's first taxi, and spawned the Johnson fleet, now known as the Qiangsheng taxi",[137] which is "now ranked number-two by the number of taxis in the city behind Dazhong. The Shanghai government took over Qiangsheng after the Communists won the Chinese civil war in 1949".[138] By 1920 the Astor House Hotel was making a handsome profit under the leadership of Ezra. By 1920 Mr. W. Sharp-Bardarson was the manager.[139]
Hong Kong Shanghai Hotels, Limited (1923-1954)
James Harper Taggart
The death of Edward Ezra in 1921, and Sir Ellis Kadoorie in 1922, resulted in James Harper Taggart, a "Lowland Scot of evidently very humble parentage",[140] former manager of the Hong Kong Hotel, becoming managing director of Shanghai Hotels Ltd., which merged with the Hong Kong Hotel Company in October 1923 to form The Hong Kong Shanghai Hotels, Limited (HSH).[141] Taggart "played a leading role in revolutionising the modern hotel business in Shanghai by introducing novel concepts, such as dinner dances and European-style grill rooms."[142] After the first radio broadcast in China on 26 January 1922, the Astor House Hotel was among the first to install a receiving set to hear the inaugural broadcast, locating it in the Grill room.[143] Another innovation was The Yellow Lantern, an exotic and exclusive curio shop, located off the lobby shop, operated by Jack and Hetty Mason, where rare Oriental treasures, including embroideries.[144][145] By the early 1920s, the Astor House Hotel had become "an international institution in fame and reputation."[146] The Shanghai Rotary Club (Club 545), which was formed in July 1919, began meeting at 12.30pm each Thursday at the Astor House Hotel for tiffins in 1921, and again for five years from 1926.[147] The Shanghai Stock Exchange was housed at the Astor House Hotel from 1920 until 1949.[148] According to Peter Hibbard,
The “Roaring Twenties” saw Shanghai entering a period of frenetic growth, only tamed in the late 1930s, with the old fabric of the city being torn apart in a rapacious drive towards modernisation. The city was staking its claim as a great international city, with a modern skyline and manners to match. Apart from its rapidly growing foreign population with their ever-increasing demands for sophisticated entertainment, the number of foreign visitors began to boom in the early 1920s. The first of a long stream of round-the-world cruise-liners began to call on the city in 1921 and by the early 1930s, Shanghai was playing host to around 40,000 globetrotters each year.[149]
The influx of White Russian refugees from Vladivostok after the fall of the Provisional Priamurye Government in Siberia in October 1922 at the close of the Russian Civil War, created a significant community of Shanghai Russians. Denied the benefits of extraterritoriality, and having few other resources, there was a proliferation of white slavery, brothels and street prostitution, and new nightspots on Bubbling Well Road and Avenue Edward VII also reduced patronage at the more sedate tea dances at the Astor House: "For foreigners, the better cabarets offered a welcome alternative to club life and the stuffy tea dances at the Astor House Hotel ... around which the foreign colony's social life had previously revolved."[150]
Renovation (1923)
By the beginning of 1923, there were those who felt the Astor House Hotel needed improvement. Further, while "The Astor House on Whangpoo Road, with its palm garden and its French chef, was the largest and best place to stay," the opening of the Majestic Hotel in 1924 eclipsed the Astor House once again.[151] One guest who attended a New Year's Eve event in 1922 indicated: "We hied to the Astor House, a place far removed in space and comfort from its namesake in New York city."[152] The owners began remodelling the hotel again in 1923.[153] In 1924 the American aviators who made the first aerial circumnavigation of the world, indicated: "Upon entering the lobby, had it not been for the Chinese attendants, we should have thought ourselves in a hotel in New York, Paris, or London.[154] According to Frederic E. Wakeman, "The tea dance was one of the first cultural events to bring the Chinese and Western elites of Shanghai together. High society initially met at the Astor."[155] At one time Chinese visitors were not allowed into the lobby or the elevator. However, by now, "smartly dressed Chinese youngsters, Shanghai's jeunesse dorte, enjoyed the tea dance at the Astor House."[156] These afternoon tea dances at the Majestic Hotel and the Astor House became "the first places where 'polite' foreign and Chinese society met. At both venues, more whiskey than tea was served. These 'teas' dragged on late into the evening, with drunken guests occasionally falling into the magnificent fountain that occupied the center of its clover-shaped Winter Garden ballroom."[157] Elise McCormick indicated in 1928, "Tea dances at the Astor House formerly took place only once a week. Later the demand caused them to be introduced twice a week and soon they were taking place every day except Saturday and Sunday, with a dinner dance in the ballroom practically every night."[158] By November 1928 the manager was H.O. "Henry" Wasser.[159][160] Another valuable employee was Mr Kammerling, a Russian Jew (born in Turkey) who became Reception Clerk: "With an amazing flair for languages and the opportunity to work with people of many cultures, Mr H. Kammerling eventually learned to converse fluently and faultlessly in German, English, French, Chinese, Hebrew, Japanese and one or two other languages, as well as his native Russian and Turkish."[161]
Decline in prestige (1929)
Despite the 1923 renovations, by 1930 the Astor House Hotel was no longer the pre-eminent hotel in Shanghai. James Lafayette Hutchison, on his return to the Astor House after several years absence in the United States, noticed no changes: "I walked across the bridge and registered at the old Astor House Hotel, then went to my room to clean up. The same subdued, cavernous lobby with the same white-gowned boys leaning against the the tall pillars, the same mystic maze of halls leading to a sparsely furnished bedroom."[162] The completion of the Cathay Hotel in 1929, "threw a painful shadow upon the old-fashioned Astor House."[163] Fortune magazine in describing the Cathay Hotel highlighted the problem for the Astor House: "Its air-conditioned ballrooms have emptied all the older ballrooms in town. And the comfort of its tower bedrooms has brought wrinkles to the foreheads of the managers of the old Astor House and the Palace Hotel.[164] While the Astor House was less expensive than the Cathay Hotel, it also lacked air-conditioning.[165] American historian William Reynolds Braisted recalling that on his return to Shanghai in 1932, after an absence of a decade:
The Palace Hotel and the Astor House were now far outclassed by three hotels built by a wealthy Baghdadi Jew, Sir Victor Sassoon: the magnificent Cathay Hotel on the Bund, the Metropole in midtown, and the Cathay Mansions across the road from the Cercle Francais in the French Concession.[166]
According to Canadian journalist Gordon Sinclair, by 1931 the Shanghai Press Club used the Astor as their regular meeting place,[167] and overseas Chinese frequently stayed there.[168]
28 January Incident (1932)
In response to the Mukden Incident, and the subsequent beating of five Japanese Buddhist monks in Shanghai by Chinese civilians on 18 January 1932, and despite offers of compensation by the Shanghai municipal government, Japanese forces attacked Shanghai in the January 28 Incident. A good deal of fighting took place near the Astor House Hotel.[169] Reports to the United States Department of State indicated: "Chinese shells once more fell in neighborhood of wharf area of Hongkew. The shells were clearly heard passing between British Consulate and Astor House."[170] On 31 January 1932, during the Japanese invasion of Shanghai, a reporter for The New York Times, reported on the impact of the Shanghai Incident on the Astor House Hotel:
At 11:30 o'clock this morning the Japanese inexplicably began firing machine guns down Broadway past the Astor House Hotel....The streets were then filled with milling masses of frightened, homeless Chinese, some of them wearily sitting on bundles of household goods. Immediately there was the wildest panic. . . . Chinese women with their bound feet and with babies in their arms were attempting to run to safety as their faces streamed in tears.[171]
On 27 February 1932 Japanese marines pursued Chinese Brigadier General Wang Keng or (Wang Kang), then a recent a West Point graduate,[172] into the Astor House Hotel and arrested him,[173] in violation of the international law that operated in the International Settlement,[174] without explanation or apologies, and refused to turn him over to the police of the International Settlement.[175][176] Eventually he was released but detained by the Nanjing government.[177]
Highlights (1932-1937)
By 1934 "the Astor House Hotel's tea dances and classical concerts [were] popular...during the Winter season."[178] In 1934 the Astor House's tariffs were, in Mexican dollars (approximately 1/3 of an American dollar): "single, $12; double, $20; suite- for two, $30."[179] One of the more interesting frequent visitors to the Astor House Hotel was Mr. Mills, a gibbon, who accompanied American journalist Emily Hahn,[180] the sometime paramour of Sir Victor Sassoon, from 1935 until her departure for Hong Kong in 1941.[181] In 1936 American artist Bertha Boynton Lum (1869-1954) was enthusiastic in her description of the Astor House Hotel: "The rooms are huge, the ceilings unbelievably high, and the baths large enough to drown" in.[182] American Charles H. Baker, Jr., in his 1939 travelogue The Gentleman's Companion, describes the drink that caused him to miss many steamships as "a certain cognac and absinthe concoction known as The Astor House Special, native to Shanghai".[183] According to Baker, the ingredients for the Astor House Special are: "1 1/2oz cognac, 1tsp maraschino liqueur, 2tsp egg white, 3/4oz Pernod, 1/2tsp lemon juice, and club soda", however "the original recipe calls for Absinthe instead of Pernod."[184]
Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945)
The Hotel was damaged during the Battle of Shanghai when the Japanese invaded Shanghai in August 1937 at the outset of the Second Sino-Japanese War.[185] On 15 August 1937 the Astor House had been evacuated,[186] however by 18 August, the Hotel management recaptured the Astor House from the Japanese troops.[187] In the following days, some 18,000 to 20,000 Europeans, Americans and Japanese evacuated to Hong Kong, Manila, and Japan, [188] including Lawrence and Horace Kadoorie, who fled to Hong Kong.[189] The vacuum created when the British owners of the Astor House Hotel fled to Hong Kong allowed the Japanese occupation forces to assume control of the hotel until the surrender of the Empire of Japan in September 1945.[190]
On 4 November 1937 a Chinese torpedo boat launched a torpedo in an attempt to sink the Japanese cruiser Izumo,[191][192] then "lying moored to the Nippon Yusen Kaisha wharf close to the Japanese Consulate General, just east of the mouth of Soochow Creek",[193] near to the Garden Bridge,[194] exploded outside the Astor House breaking several windows.[195][196] American foreign correspondent Irène Corbally Kuhn,[197] one of the writers of the 1932 film, The Mask of Fu Manchu, and then a reporter for The China Press,[198] described the hotel as "the most famous inn on the China coast, redundantly identified as the Astor House Hotel,"[199] and also the damage inflicted upon it during the 1937 Japanese invasion: "from the street the boards were up over the shop fronts."[200]
The Astor House Hotel was occupied by the Japanese YMCA, until 1941.[201] The Japanese subsequently leased the hotel for a three-year term to another party, with "a reasonable return" remitted to the absent owners.[202] On 6 November 1938 four hundred members of the White Russian diaspora in Shanghai met at the Astor House Hotel (across the road from the Soviet embassy) to discuss forming an ant-communist alliance with the Axis Powers: Japan, Italy and Germany against Soviet Russia.[203] In July 1940 Time magazine reported that, in response to the unapproved anti-Japanese thrice daily broadcasts of American journalist Carroll Duard Alcott, "The embittered Japanese began operating a maverick transmitter from Shanghai's Astor House Hotel, which set up a terrible clatter whenever Alcott began to broadcast. Alcott told about it. The Japanese denied it. Alcott told the number of the hotel room where it was housed. Finally the Japanese turned their transmitter over to some Shanghai Nazis.[204] The jamming continued by the Japanese from the top floor of the Astor House.[205]
During the Japanese occupation the Astor House was also used to house prominent British (and later American) nationals captured by the Japanese.[206][207], Later the Astor House Hotel was used as the Japanese General headquarters,[208], before being leased as a hotel for the duration of the war.
Post-War Era (1945-1949)
During World War II and the Japanese occupation, "the Astor House fell into decline, and its elegance was soon no more than an almost unimaginable memory."[209] In September 1945, the owners, the Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd (HKSH), leased the hotel to the US Army.[210][211] According to Horst Eisfelder, a German Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany, lunch at the Astor House during the American army occupancy was a real treat: "For only US 5¢ we had freshly prepared pancakes and a bottle of icy cold Coca Cola, which also cost five cents".[212]
By 1946 White Russian refugee Len Tarasov had become manager of the Astor House Hotel, but was fired when a Chinese businessman leased the Hotel[213] from the Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd (HKSH) in 1947. The Chinese management subdivided the first floor to create 23 rooms, and rebuilt the shops on street level, opened a cafe, and re—opened the bar. On 27 May 1949, the People's Liberation Army marched into Shanghai, and on 1 October 1949 the People's Republic of China was proclaimed, forcing Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek to flee. According to some accounts, Chiang had his last dinner on the Chinese mainland at the Astor House on 10 December 1949, before flying into exile on the island of Taiwan.[214] By 1950 the agreement between the Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd and the Chinese company expired. While the HKSH wanted to resume management of the hotel, the Chinese company was reluctant to relinquish control. Diplomatic tensions between the new Chinese government and the United Kingdom further complicated the dispute.
Government control (1954-1959)
On 19 April 1954 the Hotel was confiscated[215] and control of the hotel passed to the Land and House Bureau of the Shanghai people's government. On 25 June 1958 the hotel was incorporated into the Shanghai Institution Business Administrative bureau.
Pujiang Hotel (1959-2002)
On 27 May 1959, the name was changed from the Astor House Hotel to the Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店),[216] and the hotel was permitted to receive both foreigners and overseas Chinese guests. During the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), the Hotel declined substantially, with the dining room on the top floor being changed beyond all recognition. One 1983 guide described the Hotel as "slightly run-down",[217] while a 1986 guide warned: "Despite its exceptional location near the Bund, ... the Pujiang is recommended only to travelers well prepared for 'roughing it'".[218]
Shanghai Hengshan Mountain Group (1988 to today)
In 1988 the Pujiang Hotel was incorporated into the Shanghai Hengshan Mountain Group (上海衡山集).[219] At that time, one assessment indicated: "Today the Pujiang is run down and can get cold and clammy in winter - otherwise its nice."[220] At the end of 1989, the Pujiang was "Shanghai's official backpackers' hangout," with at least eight dormitories accommodating twenty people in each.[221] Accommodation in "the cheap if austere dormitory rooms",[222] was inexpensive. In 1989, a bed in the dormitories was 17 renminbi, including breakfast,[223] while four years later it had only increased to 20 renminbi per night, while a private room was 80.[224] Prior to its restoration, the Pujiang Hotel seemed to have reached its nadir, being described as "an inexpensive, somewhat grotty backpackers' favorite".[225] A 2002 review elaborates:
Situated in an inconspicuous corner near the Bund, the Pujiang Hotel, formerly the Astor House Hotel, seems to have lost its bygone glory. The low-rise building has been eroded to be dated in colour, which was submerged among the eminent architecture of the Bund. Few members of the city's younger generation are even aware that the hotel exists, let alone that it is considered the father of the city's luxury hotels.[226]
One guest described vividly the conditions before the much-needed renovation:
My room turned out to be located on a floor way up in the Gods that must have been the former servants' quarters. The lift and grand staircase ended at the fifth floor below it and from there you ascended a set of dark, steep stairs to the attic. I imagined the ghosts of weary maid-servants trudging up these stairs late at night....The polished wooden boards creaked and shook when anyone walked, or thundered, down the passage past my door....One drawback to living in the attic was that the bathroom I had to use was three flights of stairs down on the third floor. The bathroom, in an annexe off the side of the building, was a dingy old square room covered all over in white tiles and with drainage holes in the floor that made it look like a gas chamber. The floor sloped away a good four inches as though the annexe was sliding down the outer wall. It felt as though I was still on the ship. Ancient pipes ran down the walls to two antique taps that spouted a solid jet of water which, without the refinement of a shower rose, pelted you from an overhead pipe.[227]
Shanghai Stock Exchange (1990-1998)
After being closed on 10 June 1949, the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SHGSE), once the largest stock exchange in Asia,[228] re-opened on 19 December 1990, and was housed "temporarily" (until its relocation to Pudong in 1998)[229] in the former ballroom of the Astor House Hotel[230][231][232][233] in the west wing of the hotel, while "the east wing of the building still functioned as a state-run hotel."[234] The main aim of the Exchange was "to sell state securities, but a few other stocks (already being traded less formally) were also were also listed. The "transaction hall" was equipped with modern computers, several dozen small rooms for bargaining, and electronic transmission of prices "to 47 transaction centers around the city." Initially only eight stocks and 22 bonds were listed.[235]
In 1995 the Hengshan Group was considering the demolition of the Hotel, until its president Wu Huaixiang (吴怀祥) discovered its historical significance, and convinced the Group to retain the building and gradually restore it to its former glory.
Astor House Hotel (2002 to today)
In 2002 the first phase of renovation was completed, and cost about 7 million renminbi to refurbish the 35 VIP rooms.[236] About this time the Hotel was again renamed the Astor House Hotel in English, while continuing to be the Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店) in the Chinese language..[237] Jasper Becker reported in 2004, soon after the most recent renovation:
The oak-panelled walls and Ionic marble columns of the Astor Hotel's reception hall lend it a grandeur that war and revolution have not altered since Bertrand Russell and Bernard Shaw succumbed to Shanghai's splendid decadence.[238]
Frommer's travel guide described the refurbished Astor House Hotel:
The brick-enclosed inner courtyard on the third floor now leads to rooms that have been refurbished and stripped down to accentuate the building's original highlights (high ceilings, carved moldings, and wooden floors). Beds are firm and comfortable, bathrooms large and clean, and there are even little flourishes like old-fashioned dial telephones.[239]
According to Tourism Review magazine:
In recent years through intensive restoration the hotel got a completely new look. Today, it is a unique combination of old Victorian-style design and modern facilities. It contains 116 various types of rooms, including deluxe, standard, and executive and some 4-bed rooms. Each room is well decorated while some of them in which celebrities once stayed, are taken as historic spots with photos hanging on the wall to show guests.[240]
Today there is "an eccentric style to the place. And how can you not love a hotel that makes its male staff dress in spats, kilts and black tailcoats?...With its thick lacquered walls, high ceilings, wooden floorboards and winding corridors, it has a feel that's somewhere between a Victorian asylum and an English boarding school". [241]
Notable guests
Famous people who have stayed at the Astor House Hotel over the years have included:
1860-1894
- British military engineer Lt. Thomas Lyster (born 5 July 1840; died 17 August 1865), of the Royal Engineers,[242] aide to Charles George Gordon (then commander of the Ever Victorious Army), stayed at the Astor House Hotel from 24 August 1862;[243]
- Prince Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the Duke of Edinburgh, and second son of Queen Victoria of Great Britain, chose to stay at the Astor House Hotel when he visited Shanghai in 1869;[244]
- Scotsman John Francis Campbell (1821-1885), authority on Celtic folklore, publisher of Popular Tales of the West Highlands, and inventor of the Campbell-Stokes sunshine recorder, was a guest at the Astor House in January 1875;[245]
- Scottish American industrialist Andrew Carnegie stayed at the Astor House Hotel for almost a week from 5 December 1878;[246][247]
- American adventurer Thomas Wallace Knox (1835-1896), "one of the preeminent travel writers in the second half of the Nineteenth Century"[248] and the author of 46 books, who had been court martialed by Ulysses S. Grant during the American Civil War,[249] stayed at the Astor House in 1879;[250]
- former United States president Ulysses S. Grant stayed in Room 410 in May 1879;[251][252]
- King David Kalākaua I of Hawaii, the last reigning king of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, the first monarch to travel around the world,[253] stayed at the Astor House Hotel[254] in April 1881, where he occupied a suite of rooms on the first floor;[255]
- In May 1894, American mezzo-soprano opera singer Minnie Hauk (1851-1929), who was rumoured to be the illegitimate daughter of American financier Leonard Jerome, and was the first American to sing the title role in Carmen,[256] and her husband, Austrian journalist Baron Ernst von Hesse-Waltegg, were guests during Hauk's performances in Shanghai;[257][258]
- American theatre manager Miss Grace Hawthorne (born ca.1847 in Maine; died 23 May 1922, London, England),[259] "a tall, handsome American actress",[260] who had starred as Zoe in The Octoroon in the 1880s,[261] and former lessee of the Princess's Theatre, London and the Olympic Theatre, London, who "must have had abundant means of her own or else was backed by others who had, for she met failure after failure with a grim determination to go on at all costs",[262] stayed in the Astor House during her round the world trip in 1895, because of its name;[263][264]
1895-1915
- Prussian born Christian evangelist George Müller, philanthropist and founder of orphanages in Bristol,[265] stayed at the Astor House during his two weeks in Shanghai from 4 October 1886, in which he preached 17 times;[266]
- Simon Adler Stern (born in Philadelphia 1838; died May 2, 1904), American Jewish author, and editor of Penn Monthly and Industrial Review,[267] was a guest in the Hotel in 1887;[268]
- John James Aubertin (1818-1900), British railway engineer and translator of Portuguese poet Luís de Camões' magnus opus Os Lusíadas[269] and also seventy of his sonnets,[270], stayed on five separate occasions between Palm Sunday and November 1890;[271]
- Annie “Londonderry” Cohen Kopchovsky, the first woman to bicycle around the world, stayed at the Astor Hotel on her pioneering journey in 1895;[272]
- English travel writer Isabella Lucy Bird (15 October 1831 to 7 October 1904), the most famous and influential of the Victorian "lady travelers,"[273], and the first woman admitted into the Royal Geographical Society in 1892, stayed at the Astor House in 1896;[274]
- American Congregational clergyman John Henry Barrows (1847-1902), president of the Parliament of the World's Religions held in Chicago in September 1893 in connection with the World Columbian Exposition, and later president of Oberlin College,[275] stayed at the Astor House in April 1897;[276]
- British travel writer John Foster Fraser, arrived at the Astor House Hotel on 23 December 1897 during his bicycle trip around the world;[277]
- American mariner Lt. Bradley Allen Fiske (13 June 1854 - 6 April 1942), later a Rear Admiral and Aide for Operations for the United States Navy (a post that later became that of Chief of Naval Operations), stayed at the Astor House Hotel in December 1898, while on furlough after the Battle of Manila Bay;[278]
- English magician Charles Bertram (1853-1907), who was a favourite of the future King Edward VII, performing for him more than twenty times,[279][280], performed at the Astor House in March 1900, and stayed there;[281]
- future American president Herbert Hoover, then the leading mining engineer in China, stayed at the Astor House in August 1900 just after the Boxer Uprising, registered under the pseudonym of Mr. Clark to allow the registering of a mining lease without detection;[282]
- American journalist Wilbur J. Chamberlin, who stayed at the Hotel in September 1900 and again in March 1901, to cover the aftermath of the Boxer Uprising, whose reporting for the New York Sun fueled the Twain-Ament Indemnities Controversy by criticising missionary William Scott Ament;[283]
- Future First Lady of the United States Helen Herron Taft was staying at the Astor House Hotel in October 1901, when she received news that her husband, William Howard Taft, then Governor-General of the Philippines, was severely ill in Manila;[284]
- American mariner Captain Ransford D. Bucknam (born 1869; died 27 May 1915), later pasha of the Ottoman Empire and rear admiral of the navy of Turkey stayed at the Astor House prior to 1902;[285][286]
- Controversial American medical practitioner and radio pioneer John R. Brinkley, who paid $65 a day for his suite at the Astor House in 1903;[287]
- Jagatjit Singh Bahadur (1872-1949), the ruling Maharaja of the princely state of Kapurthala in the British Empire of India from 1877, stayed at the Astor House in 1903;[288]
- English feminist and travel writer Gertrude Margaret Lowthian Bell, later associated with T.E. Lawrence, stayed at the Astor House Hotel in April 1903;[289]
- American humorist Marshall Pinckney Wilder (born 19 September 1859 in Geneva, New York; died 10 January 1915),[290][291], born with congenital kyphosis, who was editor of the 10 volume The Wit and Humor of America, made 16 command performances for the future King Edward VII,[292] was a guest in 1905;[293][294][295]
- American poet and essayist Joaquin Miller, "the Poet of the Sierras", was a guest in 1905;[296][297]
- After the beating of the British Vice Consul George D. Pitzipios and the torching of his car, American Consul General to Shanghai,[298] James Linn Rodgers (born 10 September 1861; died 2 September 1930), and his family stayed in the Astor House Hotel from 18 December 1905 during Anti-American riots[299] during the boycott of American goods by Chinese in response to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, because of the isolation of their official residence on Bubbling Well Road;[300]
- American herpetologist Thomas Barbour (1884 - 1946), later director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, stayed at the Astor House Hotel during his honeymoon trip in May 1907;[301]
- Frits Holm, leader of an expedition to copy and purchase the Nestorian Stele in Xian, stayed there in February 1908;[302]
- American Presbyterian evangelist John Wilbur Chapman stayed at the Astor House from 7 September 1909, during the first Chapman-Alexander worldwide campaign, which was held in Shanghai from 8-16 September;[303]
- American gospel singer Charles McCallon Alexander and his wife, Helen Cadbury, stayed at the Astor House from 7 September 1909, during the first Chapman-Alexander worldwide campaign, which was held in Shanghai;[304]
- Malayan-born Chinese medical practitioner Dr. Wu Lien-teh (伍连德) (1879-1960), the first person of Chinese ancestry to study medicine at the University of Cambridge, and later first president of the China Medical Association (1916-1920), stayed at the Astor House Hotel about 1910;[305][306][307]
- Commander of the US Marine detachment at the American Legation in Peking Major John H. Russell, Jr., and later the Commandant of the Marine Corps,[308] stayed at the Astor House in 1911, with his family, including the seven-year old Brooke Astor, future socialite and philanthropist;[309]
1915-1939
- Canadian railway engineer Donald Mann, who dueled with a Russian count with an axe;[310]
- Randolph Ortman, owner of Blue Ridge Farm in Greenwood, Virginia,[311] and his wife, Blanche Sellers Ortman, stayed in late December 1919;[312]
- English novelist and playwright W. Somerset Maugham, stayed at the Astor House Hotel from 3 January 1920, and this visit to China influenced his On a Chinese Screen (1922);[313]
- The Astor House Hotel claims that Welsh philosopher, mathematician and logician Bertrand Russell stayed in Room 310 in 1920.[314][315] Russell's time in China influenced his 1922 book, The Problem of China;[316]
- British newspaper magnate Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe stayed for one night on 20 November 1921;[317]
- German physicist Albert Einstein, arrived in Shanghai on 13 November 1922 en route to Japan on the Kitanu Maru,[318] four days after the announcement that he had won the Nobel Prize for physics,[319] and stayed for one night. [320] Einstein returned to Shanghai on 31 December 1922 after a visit to Japan, and departed on 2 January 1923.[321][322] It is claimed that Einstein stayed in Room 304 in the Astor House Hotel;[323]
- American artist Bertha Boynton Lum (1869-1954), influenced by Japonism and the stories of Lafcadio Hearn,[324][325] stayed at the Astor House during her frequent visits to China from 1922 onwards;[326][327]
- The aviators from the American Army Air Service, including Lt. Lowell Smith, who were in the process of making the First aerial circumnavigation of the world by air stayed at the Astor House for three nights from 4 June 1924;[328][329]
- Mrs Wallis Simpson, the future wife of the Duke of Windsor, and her friend Mary Sadler stayed at the Astor House for ten days in 1925, while Shanghai was in the grip of civil war;[330]
- George Bernard Shaw (1856-1959), British playwright, politician and winner of Nobel Prize in Literature in 1925, visited the Astor House Hotel with Soong Ching-ling, the widow of Sun Yat-sen, on 17 February 1933;[331]
- Stephen P. Duggan, the American co-founder and first president of The Institute of International Education, and later professor of diplomatic history at the College of the City of New York, stayed at the Astor House in the late spring of 1925;[332]
- The Denishawn School of Dancing and Related Arts troupe, including creators Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn, stayed at the Astor House Hotel from 16 November 1925 and again about 4 October 1926 during their eighteen-month tour of the Far East;[333][334]
- Manchurian Major General Zhang Xueliang (Chang Hsüeh-liang), later Warlord of Manchuria, stayed at the Astor House Hotel in late November 1925, "disguised as an American man's servant", to avoid detection;[335]
- American naturalist and explorer W. Douglas Burden (1898-1978), stayed in May 1926 en route to capture komodo dragons for the American Museum of Natural History.[336] His account of his expedition to Komodo Island inspired the movie King Kong;[337]
- American playwright and Nobel laureate in literature Eugene O'Neill, stayed for a month from mid-November until 12 December 1928, sometimes with his future third wife, Carlotta Monterrey,[338] excepting for a period he was in hospital after a binge and when Carlotta moved into a separate hotel after an argument.[339] While in Shanghai, he was called a faker posing as Eugene O'Neill,[340] and was treated for alcoholism in his room at the Astor House.[341][342][343]
- French author and anti-imperialist politician André Malraux,[344] stayed at the Astor House in 1931,[345] while researching material for his Prix Goncourt award winning 1933 novel,[346] Man's Fate (French: La Condition humaine), about the Shanghai massacre of 1927;
- American journalist and author Helen Foster,who married Edgar Snow in 1932, stayed in Room 303 at the Astor House upon her arrival in Shanghai in 1931;[347][348]
- American humorist and actor Will Rogers spent his only Christmas away from his family at the Astor House Hotel in 1931;[349]
- Otto Braun, a German Comintern secret agent, stayed in the Astor House for several weeks in the autumn of 1932;[350]
- Italian scientist Guglielmo Marchese Marconi, the inventor of the wireless, stayed in Room 8103 at the Astor House Hotel in 1933;[351]
- Noted Harvard University historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, Sr., his wife, and two sons, including future Pulitzer Prize winning historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. stayed at the Astor House Hotel in October 1933.[352]
- On 25 March 1934 Courtney Chauncey "C.C." Julian, former president of the failed Julian Petroleum Company of Los Angeles, who had skipped bail and fled to China, "staged a banquet for friends at the Shanghai Astor House, during which he excused himself, went to his room, and committed suicide"[353] "by taking poison, 'during a glittering dinner party with a woman'", and was subsequently buried in a pauper's grave;[354][355]
- British comedian Charlie Chaplin,[356] came to Shanghai with his future wife, Paulette Goddard, where they stayed in Room 404 at the Astor House Hotel from 5 February 1936;[357][358]
- On 20 July 1936, Marshall Smith Hairston (c.1896-1936), American factory manager of the Pudong branch of the Yee Tsoong branch of the British and American Tobacco was found dead in room 302 of the Astor House;[359][360][361]
- On 17 March 1939 Japanese gangster Yoshio Kodama, later prominent Yakuza figure, began his stay at the Astor House. "At ¥12 a day, meals not included, he found the hotel expensive, yet comfortable."[362]
- Zhou Enlai, the first Premier of the People's Republic of China, has a room named after him at the Astor House Hotel, where he may also have stayed;[363]
Unconfirmed guests
The following are people that some have claimed have stayed at the Astor House Hotel in Shanghai, but for whom there is no supporting evidence:
- African American composer and pianist Scott Joplin (b. 24 November 1868; d. 1 April 1917) is alleged to have stayed at the Astor House both in 1931 and 1936 in Room 404, and has one of the four celebrity rooms named in his honour[364] but his death in 1917 invalidates this assertion.
Notable residents
Among those who resided at the hotel for a significant period are:
- Johannes von Gumpach (died at Shanghai, 31 July 1875), a German-born, British-naturalized professor of mathematics and astronomy, fired from the Imperial Tung Wen College (or Interpreters College), and litigant against Robert Hart, which was appealed to the Privy Council in Britain, was residing at the Astor in 1871 while he wrote the controversial The Burlinghame Mission: a Political Disclosure;[365][366]
- Lithuanian Jewish convert to Christianity Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky, former Anglican Bishop of Shanghai, and founder of Saint John's University, Shanghai, who completed a translation of the Hebrew Bible into Mandarin Chinese in 1875, resided at the Astor House Hotel from 1895;[367]
- American conman Frederick W. Sutterlee, who defrauded customers of Kern Sutterlee & Co in Philadelphia in 1896, and fled to China, smuggled guns to the Philippine insurgents in the Philippine-American War, and used the name W.F. Sylvester, and became a correspondent for London's The Daily Mail, resided at the Astor House Hotel by 1900.[368][369]
- Australian journalist William Henry Donald (1875-1946), editor of the Far Eastern Review (1911-1920), adviser to Sun Yat-sen and Chiang Kai-shek, resided at the Astor House for the two years he lived in Shanghai from 1911;[370][371]
- American journalist Thomas Franklin Fairfax Millard lived at the hotel from 1911 during his years in Shanghai as founder and editor of The China News and later The China Weekly Review.[372]
- Chen Chin-tao, the Vice Minister of Finance for the Qing government, and later Finance Minister under Yuan Shikai, first elected president of the Republic of China.[373]
- Polish-born Jewish Cockney adventurer Morris Cohen, known as "Two-Gun Cohen", bodyguard and aide-de-camp to Sun Yat-sen, resided in Room 305 at the Astor House Hotel in Shanghai after 1922;[374]
- Italian Maestro Mario Paci, pianist and conductor for the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra from 1919 to 1942, and his family resided at the Astor House from at least 1925;[375]
- In 1927, an eight-year-old girl named Margaret "Peggy" Hookham came to live at the Astor House with her family. Hookham's father was the chief engineer for British American Tobacco, which was located just over the Garden bridge on then Museum Road. While at the Astor House Hotel, Peggy continued her ballet lessons, studying with the Russian teachers George Goncharev, and eventually took as her stage name, Margot Fonteyn, "perhaps the world's greatest ballerina."[376]
- American journalist Edgar Snow, author of Red Star Over China, from 1928;
- Future American journalist and spy for Soviet Russia[377] Mark Gayn and his parents, Russian Jews, lived at the Astor House in the late 1920s until his "Father deduced that the hotels were being constantly watched by foreign and Chinese police;[378]
References in popular culture
The Astor House Hotel has appeared in the following films:
- 2005 Everlasting Regret (Chinese: Changhen ge), produced by Jackie Chan, based on a novel by Wang Anyi,[379] featured the Astor House's Restaurant;[380]
- 2007 Lust, Caution (Chinese: Se, jie), a Chinese espionage thriller directed by Taiwanese American director Ang Lee, based on the 1979 short story by Chinese author Eileen Chang, had some scenes shot around the Astor House Hotel.[381]
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- ^ "Millions Have Left 2 Shanghai Areas: The Hongkew and Yangtsepoo" The New York Times (18 August 1937); http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00714F935541B728DDDA10994D0405B878FF1D3&scp=4&sq=astor%20house%20hotel%20shanghai&st=cse
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- ^ Hibbard, 5.
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- ^ Ralph Shaw, Sin City; http://www.earnshaw.com/shanghai-ed-india/tales/t-bombs.htm
- ^ George Moorad, quoted in Hesperides, As We See Russia (E.P. Dutton, 1948):311.
- ^ George Lester Moorad (b. 25 March 1908; d. 12 July 1949); http://freepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hughlemmon/d0000/g0000059.htm
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- ^ Irène Kuhn, Assigned to Adventure (J.B. Lippincott Company, 1938):207.
- ^ Kuhn, 201, 206-208.
- ^ "Five-star Legend", Shanghai Daily (18 April 2005); http://english.eastday.com/eastday/englishedition/node20665/node20667/node22808/node45576/node45577/userobject1ai1026003.html
- ^ http://www.hshgroup.com/history.asp?rtid=58&cid=10&id=51&listid=63
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- ^ "Newscaster of Shanghai" Time (29 July 1940); http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,764298,00.html
- ^ James Brown Scott, ed., The American Journal of International Law 36 (1942):126.
- ^ Enid Saunders Candlin, The Breach in the Wall: A Memoir of the Old China (Macmillan, 1973):115.
- ^ Fred Harris, The Arabic Scholar's Son: Growing Up in Turbulent North China (1927-1943) (AuthorHouse, 2007):276.
- ^ Bill Lawrence, Six Presidents, Too Many Wars (Saturday Review Press, 1972):133-134.
- ^ Orville Schell, Mandate of Heaven: The Legacy of Tiananmen Square and the Next Generation of China's Leaders (Reprint: Simon & Schuster, 1995):363.
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- ^ Hibbard, 5.
- ^ Eisfelder, 219-220.
- ^ Gary Nash, The Tarasov Saga: From Russia Through China to Australia (Rosenberg, 2002):193-194)
- ^ Lu Chang, "Legendary Astor House Hotel,", Shanghai Star (30 May 2002); http://app1.chinadaily.com.cn/star/2002/0530/di24-1.html
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- ^ Harpruder; http://www.rickshaw.org/way_we_remember_it.htm
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- ^ Fredric M. Kaplan, Julian M. Sobin, and Arne J. De Keijzer, eds., The China Guidebook, 7th ed. (Houghton Mifflin Co., 1986):551.
- ^ http://www.hengshanhotels.com/en/hotels/
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- ^ Jim Ford, Don't Worry, Be Happy: Beijing to Bombay with a Backpack (Troubador Publishing Ltd, 2006):108, 109.
- ^ Ellen Hertz, The Trading Crowd: An Ethnography of the Shanghai Stock Market (Cambridge University Press, 1998):33.
- ^ Laurie Fullerton and Tony Wheeler, eds., North-East Asia on a Shoestring, 2nd ed. (Lonely Planet Publications, 1989):51.
- ^ Bruno Gmünder, ed., Spartacus, 1993-1994: International Gay Guide, 22nd ed. (Bruno Gmünder, 1993):117.
- ^ Jen Lin-Liu et al., eds., Frommer's China, 2nd ed. (John Wiley and Sons, 2006):428.
- ^ Lu Chang, "Legendary Astor House Hotel," Shanghai Star (30 May 2002); http://app1.chinadaily.com.cn/star/2002/0530/di24-1.html
- ^ Lydia Laube, Bound for Vietnam (Wakefield Press, 1999):25-26.
- ^ Stephen Paul Green, The Development of China's Stockmarket, 1984-2002: Equity Politics and Market Institutions (Routledge, 2003):8.
- ^ Damian Harper, Christopher Pitts, and Bradley Mayhew, eds., Shanghai, 3rd ed. (Lonely Planet, 2006):104.
- ^ http://www.pujianghotel.com/e-cn-3.htm
- ^ "Shanghai" The Economist 333 (1994):40.
- ^ Stock Exchange of Hong Kong, The Securities Journal 9-12 (1990):25.
- ^ William Arthur Thomas, Western Capitalism in China: A History of the Shanghai Stock Exchange (Ashgate, 2001):70.
- ^ Hertz, 33.
- ^ Lynn T. White, Unstately Power. Vol. 1: Local Causes of China's Economic Reforms (M.E. Sharpe, 1998):325.
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- ^ Jasper Becker, "The Other Side of Shanghai's Success Story" The Independent (11 August 2004); http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/the-other-side-of-shanghais-success-story-556175.html (accessed 13 April 2009).
- ^ http://travel.nytimes.com/travel/guides/asia/china/shanghai/55063/astor-house-hotel/hotel-detail.html?scp=1&sq=astor%20house%20hotel%20shanghai&st=cse (accessed 13 April 2009).
- ^ "Astor House Hotel: The History Was Made Here" Tourism Review: Online Review (November 2008):9-10.
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- ^ The Cork Examiner (17 October 1865); http://www.irelandoldnews.com/Cork/1865/OCT.html
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- ^ http://www.astorhousehotel.com/en/mrl/mrl.php
- ^ John Francis Campbell, My Circular Notes: Extracts from Journals, Letters Sent Home, Geological and Other Notes, Written While Travelling Westwards Round the World, from July 6, 1874, to July 6, 1875 Vol. 2 (Macmillan, 1876):64.
- ^ Andrew Carnegie, Round the World (Reprint: Echo Library, 2007):40.
- ^ Peter Krass, Carnegie (John Wiley & Sons, 2002):149.
- ^ James R. Phelps, "Thomas Wallace Knox: An Uncommon American Adventurer in the Holy Land"; http://knox.maxboots.com/thomasknox
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- ^ Thomas Wallace Knox, The Boy Travellers in the Far East, Part First: Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Japan & China (New York: Harper, 1879):319-320.
- ^ Wasserstrom, 57.
- ^ John Russell Young, Around the World with General Grant, abridged by Michael Fellman (JHU Press, 2002):341.
- ^ William N. Armstrong, Around the World with a King (F. A. Stokes Company, 1904):2.
- ^ William N. Armstrong, Around the World with a King (F. A. Stokes Company, 1904):89-90.
- ^ Chester Holcombe, The Real Chinaman (Dodd, Mead & company, 1895):72.
- ^ http://www.picturehistory.com/product/id/21369
- ^ Joseph Bennett, Forty Years of Music, 1865-1905 (Methuen & co., 1908):404.
- ^ Francis D. Perkins, "Minnie Hauk", in Notable American Women, 1607-1950: A Biographical Dictionary, eds. Edward T. James, Janet Wilson James, Paul S. Boyer (Harvard University Press, 1971):155-156.
- ^ Born Priscilla A. Cartland, daughter of Asa Cartland, an innkeeper on Levant Road, and Priscilla Godwin; first married John Murray, at Kensington, England; later married to Bernard Sargeant de Santleys (born 1877 in London; died 23 June 1912 in New York), see: "Family of Priscilla W. GODWIN (31) & Asa Samuel CARTLAND"; http://www.jengod.com/genealogy/reunion/maine/rr01/rr01_021.htm#P2690; Arrested in 1915 in New York as an accomplice in an attempted murder: "Disguised Suitor Shoots Two Women...Actress Gave Costume; Grace Hawthorne, Arrested as Accomplice of Jersey Barber, Denies She Knew He Was Armed", The New York Times (8 May 1915):13; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9E05E6DC1338E633A2575BC0A9639C946496D6CF
- ^ Erroll Sherson, London's Lost Theatres of the Nineteenth Century (Ayer Publishing, 1925):179.
- ^ "Disguised Suitor Shoots Two Women...Actress Gave Costume; Grace Hawthorne, Arrested as Accomplice of Jersey Barber, Denies She Knew He Was Armed", The New York Times (8 May 1915):13; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9E05E6DC1338E633A2575BC0A9639C946496D6CF
- ^ Erroll Sherson, London's Lost Theatres of the Nineteenth Century (Ayer Publishing, 1925):179.
- ^ "A Trip Around the World"; The New York Times (13 October 1895):28; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9B06E5D8113DE433A25750C1A9669D94649ED7CF
- ^ J. P. Wearing, ed., "Grace Hawthorne", in American and British Theatrical Biography: A Directory (Scarecrow Press, 1979):471.
- ^ "George Müller (1805-1898) English evangelist and philanthropist"; http://www.eaec.org/faithhallfame/georgemuller.htm
- ^ Mary Groves Müller, The Preaching Tours and Missionary Labours of George Müller (of Bristol), 2nd ed. (J. Nisbet, 1889):272-273.
- ^ American Jewish Year Book, 5665 (1904-5):409-418; http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?letter=S&artid=1090
- ^ Simon Adler Stern, Jottings of Travel in China and Japan (Porter & Coates, 1888):121.
- ^ 2 vols. (1st ed. 1878; 2nd ed., London, 1884); "Luis Vaz de Camoens", Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed. (1911);http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Luis_Vaz_de_Camoens
- ^ J. J. Aubertin, Camoens' Seventy Sonnets, Portuguese Text and Translation (London, 1881); "Luis Vaz de Camoens", Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed. (1911); http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Luis_Vaz_de_Camoens
- ^ John James Aubertin, Wanderings & Wonderings: India, Burma, Kashmir, Ceylon, Singapore, Java, Siam, Japan, Manila, Formosa, Korea, China, Cambodia, Australia, New Zealand, Alaska, the States (K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & co., 1892):263, 301, 310, 352 and 362; http://digital.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=sea;idno=sea287
- ^ Peter Zheutlin, Around the World On Two Wheels: Annie Londonderry's Extraordinary Ride (Reprint: Kensington Pub Corp, 2008):78.
- ^ "Isabella Lucy (Bird) Bishop", Dictionary of Literary Biography; http://www.bookrags.com/biography/isabella-lucy-bird-bishop-dlb/
- ^ Mrs J.F. Bishop [Isabella L. Bird], The Yangtze Valley and Beyond: An Account of Journeys in China (London: John Murray, 1899):21; http://libweb.uoregon.edu/ec/e-asia/read/yangbeyond.pdf; Olive Checkland, Collected Travel Writings of Isabella Bird Vol. 10 (Ganesha Pub., 1997):21.
- ^ "John Henry Barrows (1847-1902)", Oberlin College Archives; http://www.oberlin.edu/archive/holdings/finding/RG2/SG5/biography.html
- ^ John Henry Barrows, A World-Pilgrimage (McClurg, 1897):439.
- ^ John F. Fraser, Round the World on a Wheel: Being the Narrative of a Bicycle Ride of Nineteen Thousand Two Hundered and Thirty-seven Miles Through Seventeen Countries and Across Three Continents (1899; Reprint: Adamant Media Corporation, 2004):414.
- ^ Bradley Allen Fiske, From Midshipman to Rear-Admiral (The Century Co., 1919):290-291.
- ^ Geoffrey Frederick Lamb, Victorian Magic (Routledge, 1976):83, 121, 123
- ^ http://www.geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php/Charles_Bertram
- ^ Charles Bertram, A Magician in Many Lands (G. Routledge & sons, limited, 1911):157-158.
- ^ John Hamill, The Strange Career of Mr. Hoover Under Two Flags (William Faro,. N.Y. 1931; Reprint: Kessinger Publishing, 2005):71.
- ^ Georgia Louise Chamberlin, ed., Ordered to China: Letters Written from China While Under Commission from the New York Sun During the Boxer Uprising of 1900 and the International Complications which Followed (Methuen, 1904):35, 274.
- ^ Margaret Byrd Bassett, Profiles & Portraits of American Presidents & Their Wives (B. Wheelwright Co.; distributed by Grosset & Dunlap, New York, 1969):262; Henry Fowles Pringle, The Life and Times of William Howard Taft: A Biography Vol. 1 (Archon Books, 1964):214-215.
- ^ "American Pasha in Sultan's Favor" The New York Times (21 February 1909): THE MARCONI TRANSATLANTIC WIRELESS DISPATCHES, Page C4; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9A04E1D81738E033A25752C2A9649C946897D6CF
- ^ "Bucknam Pasha, Ex-Admiral, Dead," The New York Times (30 May 1915); Picture Section Rotogravure, Page 16; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9E06E5D81338E633A25753C3A9639C946496D6CF
- ^ R. Alton Lee, The Bizarre Careers of John R. Brinkley (University Press of Kentucky, 2002):48.
- ^ Jagatjit Singh, My Travels in China, Japan and Java, 1903 (Hutchinson, 1905):28, 160.
- ^ Gertrude Bell, Letters of Gertrude Bell (Volume I) 1874-1917 (Reprint: Echo Library, 2006):102.
- ^ Thomas William Herringshaw, Herringshaw's National Library of American Biography Vol. 5 (American Publishers' Association, 1914):695.
- ^ Collier's New Encyclopedia Vol. 10 (P.F. Collier & Son, 1928):366.
- ^ "Marshall Wilder, Famous Wit - Dead," The New York Times (11 January 1915):9; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9901EFD6113FE633A25752C1A9679C946496D6CF
- ^ Marshall Pinckney Wilder, Smiling 'Round the World (Funk & Wagnalls Co., 1908):83, 166.
- ^ The Encyclopedia Americana Vol. 2 (Encyclopedia Americana Corp., 1920):312.
- ^ Bampton Hunt and John Parker, eds. The Green Room Book; Or, Who's Who on the Stage (T.S. Clark, 1909):518,
- ^ Caspar Whitney, ed. The Outing Magazine 46 (1905):313.
- ^ http://www.literarytraveler.com/literary_articles/joaquin_miller.aspx
- ^ John King Fairbank, Martha Henderson Coolidge, and Richard Joseph Smith, H. B. Morse, Customs Commissioner and Historian of China (University Press of Kentucky, 1995):183.
- ^ "ANTI-FOREIGN OUTBREAK PUT DOWN AT SHANGHAI" Foreign Forces Guard City -- Naval Reinforcements Expected. JAPANESE MIX WITH MOBS Twenty Chinese Killed and Some Property Damaged -- American Vice Consul Beaten by Rioters", The New York Times (19 December 1905):5; http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9402E6DA143DE733A2575AC1A9649D946497D6CF
- ^ Alfred Emanuel Smith, New Outlook 82 (1906):353-355.
- ^ Thomas Barbour and Rosamond Barbour, Letters Written While on a Collecting Trip in the East Indies (s.n., 1913):183, 186.
- ^ Frits Holm, My Nestorian Adventure in China: A Popular Account of the Holm-Nestorian Expedition to Sian-Fu and Its Results, ed. Abraham Yohannan (New York: Revell, 1923; Reprint: Gorgias Press LLC, 2001):300.
- ^ Ford Cyrinde Ottman, J. Wilbur Chapman: A Biography (Doubleday, 1920):187-188; http://www.archive.org/stream/jwilburchapmana00ottmgoog/jwilburchapmana00ottmgoog_djvu.txt
- ^ Ford Cyrinde Ottman, J. Wilbur Chapman: A Biography (Doubleday, 1920):187-188.
- ^ Lien-tê Wu, Plague Fighter: The Autobiography of a Modern Chinese Physician (W. Heffer, 1959):256.
- ^ Yu-Lin Wu, Memories of Dr Wu Lien-Teh: Plague Fighter (World Scientific Pub Co, June 1995).
- ^ "Obituary: WU LIEN-TEH, M.D., Sc.D., Litt.D., LL.D., M.P.H" Br Med J. 1:5170(6 February 1960):429–430; http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=1966655&blobtype=pdf
- ^ Donald F. Bittner, "John H. Russell 1934-1936", in Allan Reed Millett and Jack Shulimson, eds., Commandants of the Marine Corps (Naval Institute Press, 2004):234-252.
- ^ Dong, 208.
- ^ Chase Salmon Osborn, The Iron Hunter (1919; Wayne State University Press, 2002):198.
- ^ http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/h/u/t/Christopher-F-Hutchins/FILE/0002text.txt
- ^ Blanche Sellers Ortman, New York to Peking (Private Printing, 1921):141-144; http://www.archive.org/download/newyorktopeking00ortmiala/newyorktopeking00ortmiala_bw.pdf
- ^ Ted Morgan, Maugham (Simon and Schuster, 1980):244.
- ^ http://www.astorhousehotel.com/en/mrl/mrl.php
- ^ However, one website indicates: Russell was in Shanghai from 12 October to 20 October 1920, and stayed at room 103 in the Yipinxiang Hotel (the present junction of Middle Xizang Road and Hankou Road); http://english.eastday.com/e/zt/u1a4029598.html
- ^ Bertrand Russell, The Problem of China (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1922).
- ^ Alfred Viscount Northcliffe, My Journey Around the World, ed. Cecil St. John Harmsworth (Philiadelphia, PA: J.B. Lippincott, 1923):150
- ^ Alice Calaprice and Trevor Lipscombe, Albert Einstein: A Biography (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005):86-87.
- ^ Abraham Pais, Subtle Is the Lord: The Science and the Life of Albert Einstein (Oxford University Press, 2005):526.
- ^ Danian Hu, China and Albert Einstein: The Reception of the Physicist and his Theory in China 1917-1979 (Harvard University Press, 2005):71.
- ^ Hu, 74.
- ^ The Guang Pan, Jews in China (China Intercontinental Press, 2001):36, for photo of Einstein arriving in Shanghai.
- ^ http://www.astorhousehotel.com/en/mrl/mrl.php
- ^ http://www.hanga.com/bio.cfm?ID=23
- ^ Mari Yoshihara, Embracing the East: White Women and American Orientalism (Oxford University Press US, 2003):57-73.
- ^ Bertha Boynton Lum, Gangplanks to the East (The Henkle-Yewdale House, Inc., 1936):261.
- ^ http://www.bertha-lum.org/Biography.htm
- ^ Ernest A. McKay, A World to Conquer: The Epic Story of the First Around-the-World Flight (Arco Pub., 1981):102.
- ^ FIRST ROUND-THE-WORLD FLIGHT, KAGOSHIMA, JAPAN, TO CALCUTTA, INDIA, JUNE 4-30, 1924
- ^ Charles Higham, Wallis: Secret Lives of the Duchess of Windsor (Sidgwick & Jackson, 1988):38.
- ^ http://english.eastday.com/e/zt/u1a4029582.html
- ^ Stephen Duggan, A Professor at Large (1943; Reprint: Ayer Publishing, 1972):314.
- ^ Jane Sherman, Soaring: The Diary and Letters of a Denishawn Dancer in the Far East, 1925-1926 (Wesleyan University Press, 1976):225.
- ^ Ruth St. Denis, Ted Shawn and their Denishawn Dancers Souvenir Program, 1926, 1925; 1,5.; http://www.oceanpark.ws/1925test.htm#DenishawnSouvenirProgram
- ^ Elizabeth Jeffreys, ed., Byzantine Style, Religion and Civilization: In Honour of Sir Steven Runciman (Cambridge University Press, 2006):xlvii; http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521834452&ss=exc
- ^ W. Douglas Burden, Dragon Lizards of Komodo: An Expedition to the Lost World of the Dutch East Indies (1927; Reprint: Kessinger Publishing, 2003):43.
- ^ John Walsh, "The First (and Original) King Kong" The Independent (10 December 2005); http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-first-and-original-king-kong-518889.html (accessed 12 April 2009).
- ^ Haiping Liu, Beyond the Horizon to The Good Earth: Transformation of China in American Literary Consciousness; http://www.eoneill.com/library/essays/liu.htm
- ^ William M. Peterson, "A Portrait of O'Neill's Electra" The Eugene O'Neill Newsletter 17:1&2 (Spring/Fall 1993); http://www.eoneill.com/library/review/17/17i.htm
- ^ "TWO PEN PORTRAITS OF EUGENE O'NEILL, BROADWAYITE", The Eugene O'Neill Newsletter 8:2 (Summer-Fall ); http://www.eoneill.com/library/newsletter/viii_2/viii-2e.htm
- ^ Curse of the Misbegotten; http://www.eoneill.com/library/curse/xvii.htm
- ^ Croswell Bowen, The Curse of the Misbegotten: A Tale of the House of O'Neill (McGraw-Hill, 1959):188.
- ^ Brian Rogers, O’Neill in France The Eugene O'Neill Review 26 (2004); http://www.eoneill.com/library/review/26/26b.htm
- ^ "André (Georges) Malraux (1901-1976)", http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/malraux.htm
- ^ Dominique Auzias, Séverine Bardon, and Jean-Paul Labourdette, Le Petit Futé Chine (Petit Futé, 2005):241.
- ^ Michel Dye, "Andre Malraux and the Temptation of the Orient in 'La Condition Humaine'" Journal of European Studies 29 (1999).
- ^ Helen Foster Snow, My China Years: A Memoir (Morrow, 1984):21-23.
- ^ Kelly Ann Long, Helen Foster Snow: An American Woman in Revolutionary China (University Press of Colorado, 2006):31.
- ^ Betty Rogers, Will Rogers (Reissue: University of Oklahoma Press, 1979):263.
- ^ Otto Brau, A Comintern Agent in China 1932-1939 (Stanford University Press, 1982):1.
- ^ http://www.astorhousehotel.com/en/mrl/mrl.php
- ^ Arthur Meier Schlesinger, A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent Beginnings, 1917-1950 (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2002):98.
- ^ William Marling, The American Roman Noir: Hammett, Cain and Chandler (University of Georgia Press, 1998):283.
- ^ Carey McWilliams, Southern California: An Island on the Land, 9th ed. (Gibbs Smith, 1994):245-246.
- ^ Jules Tygiel, "The Scandal: What a Money-Gusher" Special to The Los Angeles Times (3 December 2006 ); http://www.latimes.com/news/local/history/la-et-125depression3dec03,0,2189468.story (accessed 13 April 2009).
- ^ http://www.pujianghotel.com/e-cn-6.htm
- ^ http://hkq.sh.gov.cn/webfront_en/sub_news.aspx?cid=462
- ^ It may have been from 9 March 1936. It is quite possible that Chaplin visited Shanghai earlier, in 1931 while on his first world tour that took him to Europe, Africa and Japan. The Astor Hotel on Huangpu Road claims Chaplin stayed in Room 404 in 1931 though there are no official records of that trip; see "This Little Tramp Wears Panties" Shanghai Daily (25 December 2007):C4; http://www.snakeoilproductions.com/images/Shanghai%20Daily%20Lauren.pdf
- ^ The China Monthly Review 77 (1936):285
- ^ http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/collection/database/?irn=151033
- ^ http://boards.ancestry.com/localities.northam.usa.states.virginia.counties.henry/5086/mb.ashx?pnt=1
- ^ Kathryn Meyer and Terry Parssinen, Webs of Smoke: Smugglers, Warlords and the History of the International Drug Trade (Rowman & Littlefield, 2002):200.
- ^ http://ispyshanghai.com/2009/03/30/astor-house-hotel/
- ^ Sharon Owyang, Frommer's Shanghai, 4th ed. (John Wiley and Sons, 2006):86.
- ^ Johannes von Gumpach, The Burlingame Mission: A Political Disclosure Supported by Official Documents, Mostly Unpublished (Shanghai, London and New York, 1872).
- ^ Robert Hart, The I. G. in Peking: Letters of Robert Hart, Chinese Maritime Customs, Vol. One: 1868-1907, eds. John King Fairbank, Katherine Frost Bruner, Elizabeth MacLeod Matheson, and James Duncan Campbell (Harvard University Press, 1975):69.
- ^ Irene Eber, The Jewish Bishop and the Chinese Bible: S.I.J. Schereschewsky (1831-1906) (BRILL, 1999):156.
- ^ George Ernest Morrison, The Correspondence of G. E. Morrison: Vol. 1: 1895-1912, ed. Hui-min Lo (CUP Archive, 1976):148-149.
- ^ Peter Thompson and Robert Macklin, The Man Who Died Twice: The Life and Adventures of Morrison of Peking (Allen & Unwin, 2004):199.
- ^ Winston G. Lewis, 'Donald, William Henry (1875 - 1946)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 8. (Melbourne University Press, 1981):317-318; http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A080340b.htm
- ^ Jonathan Fenby, Chiang Kai Shek: China's Generalissimo and the Nation He Lost (Reprint: Perseus Books Group, 2005):209.
- ^ Paul French, Carl Crow - a tough old China hand: The Life, Times and Adventures of an American in Shanghai (Hong Kong University Press, 2007):30.
- ^ Frederick McCormick, The Flowery Republic (New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1913):224, 283.
- ^ Daniel S. Levy, Two-Gun Cohen: A Biography (St. Martin's Press, 2002):116, 168, 181
- ^ Floria Paci Zaharoff, The Daughter of the Maestro: Life in Surabaya, Shanghai, And Florence (iUniverse, 2005):134.
- ^ "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); http://english.eastday.com/eastday/englishedition/node20665/node20667/node22808/node45576/node45577/userobject1ai1026003.html (accessed 11 April 2009).
- ^ http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKgayn.htm
- ^ Mark Gayn, Journey from the East: An Autobiography (A. A. Knopf, 1944):122.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0475263/
- ^ http://shanghai.urbanatomy.com/index.php/entertainment/1319-is-that-shanghai
- ^ Emma Ashburn, "In the Mood for Lust", The SAIS Observer [johns Hopkins University] 9:2 (February 2009); http://www.saisobserver.org/Volume_8/Issue_3/Ashburn_Ang_Lee
Further reading
- The Astor House Guide to Shanghai. Shanghai: North-China Daily News and Herald, 1911. 41 pages.
- Browne, G. Waldo. China: The Country and Its People. Boston: Dana Estes & Company, 1901.
- Clifford, Nicholas Rowland. Spoilt Children of Empire: Westerners in Shanghai and the Chinese Revolution of the 1920s. Middlebury College Press, 1991.
- Cranley, William Patrick. "Old Shanghai's 'Others': Sailor, Whores, Half-breeds and Other Interlopers". [1]
- Dorn, Frank. The Sino-Japanese War, 1937-41: From Marco Polo Bridge to Pearl Harbor. Macmillan, 1974.
- Dupée, Jeffrey N. British Travel Writers in China: Writing Home to a British Public, 1890-1914. E. Mellen Press, 2004.
- Gamewell, Mary Louise Ninde. The Gateway to China: Pictures of Shanghai. Fleming H. Revell, 1916.
- Harpuder, Richard. Shanghai: The Way We Remember It. http://www.rickshaw.org/way_we_remember_it.htm
- Johnston, Tess and Deke Erh. A Last Look: Western Architecture in Old Shanghai. Hong Kong: Old China Hand Press, 2004.
- Jordon, Donald A. China's Trial by Fire: The Shanghai War of 1932. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001.
- Kuo chia t'ung chi chü, China. Changes and Development in China (1949-1989). Beijing Review Press, 1990.
- Macmillan, Allister. Seaports of the Far East: Historical and Descriptive, Commercial and Industrial, Facts, Figures, & Resources. 2nd ed. W.H. & L. Collingridge, 1925.
- Shanghai lishi bowuguan (ed.) 上海历史博物馆, Survey of Shanghai 1840's-1940's. Shanghai: Shanghai renmin meisha chubanshe, 1992. http://virtualshanghai.ish-lyon.cnrs.fr/Image.php?ID=1643
- Shanghai of To-day: A Souvenir Album of Fifty Vandyke Gravure Prints of the 'Model Settlement'. 3rd ed. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1930. http://virtualshanghai.ish-lyon.cnrs.fr/Bibliography.php?ID=408
- Shaw [Charles Frederick] Ralph. Sin City. Everst Books, 1976; New ed. Time Warner Paperbacks, 1992.
- Tang, Zhenchang, Yunzhong Lu, and Siyuan Lu. Shanghai's Journey to Prosperity, 1842-1949. Commercial Press, 1996.
- Tobias, Sigmund. Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai. University of Illinois Press, 1999.
- Wakeman, Frederic E. The Shanghai Badlands: Wartime Terrorism and Urban Crime, 1937-1941. Cambridge University Press, 2002.
- Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N. Global Shanghai 1850-2010. Routledge, 2009. Figure 3,2, page 58: photo of Astor House Hotel 1901.
- Wei, Betty Peh-Ti. Old Shanghai. Oxford University Press, 1993.
- Wei, Betty Peh-Ti. Shanghai: Crucible of Modern China. 2nd ed. Oxford University Press, 1987.
- Yeh, Wen-Hsin., ed. Wartime Shanghai. Taylor & Francis, 1998.
- Zhai, Qiang. The Dragon, the Lion & the Eagle: Chinese-British-American Relations, 1949-1958. Kent State University Press, 1994.
External links
- Astor House Hotel official website
- Picture of Richard's Hotel
- Pictures of Astor House Hotel, Shanghai 1880
- Picture of Astor House Hotel 1890s
- Photo Astor House 1904
- Astor House Hotel Photo ca. 1908
- Photos and detailed description of the Astor House Hotel 1908
- Photo Astor House Dining Room 1908
- Photo Astor House Hotel 1917
- Picture of Astor House Hotel 1927
- Photo Astor House Lounge 1928
- Picture of Astor House Hotel 1928
- The Bund