President Casino Broadwater Resort
President Casino Broadwater Resort | |
---|---|
Address | 2110 Beach Boulevard Biloxi, Mississippi 39531 |
Opening date | August 13, 1992 (casino form) 1939 (resort form) |
Closing date | July 31, 2005 |
No. of rooms | 450 (2 structures) |
Total gaming space | 38,000 sq ft (3,500 m2) |
Permanent shows | none |
Signature attractions | Marina, golf |
Casino type | Floating barge |
Owner | President Casinos |
Previous names | Broadwater Beach Hotel and Resort |
Coordinates | 30°23′31″N 88°57′42″W / 30.39194°N 88.96167°W |
The President Casino Broadwater Resort was a combined casino and resort that was located in Biloxi, Mississippi. It was a fixture on the Mississippi Gulf Coast for over 60 years.
Originally known as the Broadwater Beach Hotel and Broadwater Beach Resort, it opened in 1939 as a venue for the illegal but tacitly approved gambling that was flourishing along the coast. In the late 1950s and 1960s, the gambling stopped and the facility was renovated and re-purposed as a resort destination with a state-of-the-art marina and other amenities. In its heyday the Broadwater Beach Resort hosted movie stars, leading politicians, and top business figures as well as people on vacation. It became the Gulf Coast's flagship resort and its colorfully lit front sign was iconic.
In 1992, President Casinos gained control of the facility, and after changing the name, added a riverboat casino and barge. The casino had a successful niche following among lower-end gamblers, but the problems of the parent company resulting in bankruptcy filings in the early 2000s. In 2005, new owners closed the resort and casino shortly before Hurricane Katrina destroyed them.
Resort era
The Broadwater Beach Hotel was built in 1938 by investors seeking to gain the business of gamblers coming to casinos along the Mississippi Gulf Coast.[1] It opened in 1939,[2] and was built in Art Deco style.[3] The first owner was Pete Martin Sr., a well-known gambler and rum runner along the coast.[2] He openly ran a casino within the hotel, as even though it was nominally illegal at the time,[2] gambling was part of the social and economic fabric of Biloxi.[1] After Martin died, openly illegal gambling was frowned upon, and new owners tried to appeal to just the tourist market.[3] In 1958, it was bought by Joe Brown, a Texas oil millionaire.[2]
Following his death in 1959,[3] his widow Dorothy Brown, who was a noted New Orleans philanthropist,[4] renovated the property for a more modern look, including a wide arched canopy in the front.[3] In the early 1960s, the Mississippi Gulf Coast was emerging as a prime alternative to Florida as a southern vacation destination, and the Broadwater Beach Resort was considered the pacesetter for the area.[5] In 1963, Dorothy Brown spent $3 million to build a marina and a heliport.[2][5] The Broadwater Resort Marina plan was especially ambitious, involving hosting up to 150 sail and powerboats, and offering shore-to-ship maid service and room service to those docked, all in an effort to capture blue-water game fishing business.[5] When the marina opened in 1965, it was considered state of the art.[6] In 1968, she built the Broadwater Beach Sun Course on land originally owned by Jefferson Davis, and thus added golf as a prime attraction for visitors;[4][7] by 1974 a Sea Course was also present.[8] During the 1960s, a men's store was present in the hotel.[9] For entertainment, the hotel featured musicians from New Orleans and elsewhere.[10] From the 1950s on, operational control of the hotel and resort rested with Leigh MacConnell, one of the few women to rise to the top of the local hotel industry in that era.[11] In the 1960s the Broadwater Beach Resort found its glory years.[3] Hosting movie stars, leading politicians, and top business figures, as well as people on vacation,[11] it became the Gulf Coast's flagship resort.[3] During this decade, the iconic and colorfully lit Broadwater Beach Resort front sign was added.[3]
Hurricane Camille devastated the Mississippi Gulf Coast in August 1969. The resort golf club pro and his wife fought for their lives as the storm wrecked their pro shop apartment.[12] The hotel's first floor was carved out by the storm surge,[13] expensive furniture floated out of the lobby,[14] and the marina suffered moderate damage.[12] But the resort rebounded and by 1977 it was described by the New York Times as a "bustling colony of rooms, cottages, restaurants, golf courses, tennis courts, and its own marina."[15] Conferences were held there,[16][17][18] and the Broadwater Beach Hotel was the setting for a fictional regional sales meeting in the 1982 Frederick Barthelme short story "Box Step".[19]
Casino era
Entrepreneur John E. Connelly, founder of President Casinos, then gained control of the property,[20] and the President Casino Broadwater Resort was opened aboard a riverboat docked at the Broadwater Resort Marina in August 1992. It was the second casino to open on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, following the Isle of Capri Casino which opened two weeks earlier.[21] In June 1995,[20] President Casinos replaced the riverboat with the former Mississippi Gold Shore Casino barge. The table games there were known for having lower limits than most other Biloxi casinos.[22] Major country music stars performed there on Wednesday through Saturday nights, and the hotel had 550 rooms available across two structures.[22] In 1997 and 1999, titles to the resort property and barge were formally transferred from Connelly to President Casinos.[20]
By the early 2000s, the President Casino Broadwater Resort sat on 260 acres (1.1 km2).[23] The powerboat-oriented Broadwater Resort Marina had 118 berths, and was regarded by one published guide as "one of the best full-service, luxurious marinas between Mobile and New Orleans."[23][24] The President Broadwater Golf Club offered a full-length 18-hole course.[23] The casino featured over 38,000 square feet (3,500 m2) of gambling with over 900 slot machines.[23] However, no work had been done on the old resort and its hotel, resulting in its declining in appearance to a run-down state.[2][25] The hotel capacity was down to 450 rooms and suites,[23] and functioned mainly as a place for the casino barge customers to sleep briefly; furniture was piled up in corridors, the hotel main floor entertainment rooms were empty, and weeds grew on the resort's tennis courts. Nevertheless, the resort still made reference to its pre-casino past, calling itself "one of the last great Southern resorts on the Mississippi Gulf Coast."[23]
The casino itself found a niche market among local gamblers and was a reliable earner.[21] President Casinos was saddled with corporate debt, however, and a planned new $2 billion resort at the site, to be called Destination Broadwater, never materialized.[21] In April 2001, the President Broadwater Hotel, which represented the non-casino operations, filed for bankruptcy.[21] President Casinos filed for bankruptcy in June 2002, and the Broadwater casino the following month, but operation of the President Casino Broadwater Resort continued.[21][26]
End
In January 2005, Broadwater Development LLC – a casino holding company owned by two local construction figures, Roy Anderson III and Cotton Fore[25] – won a bankruptcy auction bid for the casino and resort for $82 million,[26] amid speculation that they had overpaid.[25] Anderson said of the barge, "It's a nice structure. But overall aesthetically, it's not going to fit into our master plan."[27] On April 15, 2005, the deal closed; as part of it, the President Casino barge was purchased for $6.8 million by Silver Slipper Casino Venture LLC with the intention of operating it under the name of President Casino until it could be moved to their site in Hancock County, Mississippi,[28] where the Silver Slipper operators thought it would fit in.[27] On July 31, 2005, the Broadwater Beach Resort closed its doors, with Broadwater Development announcing plans to tear it down and build a new resort and casino.[3]
Less than a month later, on August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina tore the casino barge from its moorings and washed it ashore ½ mile west of the Broadwater Resort Marina.[29] The barge was a total loss, it was cut up as scrap and removed by a salvage company. (After the state passed legislation allowing riverboat casinos to build on solid ground with a traditional foundation as long as they were near navigable waterways, the new Silver Slipper Casino would be built from the ground up instead and open in late 2006.) The hotel in the resort part was still standing but heavily damaged by Katrina, with the storm surge reaching the second floor.[30] The famed sign was destroyed.[3] The marina too was wrecked and closed.[6][29] The golf course did not reopen.[7] The hotel subsequently underwent demolition, which concluded by November 2006 with even the foundation slabs removed.[31][32]
Once the post-Katrina building boom began, the Broadwater site increased in value and several other casino operations indicated an interest in it.[25] In March 2006, Broadwater Development LLC gained city approval for creating The Broadwater resort, a $1 billion plan that would feature two casinos, 3,375 condo units, 1,900 hotel rooms, an 18-hole golf course, large amounts of retail entertainment space and convention space, and a marina again.[33] By September 2007, the Broadwater developers said they were close to signing with an international entertainment corporation to begin the work, and the Biloxi Planning Commission granted them an 18-month extension.[34] But by October 2008, the global financial crisis had prevented anything from happening, and the Mississippi Gaming Commission gave an indefinite extension to the Broadwater site approval.[35]
In the event, nothing happened, and by 2017 the site and the marina had been, as the local newspaper stated, "Lifeless for more than 11 years".[36] One of the Broadwater Development LLC owners said they had seen some interest in the property, but no realistic offers.[36]
References
- ^ a b Von Herrmann, Denise (2006). Resorting to Casinos: The Mississippi gambling industry. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 1-57806-790-1. pp. 18, 19.
- ^ a b c d e f Wilemon, Tom (2005-06-30). "The Landmark Broadwater Hotel, Once Biloxi's Premier Resort, Shutting Down". The Sun Herald. Biloxi. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Bergeron, Kat. "Before-After: Broadwater". The Sun Herald. Archived from the original on 2008-09-17. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b Plume, Janet (November 1996). "On Par on the Golf Coast". Casino Player Magazine. Archived from the original on 2009-04-30. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b c Janson, Donald (1963-12-15). "Mississippi Gulf Coast Woos Vacationists". The New York Times.
- ^ a b "Broadwater Marina in Biloxi, MS". Vacations Made Easy. Archived from the original on 2008-07-24. Retrieved 2008-09-17.
- ^ a b Moriarty, Jim (2006-05-03). "Finding golf again in New Orleans". ESPN. Golf World. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ^ Holles, Everett R. (1974-10-06). "What's Doing on the Mississippi Coast". The New York Times.
- ^ "Nick Stuart, 69, 30's Movie Star". The New York Times. United Press International. 1973-04-08.
- ^ "Joseph Enroughty: The Guy Lombardo Society". New Orleans Radio Shrine. Archived from the original on 2008-09-17. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b Welsh, J.R. (2008-06-28). "Tourism pro was pioneer". The Sun Herald. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b Hearn, Philip D. (2004). Hurricane Camille: Monster Storm of the Gulf Coast. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 1-57806-655-7. pp. 91, 97, 129–130.
- ^ "Camille and Hickel hit offshore drillers". BusinessWeek. 1969.
- ^ Fales Jr., E. D. (September 1970). "The Storm They Still Don't Believe". Popular Mechanics.
- ^ Marcus, Frances Frank (1977-03-13). "What's Doing on the Mississippi Coast". The New York Times.
- ^ "Annual Meeting, Southern CATV Association". Broadcasting. Cahners Publishing. 1966.
- ^ Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Southern University Conference. 1966.
- ^ The Insurance Almanac: Who, what, when and where in insurance. Underwriter Printing and Publishing Company. 1983.
- ^ Barthelme, Frederick (1982-06-28). "Box Step" (fee required). The New Yorker. p. 38.
- ^ a b c "President Casinos Inc · 10-Q · For 11/30/00". President Casinos. 2001-01-16. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
- ^ a b c d e Boone, Timothy (2004-03-12). "President Casinos Seek Buyer or New Partner for Biloxi, Miss., Operation". The Sun Herald. Archived from the original on 2009-02-19. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b DeAngelo, Frank (1998). Casinos Coast to Coast: A Guide to the Best Hotels, Food, Comps, Gambling, and Entertainment Across the Country. Lyle Stuart. ISBN 0-8184-0591-0. p. 133.
- ^ a b c d e f President Casino Broadwater Resort. President Casinos. 2002.
- ^ Williams, Scott B. (2004). Exploring Coastal Mississippi: A Guide to the Marine Waters and Islands. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 1-57806-424-4. pp. 106–107.
- ^ a b c d "Betting The Ranch On Casinos". BusinessWeek. 2006-09-25. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ^ a b "Broadwater Development wins auction for President's Biloxi casino". St. Louis Business Journal. 2005-01-21. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b Kessie, Brad (2005-02-23). "Broadwater Will Say Goodbye To President". WLOX-TV. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
- ^ "President Casinos, Inc. Completes Sale of Biloxi Assets". The Free Library. 2005-04-15. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ a b Bellantoni, Christina (2008-03-20). "Katrina help rare in campaign talks". The Washington Times. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ^ "An historic Biloxi Landmark takes the brunt of Hurricane Katrina". The Dominos After-Midnight Club. Archived from the original on 2009-08-06. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ "The Last Lurk - Broadwater Resort October 2006". The Dominos After-Midnight Club. Archived from the original on 2009-10-25. Retrieved 2008-09-15.
- ^ "Biloxi Mayor Details Casino Industry Status for Audience at 2007 Gaming Summit". gulfcoastnews.com. 2007-05-10. Archived from the original on 2009-03-16. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ^ Newsom, Michael (2006-03-29). "Biloxi casino resort OK'd: Broadwater plans to be reviewed by committee" (fee required). The Sun Herald.
- ^ "Broadwater Casino plans revived". Casino City Times. 2007-09-07. Retrieved 2009-03-26.
- ^ "Broadwater Casino site approval extended". 500nations.com. 2008-10-28. Retrieved 2009-03-26.
- ^ a b Perez, Mary (2017-01-27). "Lifeless for more than 11 years, Broadwater attracts interest". The Sun Herald. Retrieved 2019-09-09.
External links
- Hotel buildings completed in 1938
- Defunct casinos in the United States
- Demolished hotels in the United States
- Casinos completed in 1938
- Hotels established in 1939
- Casinos in Mississippi
- Resorts in Mississippi
- 1939 establishments in Mississippi
- Hotels disestablished in 2005
- 2005 disestablishments in Mississippi
- Buildings and structures demolished in 2006
- Demolished buildings and structures in Mississippi