Jump to content

Astor House Hotel (Shanghai)

Coordinates: 31°14′39″N 121°29′27″E / 31.2441°N 121.4908°E / 31.2441; 121.4908
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Sadads (talk | contribs) at 18:59, 1 December 2016 (link Helen Foster Snow using Find link). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Astor House Hotel
Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店)
Astor House Hotel, Shanghai
Map
General information
Location15 Huangpu Road, Hongkou District, Shanghai
Coordinates31°14′39″N 121°29′27″E / 31.2441°N 121.4908°E / 31.2441; 121.4908
OpeningFebruary 1858,
Northern wing: 1903
Reopening: 16 January 1911
OwnerShanghai Hengshan Mountain Group (上海衡山集团).[1]
Technical details
Floor count6
Floor area16,563 square metres
Design and construction
Architect(s)Renovation: Davies & Thomas
Annex: Atkinson & Dallas:
Brenan Atkinson (until 1907),
G.B. Atkinson (from 1907)
Other information
Number of rooms134 rooms and suites
Website
http://www.pujianghotel.com

The Astor House Hotel (礼查饭店), known as the Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店) in Chinese since 1959, has been described as once "one of the famous hotels of the world". Established in 1846 as Richards' Hotel and Restaurant (礼查饭店) on The Bund in Shanghai, it has been 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 1858.

Location

The Astor House Hotel has been on the North Bund of Shanghai, by the northern end of the Waibaidu Bridge (Chinese: 外白渡; pinyin: Wàibáidù Qiáo) (the Garden Bridge in English),[2] since 1858. The hotel is on a 4,580 square metre site and has a total building area of 16,563 square metres with 134 rooms and suites.[3] It was a landmark in the Hongkou District and the centre of foreign social life before the opening of the Cathay Hotel.[4] It occupies an entire block, and is across the road from the Russian Consulate, and previously the embassies of Germany, the United States and Japan.[4]

Richards' Hotel and Restaurant (1846–1859)

Background

On 29 August 1842, the Treaty of Nanjing declared Shanghai to be one of five open treaty ports in China, the others being Canton, Amoy, Foochow, and Ningpo.[5] On 17 November 1843, Shanghai was declared open to foreign traders, and soon after the British concession in Shanghai was established and the boundaries gradually defined.[6] Afterward, the resident foreign population of the British concession increased: "In 1844 [at years end] it was 50, in the following year 90, and after five years it had grown to 175. In addition there was a 'floating population,' consisting of the men on shore from the ships in harbour."[6]

Among the very first foreign residents of Shanghai was Peter Felix Richards, a Scottish merchant. Richards had been doing business in China from about 1840;[7] and in 1844 had established P.F. Richards & Co. (of Shanghai and Fuchowfoo).[8] P.F. Richards operated a general store, a ship chandler, and a commissioned agent business[9] on 4th Avenue (四马路) (now Fuzhou Road; 福州路).[10] In 1846, Richards opened one of the first Western restaurants in Shanghai[11] and the first Western hotel in China.[11][12] These were located south of the Yangkingpang (Yangjingbang) creek.[13][14]

Peter Felix Richards (1846–1859)

The hotel was "a single and ordinary building"[15] built in the Baroque style,[3] which initially targeted the seafaring clientele that made up the bulk of travelers to 19th century Shanghai. One contemporaneous account describes corridors and floors whose color and design echoed those on ships.[16] Almost a century later, John B. Powell erroneously 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.[17] A string of sea captains followed the original as managers of the hotel.[16][18] The very first public meeting of the British settlement was held in the newly opened Richards' Hotel on 22 December 1846.[19] In August 1850 Richards advertised that a reading room for shipmasters had been established in his hotel.[20] On 1 March 1856 his company was renamed "Richards & Co." and on 15 May 1856, while in New York on business, Richards' company was declared insolvent by decree of the British Consular Court in Shanghai,[21] and all of his assets (including the Richards' Hotel) were assigned provisionally to his creditors, Britons William Herbert Vacher and Charles Wills.

Wills' Bridge

According to Shanghai historian Peter Hibbard, the completion of the Wills Bridge allowed the expansion of the over-crowded settlement. Wills, who owned the land on the northern side of Suzhou Creek, benefited from increased property values.[22] During 1857 Wills leased a lot that was slightly larger than 22 mu (15,000 square metres) in a section of reclaimed mud flats in Hongkew[23] east of Broadway (now Daming Lu) on the northern banks of the Soochow Creek, that was adjacent to the new bridge, and faced the Suzhou Creek near its confluence with the Huangpu River, "at a huge profit for the building of the Astor House Hotel."[22] In February 1858 Richards' store and the Richards Hotel and Restaurant were relocated to the site leased from Charles Wills on the northern banks of the Suzhou Creek.[24] The new Hotel was a two-story East India style building.[25]

In 1859 the hotel was renamed (in English) the Astor House Hotel,[26] while retaining the original Chinese name until 1959.

The Astor House Hotel (1859–1959)

In February 1858 Richards' store and the Richards Hotel and Restaurant were relocated to the site leased from Charles Wills on the northern banks of the Suzhou Creek, near its confluence with the Huangpu River in the Hongkou District of Shanghai.[27] By 1859 the hotel was renamed (in English) the Astor House Hotel,[28] while retaining the original Chinese name until 1959.

The Astor House Hotel was sold to Englishman Henry W. Smith on 1  January 1861;[29] Richards and his wife were still residents of the Astor House when their seven-year-old daughter died on 10 February 1861.[30] According to an 1862 guidebook, at that time the building also housed a "soda-water maker" by the name of F. Farr. [31]

By October 1868 George Baker was the proprietor of the Astor House.[32] By August 1873 it had been purchased by DeWitt Clinton Jansen.[33]

Enlargement (1876)

Astor House Hotel.

In 1876 the Astor House Hotel was enlarged,[25] with fifty new rooms added that were often used to accommodate newly arrived families who were awaiting the completion of their own residences.[34] After the 1876 expansion the hotel was "four large neo-Renaissance brick buildings linked together by stone passageways."[4] American travel writer Thomas Wallace Knox (1835–1896) stayed there in 1879, providing a positive review in his Boy Travellers in the Far East.[35]

In January 1877 plans were announced to construct a Turkish bath on the Seward Road frontage as part of the expansion of the Astor House.[36] In 1881 Jansen renewed his lease of the Astor House Hotel with the trustees of the Wills' Estate for a period of thirty years.[37] In July 1882, the Astor House Hotel became the first building in China to be lit by electricity,[38] and in 1883 it became the first building in Shanghai to install running water.[39]

In 1882 the Astor House hosted the first Western circus in China. By the end of 1887, the Astor House was described by Simon Adler Stern as "the principal American hotel in Shanghai"[40] The Astor House Hotel was "a landmark of the white man in the Far East, like Raffles Hotel in Singapore."[41]

During 1889, The Shanghai Land Investment Company Limited (SLIC), which was formed in December 1888, purchased the "extensive estate known as the Wills' Estate, which includes the site of the Astor House Hotel, and possesses one of the best business situations in Hongkew" for 390,000 taels, approximately US$290,000.[42] By the end of November 1889 Jansen agreed with the Shanghai Land Investment Company to transfer the Astor House Hotel and its land to the proposed Shanghai Hotel Company (SHC).[43] To allow for the expansion of the Astor House and the construction of a new one-hundred bedroom hotel and large assembly hall, the SHC would also purchase the land at the back of the Hotel, so that the property would extend from Whangpoo (Huangpu) Road to Broadway, and from Astor Road to Seward Road.[43]

By 1890, "For foreigners the Astor House was the center of social activity."[44] Renovations to the Astor Hall were completed in time for the annual St. Andrew's Ball on Wednesday, 30 November 1892.[45] In 1894 the Astor House was described as a "first class hotel in all these words imply" and was listed in Moses King's Where to Stop.": A Guide to the Best Hotels of the World.[46]

After her husband's death, Ellen Jansen operated the Astor House.[47] The Astor House remained in her control until 1 November 1900.[48] By 1896 the Hotel was managed by Canadian-born Lewis M. Johnson, who was responsible for booking the first motion pictures to be shown in Shanghai on Saturday 22 May 1897 in Astor Hall.[49][50] 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";[16] One traveller indicated in 1900, "the Astor-House Hotel at Shanghai, it might be called European with a few Chinese characteristics. We of course had Chinese to wait on us here".[51]

Auguste Vernon (1900–1901)

On 1 November 1900 Mrs Ellen Jansen sold the Astor House Hotel for 175,000 taels (about US$130.000)[52] to Frenchman Auguste Vernon,[53] who owned another hotel in Hankow[54] and had previously managed the Hotel Bella Vista in Macau from its opening on 1 July 1890 until he left due to serious illness.[55] Vernon retained all of the principal staff.[56] At that time of the change of ownership, the Hotel was considered the first first-class hotel in Shanghai,[57] and "the best hotel in all the Orient",[58] but Vernon introduced several improvements, including a series of "Elite Dinners" accompanied by the Shanghai Municipal Symphony.[59] Vernon added a suite of eighteen bedrooms and saloons to the Hotel.[60] In 1901 the first telephones were installed in Shanghai, with the Astor House having the first telephone used.[61] The North-China Herald praised the Astor House Hotel in January 1902: "it is a great thing that we have at last in Shanghai a hotel which is a credit to the place, and whose vast improvement has stimulated its rivals to renewed efforts to satisfy the travelling and homeless public".[62] However, later

In the first six months of 1901 the Astor Astor House Hotel had generated a profit of $90,000.61, while its sister hotel in Hankow made just over $10,000.[63]

The Astor House Hotel Company (1901–1915)

Auguste Vernon (1901–1902)

In July 1901 Vernon created the "Astor House Hotel Company" as a limited corporation in Hong Kong.[64]

In July 1901 Vernon convinced the company to extend its nine-year lease of the hotel with the Land Investment Company for an additional twenty-one years,[63] of the entire block.[34][65] Vernon wanted to demolish the Chinese shops to allow the construction of a new wing containing 250 rooms, increasing its total capacity to 300 rooms.[66]

In 1902, Vernon retired due to ill-health, and left owing the company "a considerable sum of money".[67]

Expansion (1903)

The Chinese shops that occupied the newly leased property at the rear of the existing hotel were demolished, however the new northern section of the hotel contained only 120 rooms.[34] It was managed originally by Louis Ladow, who later subsequently built the Grand Carleton Hotel in Shanghai in 1920.[68]

Captain Frederick W. Davies (1906–1907)

By July 1906 retired British naval officer Captain Frederick W. Davies, who had previously been a sea captain on the NYK European Service, and associate manager of the Grand Hotel in Yokohama,[69] had become manager of the Astor House.[70]

Walter Brauen (1907–1910)

From February 1907 the hotel's manager was Walter Brauen,[71] a linguist who had been recruited from Europe.[72] The company decided to build a new hotel, "fitting of Shanghai's growth and importance."[73]

Architects Davies & Thomas designed the three main wings of the new Astor House Hotel.[74] The Astor House Hotel was restored to a neo-classical Baroque structure.[75] The new addition (the Annex) was based on plans drawn by British architects Brenan Atkinson and Arthur Dallas.[76] After the death of principal architect Brenan Atkinson in 1907,[77] he was replaced by his brother, G.B. Atkinson.[78] The intention was to rebuild the hotel "on modern lines", using reinforced concrete as the primary building material.[79] 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."[80] A new reinforced concrete wharf measuring 1,180 feet (360 m) long and 200 feet (61 m) wide was also constructed.[79] Construction finally commenced in November 1908, and was scheduled to be completed by July 1909.[73] However, delays postponed completion until November 1910.[73]

In September 1910, days after the annual meeting of the Astor House Hotel Co., Brauen "ran off with a huge chunk of hotel funds just three months before the hotel opened, six months behind schedule, in January 1911."[73] A total of $957 had been embezzled by Brauen.[81] A warrant for his arrest was issued by the Mixed Court of Shanghai,[81] but Brauen had already left Shanghai on a Japanese steamship.[82] Brauen was spotted in Nagasaki on Thursday, 14 September 1910, but evaded capture.[73][82]

Re-opening (1911)

Costing $360,000,[83] the restoration was completed in December 1910,[84] and the official opening was on Monday, 16 January 1911.[85] The North-China Herald reported:

The enduring impression of a city is largely given by the buildings that first catch the eye. The new Astor House Extension will greatly assist in bearing in upon the visitor that he is approaching no mean city. Favoured by its site, it stands out boldly and inspires a belief in the future of a city that can support such a huge caravanserai, in addition to others. The Shanghai resident regards it with equal admiration and also with a sense of personal pride. That gigantic edifice stands where, in the memory of many still living, the swamp-birds called defiantly to the struggling settlement that was finding its feet on the other side of the creek. It personifies to the resident the verification of the brightest dreams that in the old days the most daring dared to dream. A huge, but stately seal has in a sense been set upon the city's aspirations, and it stands at once as an emblem of accomplishment and an example for emulation.[85]

Advertising itself as the Waldorf Astoria of the Orient’,[86][87][88][89] and was the first Western hotel in China.[75] its new 211-room building, with a 500-seat dining room.[90] 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."[91] An advertisement in Social Shanghai in 1910 bragged, "The Astor House Hotel is the most central, popular and modern hotel in Shanghai."[92] At the time of its re-opening in January 1911, the refurbished Astor House Hotel was described as follows:

Astor House Hotel Shanghai Dining Room

The building has five storeys and attics on the Whangpoo Road frontage and four storeys on the Astor Road side. On the ground floor, at the corner of Whangpoo Road and the Broadway, is a handsomely appointed public bar-room and buffet, 59 ft. by 51 ft; in the centre, with main entrance from Whangpoo Road, is a magnificent lounge ball, 70 ft. by 60 ft., and at the East end are the Hotel office and the manager's office, with the secretary's office, in mezzanine, above the latter. The basement fronting Astor Road contains store-rooms, the steam-heating apparatus, and motor fire-pump. The grand staircase, with marble dado and red panels on white background, leads upward to passenger lifts, 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.[85]

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. A major feature of the reconstruction was the creation of the Peacock Hall, "the city's first ballroom",[93] "the most commodious ballroom in Shanghai".[94] The newly restored Astor House Hotel was renowned for its lobby, special dinner-parties, and balls."[94] 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".[95] 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."[96]

William Logan Gerrard (1910–1915)

In October 1910 Scotsman William Logan Gerrard, who was a long-time resident of Shanghai, was appointed the new manager,[97] but severe illness forced him into hospital for several weeks, before being invalided home temporarily.[72] Soon after his release from the hospital, Gerrard married Gertrude Heard on Tuesday 19 July 1911 at the St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church in the French Concession. That evening they departed on their honeymoon in the USA and Scotland, and returned to Shanghai early in 1912.[98] The Secretary of the Hotel, Mr. Whitlow, was appointed acting manager, but was soon replaced by Mr. Olsen.[72]

File:Jim Thorpe olympic.png
Jim Thorpe at 1912 Olympics
Christy Mathewson

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 proceeded for the Astor House Hotel, where rooms were available from $6 to $10 per night,[99] however the effects of the Revolution and the long absence of Gerrard, resulted in a three-month operating loss of $60,000. On 30 June 1912 a "serious crisis" confronted the shareholders of the Astor House Hotel Company. While praise for the renovations was almost universal, they strained severely the Hotel's finances.[100] The Hotel's bank refused to issue the funds needed to pay interest to the debenture holders, forcing an extraordinary meeting with the trustees of the note holders.[101] The interest was finally paid after mortgaging the Astor Garden (B.C. Lot 1744), the foreshore property between Whangpoo Road and the Suchow Creek, for 25,000 taels (US$33,333.33).[83]

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 Olympian Jim Thorpe, who were touring the world playing exhibition games.[102] This transnational tour was led by Albert Goodwill Spalding, owner of the White Stockings, "professional baseball's most influential figure."[103] 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."[104] On 29 December 1913 the first sound film in China was shown at the Hotel. At this time there were still restrictions on Chinese entering the Astor House Hotel.[105]

At the annual meeting of the Astor House Hotel Company held at the hotel in October 1913, the directors revealed plans to increase profit by another reconstruction,[106] including the construction of a new theatre seating 1,200 people to replace Astor Hall, which seated only 300; additional luxury suites; and also a winter garden.[88]

Mary Hall, who stayed at the Astor House in April 1914, described her experience:

The Astor House, which since I was here last, seventeen years ago, had outgrown all recognition....I entered the spacious social hall flanked with cigar, sweets, scent and other stalls....[I]nside the hotel it was easy to imagine ones self in London or New York. The idea is soon dissipated when you find yourself following a man clad in bath-room slippers and shirt to the feet, the whiteness of which is relieved by a long black pigtail hanging down his back. He bows and smiles as he unlocks a door and shows you to your room, which is light and airy, with a bath-room attached. The dining-room was a gorgeous scene in the evening...The room is long, and the prevailing colours buff and white: down the centre are very handsome Chinese inlaid pillars on which, during the hot months, electric fans are worked. A gallery runs down either side, and in the busy season is also filled with tables. A band plays nightly....'Boys' moved hither and thither dressed in long blue shirts over which were worn short white sleeveless jackets, the latter obviously full dress, as they were dispensed with at breakfast or tiffin. Soft black shoes over white stockings, and legs swathed with dark felt were the finishing touches of a picturesque uniform.[107]

During 1914, the Astor Gardens, the portion of the hotel grounds at the front of the Hotel known as "the foreshore" that had stretched to the Suzhou Creek, was sold to allow the construction of the consulate of the Empire of Russia immediately in front of the Hotel.[108] By October 1914, the Hotel's financial position had improved sufficiently to allow the shareholders to approve the renovation plans, which included demolishing the old dining room and kitchen to create eight shops that could be leased, and first class bedrooms and small apartments; construction of a new dining room in the centre of the hotel; relocation of the kitchen on the top floor to allow the conversion to bachelor's bedrooms; and conversion of part of the bar and billiard room into a grill room.[109]

Despite the renovations, financial difficulties persisted that resulted in the trustees for the debenture holders foreclosing on the Hotel in August 1915.[110] In September 1915 The trustees subsequently sold the Astor House Hotel Company Limited and all of its property and assets, including over 10 mow of land, to Central Stores Limited, owners of the Palace Hotel, for 705,000 taels.[110] With the change of ownership, Gerrard's services were no longer required.

Central Stores Ltd. (1915–1917) and The Shanghai Hotels Limited (1917–1923)

Central Stores Ltd. (renamed The Shanghai Hotels Limited in 1917) was owned 80% by Edward Isaac Ezra (born 3 January 1882 in Shanghai; died 16 December 1921 in Shanghai),[111] the managing director of Shanghai Hotels Ltd., the largest stockholder,[112] and its major financier,[113] At one time Ezra was "one of the wealthiest foreigners in Shanghai".[114] According to one report, Ezra amassed a vast fortune estimated at from twenty to thirty million dollars primarily through the importation of opium,[115] and successful real estate investment and management in early twentieth century Shanghai.[116] The Kadoorie family, Iraqi Sephardic Jews from India,[117] 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.

Captain Harry Morton (1915–1920)

Despite some shareholder opposition, in March 1915 Captain Henry "Harry" Elrington Morton was appointed managing director, with responsibility for managing Central Stores' three Shanghai hotels, including the Astor House, with a salary of $900 a month, plus board and lodging.[118] Morton was "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."[4] American journalist John B. Powell 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.[17] 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."[119]

In 1915 soon after taking control of the Astor House Hotel, Ezra decided to add a new ballroom.[120] The new ballroom, designed by Lafuente & Wooten, was opened in November 1917.[121] At the time, Shanghai was considered the "Paradise of Adventurers", and the "ornate but old-fashioned lobby" of the Astor House was considered its hub.[122] The lobby was furnished with the heavy mahogany chairs and coffee tables.[123] By 1918 the lobby of the Astor House, "that amusing whispering gallery of Shanghai",[124] was "where most business is done" in Shanghai.[125]

Despite an annual profit of $596,437 in the previous year, in April 1920 Morton was forced to resign as the manager of the Shanghai Hotels Companies, Ltd, due to a new British government Order in Council restricting management of British companies to British subjects.[126]

Walter Sharp Bardarson (1920–1923)

Morton was replaced by Canadian Walter Sharp Bardarson. A 1920 travel guide summarised the features of the Astor House: "Astor House Hotel 250 rooms all with attached baths, the most commodious ballroom in Shanghai, renowned for its lobby, special dinner-parties, and balls. Banquets a special feature, and a French chef employed. Up-to-date hairdressing salon and beauty parlor. Strictly under foreign supervision."[127]

Under the leadership of Edward Ezra, the Astor House Hotel made a handsome profit. Ezra, intended to build "the biggest and best hotel in the Far East, a 14-storey hotel with 650 huge luxury bedrooms, including a 1500-seat dining hall and two dining rooms," on Bubbling Well Road.[128] Ezra died in December 1921[129] and in 1922 Sir Ellis Kadoorie, one of the prominent members of the board of the Hong Kong Hotel Company, died, curtailing their expansion plans.[130]

Hong Kong & Shanghai Hotels, Limited (1923–1954)

James Harper Taggart
Astor House Hotel Baggage Label 1920s

On 12 May 1922 Ezra's 80% controlling interest in The Shanghai Hotels Limited was purchased for 2.5 million Mexican dollars by Hongkong Hotels Limited,[131] "Asia's oldest hotel company",[132][133] which already owned the Hongkong Hotel, as well as the Peak, Repulse Bay, and Peninsula Hotels in Kowloon; Messrs. William Powells Ltd., a large department store in Hong Kong; the Hong Kong Steam Laundry; and three large parking garages in Hong Kong.[131] Shanghai Hotels Limited, which was managed by Mr. E. Burrows, owned the Astor House Hotel, Kalee Hotel, Palace and Majestic Hotels in Shanghai and approximately 60% of The Grand Hotel des Wagons-Lits in Beijing; the China Press; and China Motors Ltd., which owned parking garages.[131] The architect of the acquisition was James Harper Taggart (born 1885 in Castlemaine, Victoria, Australia)[134] managing director of Hongkong Hotels Limited, who was of "Lowland Scot heritage, of evidently very humble parentage",[135] who was married to "an American millionaire heiress",[136] was described as "dynamic",[128] and as "diminutive and sharp-minded".[136] and who had been the former manager of the Hong Kong Hotel. Initially both Burrows and Taggart were joint managing directors of the new entity.[137] In October 1923 Taggart helped engineer the merger of Shanghai Hotels Limited and the Hongkong Hotel Company, to create Hong Kong & Shanghai Hotels, Limited with himself as managing director.[138]

Despite indicating in May 1922 that Ezra and Kadoorie's planned new "super hotel" to be built at Bubbling Well Road would proceed,[137] later Taggart decided to cancel the project, instead decided to create "new rendezvous and entertainment centres of Shanghai's social and business circles."[139] 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."[113] 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.[140] 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, were offered for sale.[141] By the early 1920s, the Astor House Hotel had become "an international institution in fame and reputation."[142] 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.[143] The Shanghai Stock Exchange was housed at the Astor House Hotel from 1920 until 1949.[144] 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.[113]

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[145] 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."[146]

Renovations (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.[147] 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."[148] Additionally, the large public spaces created in the previous renovations were not proving profitable.[120]

The owners began remodelling the hotel again in 1923 to "keep up with the Shanghai passion for nightly entertainment."[142] The ground floor was remodelled, and "its grill-room soon earned distinction."[121] They commissioned architect Mr. A. Lafuente to design the dining room and ballroom.[149] On Saturday, 22 December 1923, the new ballroom was opened formally with 350 invited guests.[149] The North-China Herald described the ballroom:

The light blue walls decorated with maidens and sylphs dancing in the open spaces, are surmounted by the plaster reliefs for the indirect lighting system suspended from the ceiling, while high on the marble pillars beautifully cast female figures appear to support the roof. Probably the most novel feature of the decorative scheme, excepting the incandescent mirrors was the peacock shell utilized by the orchestra.[149]

The initial Astor House orchestra had eight members under the direction of "Whitey" Smith.[149] Later the resident Astor Orchestra was directed by Alex Bershadsky, a White Russian emigré,[150] while the orchestra of Ben Williams, the first American orchestra to travel to Shanghai, also played at the Astor House.[151]

Jacques Kiass (1924–1928)

By April 1924 the manager was Jacques Kiass.[152] 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."[153] During the First Jiangsu-Zhejiang War, conflict between the armies of General Sun Chuanfang, warlord of Fukien, and rival warlord General Lu Yongxiang of Chekiang, an evening fire caused damage at the Astor House Hotel on 17 October 1924, and forced the evacuation of guests and hundreds of Chinese servants.[154] Isabel Peake Duke recalled being at a tea dance at the Astor during an earthquake in 1926, during which "the walls of the hotel were visibly shaking and swaying".[155] At this time the tea dances were held daily (except Sundays) between 5pm and 7pm. Duke indicates that for the price of one Mexican dollar (about 35 US cents), the Paul Whiteman Orchestra played the romantic dance tunes of the period, and included sandwiches, cream and cakes. Her only complaint was the lack of air-conditioning, necessitating overhead ceiling fans and fountains of water to keep the dancers cool in the summer months.[155] 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."[156] 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."[157] 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."[158] 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."[159]

On 21 March 1927, during a battle between the Kuomintang and the Communist forces during the Chinese Civil War, the Astor House Hotel was struck by bullets.[160] In 1927 the Astor House Hotel in Shanghai was included in Robert Ludy's Historic Hotels of the World, where it was indicated that "the Astor House Hotel...has been the principal hostelry for more than fifty years."[161] Ludy further indicates that the Hotel was one of the three hotels in Shanghai where all the important foreign visitors to Shanghai stay, and that "it is not only possible to enjoy modern conveniences in these Chinese hotels, but they are quite as well equipped as those found in America or Europe."[161] In 1929 the officers of the Royal Army Medical Corps were impressed with the standard of accommodation: "The rooms at the Astor House Hotel are very comfortable, central heating, bathroom attached, hot and cold water ad lib. The hotel charges were $12 a day, about 25 s[hillings]., inclusive of food and everything, but you have to have your meals in the big dining room."[162]

H.O. Wasser (1928)

By November 1928 the manager was H.O. "Henry" Wasser.[163] 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."[164] By 1930, Kammerling was one of the Hotel's managers.[165]

Decline in prestige (1930–1932)

Despite the 1923 renovations, by 1930 the Astor House Hotel was no longer the pre-eminent hotel in Shanghai. The completion of the Cathay Hotel in 1929, "threw a painful shadow upon the old-fashioned Astor House."[166] According to Gifford, "The center of social activity shifted in the 1930s from the Astor House around the corner to the Cathay. Its jazz was even more jumping, its rooms were even more Art Deco a-go-go."[167] In 1912, when the American Consulate was constructed on Huangpu Road, and just after the re-opening of the Astor House after extensive renovations, the Hongkou area was considered "a most desirable location", however by 1932 the area had deteriorated, due in part to the proliferation of Japanese businesses and residents, with many Chinese refusing to cross into the Hongkou district. In April 1932 The China Weekly Review indicated that the Hotel "incidentally had slumped into a second rate establishment due to the construction of newer and more modern hotels south of the [Suzhou] creek."[168] Further, 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."[169] While the Astor House was less expensive than the Cathay Hotel, it also lacked air-conditioning.[170] 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 Français in the French Concession.[171]

James Lafayette Hutchison, on his return to the Astor House in the 1930s after several years absence in the United States, noticed no changes: "I walked across the bridge and registered at the old Astor House Hotel.... The same subdued, cavernous lobby with the same white-gowned boys leaning against the tall pillars, the same mystic maze of halls leading to a sparsely furnished bedroom." Further, he described the Astor House as "a faded green, cavern-like wooden structure, with tall rooms smelling of must and mildew".[172] According to Canadian journalist Gordon Sinclair, by 1931 the Shanghai Press Club used the Astor as their regular meeting place,[173] and overseas Chinese frequently stayed there.[174]

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.[175] 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."[176] On 30 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.[177]

On 30 January 1932 the Japanese "effected the seizure and military occupation of virtually all parts of the International Settlement eastward of and down the river from Soochow Creek, which area includes the postoffice, the Astor House Hotel, the buildings of the Japanese, German and Russian consulates and the city's main wharves and docks."[178] The fighting and shelling in the vicinity of the Astor House Hotel "resulted in consternation among the guests",[179] but the arrival of four American naval vessels on 1 February 1932 partially alleviated their concerns.[180] On 25 February 1932, American Consul-General Cunningham ordered all Americans staying at the Astor House to evacuate due to fears of the artillery of the counter-attacking Chinese forces.[181] However, despite "many Chinese shells" falling in the vicinity of the Astor House that night, the American guests refused initially to evacuate the Hotel,[182] but by 30 April "many guests moved out of the Astor House hotel",[168] along with most non-Japanese residents of the Hongkou district.

Arrest of Ken Wang (1932)

On 27 February 1932 Japanese sailors pursued Chinese Brigadier General Ken Wang (Wang Keng or Wang Kang) (born 1895),[183] then a recent West Point graduate,[184] whom they believed to be a spy,[185] into the lobby of the Astor House Hotel and arrested him,[186] in violation of the international law that operated in the International Settlement,[187] without explanation or apologies, and refused to turn him over to the police of the International Settlement.[188] After a strike of Astor House employees,[189] and a scare caused by a "convivial guest" throwing an empty bottle out of one of the Hotel's windows at midnight,[190] eventually Wang was released but detained by the Nanjing government,[191] which was forced to deny three weeks later that Wang had been executed for treason.[192]

Highlights (1932–1937)

By 1934 "the Astor House Hotel's tea dances and classical concerts [were] popular...during the Winter season."[193] 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."[193] One of the more interesting frequent visitors to the Astor House Hotel was Mr. Mills, a gibbon, who accompanied American journalist Emily Hahn,[194] the sometime paramour of Sir Victor Sassoon, from 1935 until her departure for Hong Kong in 1941.[194] 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.[195] 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".[196] According to Baker, the ingredients for the Astor House Special are: "1½ oz cognac, 1 tsp maraschino liqueur, 2 tsp egg white, ¾ oz Pernod, ½ tsp lemon juice, and club soda", however "the original recipe calls for Absinthe instead of Pernod."[197]

Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945)
Effects of Chinese Bomb dropped near Cathay Hotel 14 August 1937

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.[198] After Japanese machine guns were set up outside the hotel, and Japanese troops searched the Astor House for an American photographer, Americans living there evacuated on 14 August, with one, Dr. Robert K. Reischauer, subsequently killed later that day in the lobby of the Cathay Hotel by a bomb dropped from a Chinese war plane.[199] Subsequently Japanese troops seized the Astor House Hotel,[200] but by 18 August, the Hotel management recaptured the Astor House.[201] In the following days, some 18,000 to 20,000 Europeans, Americans and Japanese evacuated to Hong Kong, Manila, and Japan,[202] including Lawrence and Horace Kadoorie, who fled to Hong Kong.[203] The Hotel was damaged again on 14 October 1937 by bombs from planes of the Chinese government and shells from Japanese naval guns.[204] On 4 November 1937 a Chinese torpedo boat launched a torpedo in an attempt to sink the Japanese cruiser Izumo,[205] then "lying moored to the Nippon Yusen Kaisha wharf close to the Japanese Consulate General, just east of the mouth of Soochow Creek",[202] near to the Garden Bridge,[206] exploded outside the Astor House breaking several windows.[207] American foreign correspondent Irène Corbally Kuhn,[208] one of the writers of the 1932 film, The Mask of Fu Manchu, and then a reporter for The China Press,[209] described the hotel as "the most famous inn on the China coast, redundantly identified as the Astor House Hotel,"[210] and also the damage inflicted upon it during the 1937 Japanese invasion: "from the street the boards were up over the shop fronts."[211] On 23 November 1937, it was reported that "The Japanese at present have the Astor House Hotel filled with socalled Chinese traitors".[212]

The vacuum created when the British owners of the Astor House Hotel fled to Hong Kong in September 1937 allowed the Japanese occupation forces to assume control of the hotel until the surrender of the Empire of Japan on 2 September 1945.[142] The Astor House Hotel was occupied by the Japanese YMCA for two years, until 1939.[213] The Japanese subsequently leased the hotel for a three-year term to another party, with "a reasonable return" remitted to the absent owners.[214] 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 Union.[215]

In July 1940 Time magazine reported that, in response to the unapproved anti-Japanese thrice daily broadcasts on radio station XMHA (600 kilocycles on the AM band) of "burly, tousled, tough-tongued, 39-year-old"[216] veteran American journalist Carroll Duard Alcott (1901–1965),[217] "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."[218] The jamming continued by the Japanese from the top floor of the Astor House.[219] Alcott, who had worn a bullet-proof vest, had two bodyguards, and carried a .45 automatic after threats to him by Japanese authorities, was ordered to leave China by the Japanese-sponsored government of Wang Ching-wei in July 1940,[220] refused to quit his broadcasts, but eventually departed Shanghai on 14 September 1941 on board the President Harrison,[221] after four years of broadcasts.[222]

During the Japanese occupation the Astor House was also used to house prominent British (and later American) nationals captured by the Japanese.,[223] Later the Astor House Hotel was used as the Japanese General headquarters,[224] before being leased as a hotel for the duration of the war. In late June 1944 the Japanese held "an elaborate ceremony at the Astor House Hotel in which the titles of six public utilities in Shanghai, including electricity, gas, waterworks, telephone, telegraph and tram service were transferred to the Nanjing Government."[225]

Post-War Era (1945–1959)

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."[226] Hibbard indicates "the hotel fared badly in the war and extensive refurbishment bills were deferred following its requisition by the US Army",[227] in September 1945. The Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd (HKSH) leased the hotel to the US Army until June 1946.[228] 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".[229]

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[230] from the Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd (HKSH) in 1947. Its address was listed as 2 Ta Ming Road, Shanghai.[231] 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. The hotel was "filled with members of organisations involved in the post-war reconstruction of China, including the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Association".[227] 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.[232] 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.

On 19 April 1954 the Hotel was confiscated[233] 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. Prior to the Hotel's re-opening as the Pujiang Hotel in 1959, "the building had been used by a tea and textile trading company as offices and dormitories, as well as by the Chinese Navy."[234]

Pujiang Hotel (1959 onwards)

On 27 May 1959, the name was changed from the Astor House Hotel to the Pujiang Hotel (浦江饭店),[84] 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. In 1988 the Pujiang Hotel was incorporated into another government-controlled entity, the Shanghai Hengshan Mountain Group (上海衡山集团).[235]

In the late 1980s, the hotel's reputation declined,[236] and it functioned partly as a "backpackers hangout."[237] At the end of 1992, the then Pujiang Hotel was described negatively.[238]

In 1990, the ballroom of the west wing of the hotel was being occupied by the newly reopened Shanghai Stock Exchange, until its relocation to Pudong in 1998.[239][240][241]

In 1998 the Pujiang became the first Shanghai member of the International Youth Hostel Federation.[234] By 1998, "its 80 [private] rooms cost $40 to $60" per night.[242] Prior to its restoration, the Pujiang Hotel seemed to have reached its nadir, being described as "an inexpensive, somewhat grotty backpackers' favorite"[243] and "a dive for young budget travelers. Only the ballroom still shows signs of life."[244]

Renovations (2002 onwards)

According to Mark O'Neill, in 1995 the Hotel faced destruction, as "much of the furniture and interior decoration was destroyed or stolen during the Cultural Revolution, while insects had eaten a large part of the wood. Some parties have proposed demolishing it and putting a modern, five-star hotel on the site. Hengshan established a committee of scholars and experts which concluded that the hotel should be saved."[245] The Shanghai Zhuzong Group Architectural and Interior Design Co. Ltd., which had also renovated the nearby Broadway Mansions, was chosen to undertake the renovation work.[246] In 2002 the first phase of renovation was completed, and cost about 7 million renminbi to refurbish the 35 VIP rooms.[247]

In November 2003 Wu Huaixiang indicated the Hengshan Group was looking for an overseas investor to pay part of the 100 million yuan (US$12.5 million) needed to "renovate and manage the property and turn it into the Raffles of Shanghai."[248] Wu indicated: "Our aim is to turn it into a classic five-star hotel, like the Raffles in Singapore. We want the investor to pay a leasing fee and provide some of the money for renovation. That we can negotiate." The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels Group, which owned Astor House until its confiscation in 1952, was uninterested in buying it back, as it had plans to construct a Peninsula Hotel on the nearby site of the former British Consulate.

During the renovations in 2004 several significant discoveries were made: "Seven century-old, white marble clapboards embossed with carvings of the Egyptian Sphinx were recently found in a hotel storage room that has been sealed for decades. The storage room at the Shanghai Astor House Hotel also contained several other century-old utensils, including an American hurricane lamp, an English ammeter, four blades of an American electric fan, and 37 white marble candle holders".[249] According to Li Hao, a manager at the Hotel, "The antiques will first be appraised, then be repaired, and finally be put in their former places or exhibited to the public. ... We'll relocate them to where they were, providing them a chance to function again as before."[250] Jasper Becker reported later 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."[251]

In May 2006 the Hotel was described: "From the outside, the hotel looks like Harrods; inside is a marble-floored reception dimly lit by a huge chandelier. The air of faded grandeur is enhanced by the fact that previous guests have included Einstein and Charlie Chaplin."[252] 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."[253] In 2006 the Morning Shanghai restaurant opened at the Astor House.[254]

In February 2006 the Shanghai Municipal Council announced significant renovations for the area around the Astor House Hotel.

The Astor House Hotel has appeared in the following films:

References

  1. ^ Hengshan Hotels Archived 21 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Stella Dong, Shanghai: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City 1842–1949 (New York: HarperCollins, 2001):208
  3. ^ a b Property Details: http://www.wotif.com/hotel/View?hotel=W47786
  4. ^ a b c d Stella Dong, Shanghai: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City 1842–1949 (New York: HarperCollins, 2001):208.
  5. ^ See Francis Pott, A Short History of Shanghai (Kelly & Walsh); http://jds.cass.cn/english/20070304220424.asp
  6. ^ a b Pott;
  7. ^ See P.F. Richards, 17 March 1861 from Tientsin, published in North-China Herald (6 April 1861).
  8. ^ Mark Swislocki, Culinary Nostalgia: Regional Food Culture and the Urban Experience in Shanghai (Stanford University Press, 2008):104; Papers of miscellaneous companies, 1823–1940 (Manuscripts/MS JM/MS.JM/I28), Jardine Matheson Archive, [1]
  9. ^ Hibbard, Bund, 212; Shanghai Almanac and Miscellany (1856):111, where Richards is listed as "Ship Chandlers, General Store-keeper, Shipping Victuallers."
  10. ^ "Ladies of Old Shanghai on the 4th Avenue", Multitext (29 June 2009)
  11. ^ a b Mark Swislocki, Culinary Nostalgia: Regional Food Culture and the Urban Experience in Shanghai (Stanford University Press, 2008):107.
  12. ^ Note: Hibbard suggests that the Hotel was established in 1844. See Hibbard, Bund, 212.
  13. ^ Richards' Hotel and Restaurant (礼查饭店; "Licha"; Lee-zo).
  14. ^ Teikoku Tetsudōchō, Japan, An Official Guide to Eastern Asia: Trans-Continental Connections between Europe and Asia Vol. 4 (Imperial Japanese Government Railways, 1915):233.
  15. ^ George Lanning and Samuel Couling, The History of Shanghai (The Shanghai Municipal Council; Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1921):434-435.
  16. ^ a b c "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); [2]; retrieved 11 April 2009.
  17. ^ a b John B. Powell, My Twenty Five Years in China (1945; Reprint: Read Books, 2008):7.
  18. ^ Rob Gifford, China Road: A Journey into the Future of a Rising Power (Random House, 2007):4.
  19. ^ "Some Pages in the History of Shanghai, 1842-1856", The Asiatic Review [East India Association] 9-10 (1916):129; George Lanning and Samuel Couling, The History of Shanghai Part 1 (Shanghai: For the Shanghai Municipal Council by Kelly. & Walsh, Limited, 1921; 1973 ed.):290; J.H. Haan, "Origin and Development of the Political System in the Shanghai International Settlement", Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 22 (1982):38; [3]
  20. ^ "Notice", North-China Herald (17 August 1850):1.
  21. ^ Swabey, 399.
  22. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 53.
  23. ^ "Hongkew then was low and swampy, with the present Broadway the fore-shore of the Whangpoo river. See "All About Shanghai: Chapter 1 - Historical Background", Tales of Old Shanghai, [4]
  24. ^ "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); [5]; (accessed 11 April 2009); Dong, 208.
  25. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 212.
  26. ^ "Of Foreing [sic] Residents and Mercantile Firms at Shanghai", The Hongkong Directory: with List of Foreign Residents in China 2nd ed. (The "Armenian Press", 1859):76, 90; "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); [6]; (accessed 11 April 2009); Dong, 208.
  27. ^ "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); [7]. Retrieved 11 April 2009; Dong, 208.
  28. ^ "OF FOREING (sic) RESIDENTS AND MERCANTILE FIRMS AT SHANGHAI", The Hongkong Directory: With List of Foreign Residents in China 2nd ed. (The "Armenian Press", 1859):76, 90; "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); [8]. Retrieved 11 April 2009; Dong, 208.
  29. ^ P.F. Richards, "Notice", North-China Herald (29 December 1860):1.
  30. ^ E. S. Elliston, Shantung Road Cemetery, Shanghai, 1846–1868: With Notes About Pootung Seamen's Cemetery [and] Soldiers' Cemetery (Millington, 1946):26.
  31. ^ "China Directory 1862" (PDF). Hong Kong: A. Shortrede & Co. 1862. p. 42. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  32. ^ North-China Herald (27 October 1868):8; North-China Herald (15 February 1870):14; J. Small, "Notes From My Diary", Wellington Independent [New Zealand] XXVIII (16 May 1872):3.
  33. ^ Hibbard indicates the date of purchase was 1884, seeBund, 212, and Darwent suggests a much earlier date than that: "It was founded by Mr. DC Jansen in 1860." See Charles Ewart Darwent, Shanghai: A Handbook for Travellers and Residents to the Chief Objects of Interest in and Around the Foreign Settlements and Native City 2nd ed. (Kelly & Walsh, 1920):62.
  34. ^ a b c Hibbard, Bund, 213.
  35. ^ 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.
  36. ^ North-China Herald (11 January 1877):5.
  37. ^ North-China Herald (28 February 1890):4 (232).
  38. ^ Hanchao Lu, "Out of the Ordinary: Implications of Material Culture and Daily Life in China", in Everyday Modernity in China, ed. Madeleine Yue Dong and Joshua L. Goldstein (University of Washington Press, 2006):26.
  39. ^ George Moerlein, A Trip Around the World (M. & R. Burgheim, 1886):59.
  40. ^ Simon Adler Stern, Jottings of Travel in China and Japan (1888):121.
  41. ^ Barbara Baker and Yvette Paris, eds., Shanghai: Electric and Lurid City : an Anthology (Oxford University Press, 1998):100.
  42. ^ "The Proposed Land Investment Co., Limited", North-China Herald (7 December 1888):17 (637); "Advertisement", North-China Herald (14 December 1888):22 (666).
  43. ^ a b North-China Herald (29 November 1889):3 (889).
  44. ^ Emily Hahn, The Soong Sisters (E-Reads Ltd, 2003):15.
  45. ^ "The St. Andrew's Ball", North-China Herald (2 December 1892):17.
  46. ^ Moses King, ed., Where to Stop.": A Guide to the Best Hotels of the World (1894):110.
  47. ^ Transactions of the Annual Meeting 15 (National Tuberculosis Association., 1920):525.
  48. ^ Hibbard, Bund.
  49. ^ "The Animatoscope", North-China Herald (28 May 1897):23 (963); North-China Herald (4 June 1897):6 (988); and North-China Herald (18 June 1897):4 (1080).
  50. ^ Matthew D. Johnson, "'Journey to the Seat of War': The International Exhibition of China in Early Cinema", Journal of Chinese Cinemas 3:2 (June 2009):109-122.
  51. ^ J. Fox Sharp, Japan and America: Lecture (Todd, Wardell and Larter, 1900):13.
  52. ^ North-China Herald (24 October):6 (862).
  53. ^ "The Transfer of the Astor House", North-China Herald (24 October 1900):27 (883); North-China Herald (20 July 1918):9 (129).
  54. ^ "The Astor House Hotel Company, Limited", North-China Herald (24 July 1901):20 (164).
  55. ^ Elaine Denby, Grand Hotels: Reality and Illusion (Reaktion Books, 1998):210.
  56. ^ "The Transfer of the Astor House", North-China Herald (24 October 1900):27 (883)
  57. ^ The North-China Herald (17 July 1901):6 (102).
  58. ^ The World's Work: A History of our Time 3 (Doubleday, Doran and company, 1901):1963.
  59. ^ North-China Herald (14 November 1900):30 (1046).
  60. ^ "The Astor House Hotel Company, Limited", North-China Herald (24 July 1901):21 (165).
  61. ^ The Astor House in Tientsin installed one of the first telephones in 1879. See Dikötter, 148.
  62. ^ The North-China Herald (8 January 1902), quoted in William Arthur Thomas, Western Capitalism in China: A History of the Shanghai Stock Exchange (Ashgate, 2001):58.
  63. ^ a b "The Astor House Hotel Company, Limited", North-China Herald (24 July 1901):20.
  64. ^ North-China Herald (17 July 1901):6 (102).
  65. ^ North-China Herald (10 July 1901):5 (49).
  66. ^ North-China Herald (17 July 1901):5 (101)
  67. ^ Hibbard, Bund, 213.
  68. ^ Carl Crow, Foreign Devils in the Flowery Kingdom (1941):97; Jennifer Craik, Uniforms Exposed: From Conformity to Transgression (Berg, 2005):viii.
  69. ^ North-China Herald (5 February 1904):31 (243.
  70. ^ "R. v. G. Wilson, alias Hamilton", North-China Herald (6 July 1906):41ff.
  71. ^ "The Astor House Hotel Co. Ld.", North-China Herald (23 August 1907)
  72. ^ a b c "Astor House Hotel: Annual Meeting", North-China Herald (2 September 1911):29.
  73. ^ a b c d e Hibbard, Bund, 114.
  74. ^ Wright & Cartwright, 630, 632; Edward Denison and Guang Yu Ren, Building Shanghai: The Story of China's Gateway (Wiley-Academy, 2006):113
  75. ^ a b Astor House Hotel
  76. ^ Wright & Cartwright, 628, 630; Banister Fletcher, Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture, ed. Dan Cruickshank, 20th ed. (Architectural Press, 1996):1228; Edward Denison and Guang Yu Ren, Building Shanghai: The Story of China's Gateway (Wiley-Academy, 2006):113; Arif Dirlik, "Architecture of Global Modernity, Colonialism and Places" in The Domestic and the Foreign in Architecture, eds. Ruth Baumeister and Sang Lee (010 Publishers, 2007):39.
  77. ^ "Atkinson & Dallas", Dictionary of Scottish Architecture;
  78. ^ Wright & Cartwright, 628.
  79. ^ a b Concrete and Constructional Engineering 4 (1909):446.
  80. ^ Wright & Cartwright, 630.
  81. ^ a b North-China Herald (16 September 1910):52.
  82. ^ a b "Local and General News", North-China Herald (23 September 1910):10.
  83. ^ a b "Astor House Hotel", North-China Herald (31 August 1912):34.
  84. ^ a b Harpuder, Richard. Shanghai: The Way We Remember It
  85. ^ a b c "The New Astor House Building", North-China Herald (20 January 1911):20 (130).
  86. ^ Allister Macmillan, Seaports of the Far East: Historical and Descriptive, Commercial and Industrial, Facts, Figures, & Resources, 2nd ed. (W.H. & L. Collingridge, 1925):76.
  87. ^ Edward Denison and Guang Yu Ren, Building Shanghai: The Story of China's Gateway (Wiley-Academy, 2006):113.
  88. ^ a b "New Theatre in Shanghai", North-China Herald (11 October 1913):34.
  89. ^ Graham Bond, Frommer's Shanghai Day by Day (Frommer's, 2009):138.
  90. ^ The Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd., "Tradition Well Served and Heritage Revisited", press release (21 November 2008):3; Edited from an essay by Peter Hibbard, September 2008; [9]. Retrieved 11 April 2009.
  91. ^ Astor House Hotel - Shanghai - 1916 | Flickr - Photo Sharing!. Flickr (2006-06-23). Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  92. ^ Tess Johnston, The Last Colonies: Western Architecture in China's Treaty Ports; quoted in "Five-star legend", Shanghai Daily News (18 April 2005); [10] . Retrieved 11 April 2009.
  93. ^ "Hotel Uncovers Hidden Treasures", (7 May 2004);
  94. ^ a b George Ephraim Sokolsky, China, A Sourcebook of Information (Pan-Pacific Association, 1920).
  95. ^ Hibbard, 3.
  96. ^ Dong, 208.
  97. ^ North-China Herald (12 October 1912):60; "The New Astor House Building", North-China Herald (20 January 1911):20 (130).
  98. ^ North-China Herald (22 July 1911):46 (236).
  99. ^ Carl Crow, The Travelers' Handbook for China (Dodd, Mead & Co., 1913):158.
  100. ^ "Astor House Hotel Co., Ld.", North-China Herald (3 October 1914):38.
  101. ^ "Astor House Hotel Co.", North-China Herald (12 October 1912):33.
  102. ^ James E. Elfers, The Tour to End All Tours: The Story of Major League Baseball's 1913–1914 World Tour (U of Nebraska Press, 2003).
  103. ^ Thomas W. Zeiler, "Basepaths to Empire: Race and the Spalding World Baseball Tour1," Journal of Gilded Age and Progressive Era 6:2 (April 2007); [11] accessed (12 April 2009).
  104. ^ James E. Elfers, The Tour to End All Tours: The Story of Major League Baseball's 1913–1914 World Tour (U of Nebraska Press, 2003):125.
  105. ^ North-China Herald (1 March 1913):66 (652).
  106. ^ "Astor House Hotel Co.", North-China Herald (4 October 1913):46.
  107. ^ Mary Hall, A Woman in the Antipodes and in the Far East (Methuen, 1914):286.
  108. ^ "Astor House Hotel Co., Ld.", North-China Herald (3 October 1914):38; Hibbard, 215.
  109. ^ "Astor House Hotel Co., Ld.", North-China Herald (3 October 1914):38-39.
  110. ^ a b "The Central Stores", North-China Herald (18 September 1915):29.
  111. ^ "Sudden Death of Mr. Edward Ezra", North-China Herald (17 December 1921):27 (767); Les Fleurs de L'Orient; [12]
  112. ^ Hotel Monthly 28 (1920):53.
  113. ^ a b c Hibbard, 4.
  114. ^ Tahirih V. Lee, Contract, Guanxi, and Dispute Resolution in China ( ):110.
  115. ^ G. E. Miller, Shanghai: The Paradise of Adventurers (Orsay Publishing House Inc., 1937):153.
  116. ^ Kathryn Meyer and Terry Parssinen, Webs of Smoke: Smugglers, Warlords and the History of the International Drug Trade (Rowman & Littlefield, 2002):40.
  117. ^ Betta, Chiara (2003). "From Orientals to Imagined Britons: Baghdadi Jews in Shanghai". Modern Asian Studies. 37 (4): 999. doi:10.1017/S0026749X03004104.
  118. ^ Central Stores, Limited", North-China Herald (18 March 1916):36-37.
  119. ^ Powell, 9.
  120. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 216.
  121. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 116.
  122. ^ Yuan-tsung Chen, Return to the Middle Kingdom: One Family, Three Revolutionaries, and the Birth of Modern China (Union Square Press, 2008):73.
  123. ^ Barbara Baker and Yvette Paris, Shanghai: Electric and Lurid City : an Anthology (Oxford University Press, 1998):100.
  124. ^ Walter Hines Page and Arthur Wilson Page, eds. The World's Work 41 (Doubleday, Page & Co., 1921):454.
  125. ^ Jeffrey W. Cody, "Building a China-Based Practice: Murphy amid Competitors in Shanghai and Beijing, 1918–1919" in Building in China: Henry K. Murphy's "adaptive architecture," 1914–1935 (Chinese University Press, 2001):89.
  126. ^ "British Order Causes American Business Loss", The Evening Herald (Rock Hill, South Carolina) (6 May 1920):6.
  127. ^ George Ephraim Sokolsky, China, a Sourcebook of Information (Pan-Pacific Association, Shanghai, 1920).
  128. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 210.
  129. ^ "Sudden Death of Mr. Edward Ezra", North-China Herald (17 December 1921):27 (767); "Internment [sic] of Mr. E.I. Ezra", North-China Herald (24 December 1921):25 (833).
  130. ^ Hibbard, Bund, 121.
  131. ^ a b c "Shanghai Hotels Sold", North-China Herald (13 May 1922):31; Hibbard, Bund, 211.
  132. ^ It was founded in Hong Kong in March 1866. See "Topping Out Ceremony For The New Peninsula Shanghai" (17 April 2008); [13]
  133. ^ Hibbard, 4; and "Topping Out Ceremony For The New Peninsula Shanghai" (17 April 2008); [14]
  134. ^ By 1940 Taggart had been awarded an OBE, see Geoffrey Cadzow Hamilton, Government Departments in Hong Kong, 1841–1966 (J. R. Lee, acting Govt. printer, at the Govt. Press, 1967):81.
  135. ^ Austin Coates, Quick Tidings of Hong Kong (Oxford University Press, 1990):108.
  136. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 211.
  137. ^ a b "Shanghai Hotels Sold", North-China Herald (13 May 1922):31.
  138. ^ "Topping Out Ceremony For The New Peninsula Shanghai" (17 April 2008);
  139. ^ Hibbard, Bund, 211.
  140. ^ China Review [China Trade Bureau] 3-4 (1922):120.
  141. ^ Kuhn, 208; China Weekly Review 18 (1921):282.
  142. ^ a b c Hibbard, 5.
  143. ^ "RC Shanghai: A Brief History";
  144. ^ http://www.geocities.com/zhihguo/oldnbundZ. Retrieved 13 April 2009. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  145. ^ Now Yan'an Road.
  146. ^ Dong, 137.
  147. ^ Nicholas Rowland Clifford, Spoilt Children of Empire: Westerners in Shanghai and the Chinese Revolution of the 1920s (Middlebury College Press, 1991):62.
  148. ^ Gulian Lansing Morrill, Near Hell in the Far East: A Pleasure Jaunt Through Japan, Formosa, Korea, Manchuria, China, Tonkin, Cochin-Chine, Cambodia, Siam, Malay States, Sumatra, Java, Madura, Bali, Lombok, Borneo, Celebes, Hawaii (Pioneer printers, 1923):110.
  149. ^ a b c d "New Astor House Ball-Room", North-China Herald (29 December 1923):27 (891).
  150. ^ Valentin Vassilievich Fedoulenko and Boris Raymond, Russian Emigré Life in Shanghai (Bancroft Library, 1967):66; Hibbard, Bund, 217.
  151. ^ Maud Parrish, Nine Pounds of Luggage (J.B. Lippincott company, 1939):86.
  152. ^ "China Attracts Tourists: Visitors from America Steadily Increase, Shanghai Hotel Man Says; Market for Goods", The Los Angeles Times (23 April 1924):24.
  153. ^ Lowell Thomas and Lowell H. Smith, The First World Flight: Being the Personal Narratives of Lowell Smith, Erik Nelson, Leigh Wade, Leslie Arnold, Henry Ogden, John Harding (Houghton Mifflin, 1927):153.
  154. ^ D.C. Bess, "General Sun Takes Shanghai Control", Berkeley Daily Gazette (17 October 1924):1.
  155. ^ a b Mrs Isabel Duke, "Victims: All in a Lifetime" typescript; quoted in Hibbard, Bund, 224.
  156. ^ Frederic E. Wakeman, Policing Shanghai, 1927–1937 (Reprint: University of California Press, 1996):107.
  157. ^ Ernest O. Hauser, Shanghai: City for Sale (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):304.
  158. ^ Dong, 97.
  159. ^ Elise McCormick, Audacious Angles of China (Reprint: READ BOOKS, 2007):43.
  160. ^ "Settlements Under Fire", The Evening Independent [St. Petersburg, Florida] (21 March 1927):1; [15]
  161. ^ a b Robert B. Ludy, Historic Hotels of the World: Past and Present (David Mckay Co,, 1927):273
  162. ^ Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps 52 (1929): 143.
  163. ^ The Pagoda [Shanghai Rotary Club] 344 (24 June 1926):8; [16]; Croswell Bowen, The Curse of the Misbegotten: A Tale of the House of O'Neill (McGraw-Hill, 1959):188; [17]. Retrieved 13 April 2009.
  164. ^ Eisfelder, 34-35.
  165. ^ Betty Peh-T'i Wei, Old Shanghai (Images of Asia) (Oxford University Press (USA), 1993):34.
  166. ^ Ernest O. Hauser, Shanghai: City for Sale (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):278.
  167. ^ Rob Gifford, China Road: A Journey into the Future of a Rising Power (Random House, 2007):9.
  168. ^ a b "Shanghai Should Be Moved", The China Weekly Review 60 (30 April 1932): 274.
  169. ^ "The Shanghai Boom" Fortune 11:1 (January 1935)
  170. ^ Dong, 220.
  171. ^ William Reynolds Braisted, "This I Can Remember", in Burnt Orange Britannia: Adventures in History and the Arts, ed. William Roger Louis (I.B.Tauris, 2006):22.
  172. ^ James Lafayette Hutchison, China Hand (Lothrop, Lee and Shepard company, 1936):273, 220.
  173. ^ Gordon Sinclair, Will the Real Gordon Sinclair Please Sit Down (Formac Publishing Company, 1986)122.
  174. ^ Helen Foster Snow, My China Years, 23.
  175. ^ Pictorial Review of the Sino-Japanese Conflict 1932: With a Day-by-Day Abbreviated Report (Asiatic Pub. Co., 1932):31.
  176. ^ United States Dept. of State, Foreign Relations of the United States Vol. 3 (U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1932):422.
  177. ^ "Wild Turmoil in City" The New York Times (31 January 1932); [18]; quoted in Izumi Hirobe, Japanese Pride, American Prejudice: Modifying the Exclusion Clause of the 1924 Immigration Act (Stanford University Press, 2001):160.
  178. ^ Hallett Abend, "Wild Turmoil in City", The New York Times (31 January 1932):1.
  179. ^ Hallett Abend, "Cannon Used in Shanghai: Battle in Hongkew Area Follows Failure to Agree on Peace. Many Slain in Streets. Tens of Thousands of Chinese Driven From Their Homes by the Japanese. Snipers Fight Europeans. Americans Also Are Targets", The New York Times (1 February 1932):1.
  180. ^ "4 of our Warships Arrive at Shanghai: Americans Are Heartened by the Event, Though Grave Concern Is Still Felt", The New York Times (1 February 1932):2.
  181. ^ "In Our Pages: 100, 75, & 50 years ago - Opinion - International Herald Tribune", The New York Times (26 February 2007); [19]
  182. ^ "Astor House Guests at Shanghai Refuse to Go; Americans Adopt Emergency Evacuation Plan", The New York Times (26 February 1932):13.
  183. ^ The Monthly Supplement 3-4 (1942):141.
  184. ^ John Wands Sacca, "Like Strangers in a Foreign Land: Chinese Officers Prepared at American Military Colleges, 1904-37", The Journal of Military History 70:3 (July 2006):703-742.
  185. ^ Japanese Say Wang Legally Was a Spy: Chinese West Pointer Was Released, However, "Because This Is Not a War." The New York Times (2 March 1932):13.
  186. ^ Chung-shu Kuei, ed., Symposium on Japan's Undeclared War in Shanghai (Chinese Chamber of Commerce, 1932):15, vi.
  187. ^ Junpei Shinobŭ, International Law in the Shanghai Conflict (Maruzen company, ltd., 1933):2, 100-101.
  188. ^ Ernest O. Hauser, Shanghai: City for Sale (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):210; Ping-jui Li, Two Years of the Japan-China Undeclared War and the Attitude of the Powers, 2nd ed. (Mercury Press, 1933):561.
  189. ^ "Strike Ties Up Shanghai Hotel When Japanese Arrest Chinese", The New York Times (28 February 1932):21.
  190. ^ "Bottle Thrown Out of Window of Astor House Causes Scare", The New York Times (29 February 1932):13.
  191. ^ "Gen. Wang is Freed by Shanghai Japanese: Seizure of West Point Graduate Resulted in Complaint to Foreign Consuls." The New York Times (1 March 1932):17; Chih-hsiang Hao, Who's Who in China: Containing the Pictures and Biographies of China's Best Known Political, Financial, Business & Professional Men (The China Weekly Review, 1936):250.
  192. ^ "Col. Wang Not Executed: Chinese Deny Report That He Was Put to Death for Treason", The New York Times (25 March 1932):10.
  193. ^ a b All About Shanghai and Environs: A Standard Guide Book (Shanghai: University Press, 1934): Chapter 8
  194. ^ a b Joel Bleifuss, "Shanghai in 1942" Film in Focus;
  195. ^ Bertha Boynton Lum, Gangplanks to the East (The Henkle-Yewdale House, Inc., 1936):261.
  196. ^ Charles H. Baker, Jr., The Gentleman's Companion. Volume II Being an Exotic Drinking Book Or, Around the World with Jigger, Beaker and Flask, (New York: Derrydale Press, 1939):12; quoted in "Charles Baker's Drunken Oriental Junket", Things Asian (21 April 2006); [20]; see Charles Baker, Jigger, Beaker and Glass: Drinking Around the World (The Derrydale Press, 2001):12.
  197. ^ "The Astor Hotel Special" (15 March 2006);
  198. ^ Vaudine England and Elizabeth Sinn, The Quest of Noel Croucher: Hong Kong's Quiet Philanthropist (Hong Kong University Press, 1998):124.
  199. ^ "CHINA-JAPAN", Time (23 August 1937); [21]; "Missiles Hit Crowd in Street", The Evening Independent [St. Petersburg, Florida] (14 August 1937):1-2; [22]; "Americans Leaving Zones Under Fire" The New York Times (15 August 1937); [23]
  200. ^ "Japanese Soldiers Seize British Hotels in Shanghai", Los Angeles Times (18 August 1937):3.
  201. ^ "Millions Have Left 2 Shanghai Areas: The Hongkew and Yangtsepoo" The New York Times (18 August 1937); [24]
  202. ^ a b "War in Shanghai", The China Journal 27:3 (September 1937)
  203. ^ Sean O'Reilly and Larry Habegger, Traveler's Tales Hong Kong: Including Macau and Southern China (Travelers' Tales, 1996):236.
  204. ^ Hallett Abend, "Chinese Bomb Foe: Japanese Naval Guns Imperil City in Attack on the Air Raiders", The New York Times (15 October 1937):1.
  205. ^ "Photographs of Karl Kengelbacher", [25]; George Moorad, quoted in Hesperides, As We See Russia (E.P. Dutton, 1948):311.
  206. ^ Ralph Shaw, Sin City
  207. ^ 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)
  208. ^ "Kuhn, Irene Corbally", in Sam G. Riley, ed., Biographical Dictionary of American Newspaper Columnists (Greenwood Publishing Group, 1995):168-169.
  209. ^ Irene Corbally Kuhn, "Shanghai: The Vintage Years" (January 1986), in Ruth Reichl, Endless Feasts (Allen & Unwin, 2002):73-81.
  210. ^ Irène Kuhn, Assigned to Adventure (J.B. Lippincott Company, 1938):207.
  211. ^ Kuhn, 201, 206-208.
  212. ^ Hallett Abend, "Peace Talk Grows; China is in Straits: Japanese Send a Message by Parachute to Chiang Kai-shek Asking Surrender", The New York Times (23 November 1937):18.
  213. ^ Hibbard, Bund, 120; "Five-star Legend", Shanghai Daily (18 April 2005)
  214. ^ The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels: History Archived 2011-07-12 at the Wayback Machine. Hshgroup.com. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  215. ^ Marcia Reynders Ristaino, Port of Last Resort: The Diaspora Communities of Shanghai (Stanford University Press, 2003):162-163.
  216. ^ "Newscaster of Shanghai" Time (29 July 1940); [26]; see also "Shanghai Radio Dial 1941"; [27]
  217. ^ Greg Leck (gregleck@epix.net), [28] (posted 11 August 2007) indicates Alcott, was the son of "Fred Allcott, was a physician and may have had a pharmacy in Reliance the family moved to Reliance from Iowa sometime before 1920. Carroll Alcott (he changed the spelling of his name while in college) attended the (then) South Dakota State College in the 1918–1920 time period. He then joined the staff of the Sioux Falls Argus Leader, then newspapers in Sioux City Denver before going to the Philippines where he served in the Army for one year. From there he went to Shanghai, China and returned to the US in 1941. He worked for the Office of War Information during the war. He died in 1965 and left no descendants."; See Carroll Duard Alcott, My War with Japan (New York, H. Holt and Co., 1943); Bernard Wasserstein, Secret War in Shanghai: An Untold Story of Espionage, Intrigue, and Treason in World War II (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1999):66-67; Paul French, Through the Looking Glass: Foreign Journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao (Hong Kong University Press, 2009), especially Chapter 8, "The Dirty Thirties—Left Wing, Right Wing, Imperialists and Spies: Radio Shanghai", extracted at Alice Xin Liu, "Foreign Journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao" (19 June 2009), [29]
  218. ^ "Newscaster of Shanghai" Time (29 July 1940)
  219. ^ James Brown Scott, ed., The American Journal of International Law 36 (1942):126.
  220. ^ "Foreign News: New Order in Shanghai" Time (29 July 1940)
  221. ^ Harold Abbott Rand Conant, "A Far East Journal (1915–1941)", ed. Edmund Conant Perry (published 1994)
  222. ^ "Radio: Radio and Asia" Time (29 December 1941); [30]; Carroll Duard Alcott, My War with Japan (New York, H. Holt and Co., 1943); Paul French, Through the Looking Glass: Foreign Journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao (Hong Kong University Press, 2009), especially Chapter 8, "The Dirty Thirties—Left Wing, Right Wing, Imperialists and Spies: Radio Shanghai", extracted at Alice Xin Liu, "Foreign Journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao" (19 June 2009), [31]
  223. ^ 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.
  224. ^ Bill Lawrence, Six Presidents, Too Many Wars (Saturday Review Press, 1972):133-134.
  225. ^ Parks M. Coble, Chinese Capitalists in Japan's New Order: The Occupied Lower Yangzi, 1937–1945 (University of California Press, 2003):79.
  226. ^ Orville Schell, Mandate of Heaven: The Legacy of Tiananmen Square and the Next Generation of China's Leaders (Reprint: Simon & Schuster, 1995):363.
  227. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 220.
  228. ^ Horst "Peter" Eisfelder, Chinese Exile: My Years in Shanghai and Nanking (Avotaynu Inc, 2004):219; Hibbard, Bund, 220.
  229. ^ Eisfelder, 219-220.
  230. ^ Gary Nash, The Tarasov Saga: From Russia Through China to Australia (Rosenberg, 2002):193-194)
  231. ^ The China Monthly Review 105-106 (1947):161. Its phone number was 40499.
  232. ^ Lu Chang, "Legendary Astor House Hotel", Shanghai Star (30 May 2002)
  233. ^ "Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd.," Far Eastern Economic Review 18 (1955):344.
  234. ^ a b Hibbard, Bund, 222.
  235. ^ Hibbard says it was in 1994. See Hibbard, Bund, 222.
  236. ^ Alan Samagalski, Robert Strauss, and Michael Buckley, eds. China: A Travel Survival Kit, 2nd ed. (Lonely Planet Publications, 1988):353.
  237. ^ Jim Ford, Don't Worry, Be Happy: Beijing to Bombay with a Backpack (Troubador Publishing Ltd, 2006):108, 109.
  238. ^ Orville Schell and Todd Lappin, "China Plays the Market: Capitalist Leap", The Nation (14 December 1992).
  239. ^ Damian Harper, Christopher Pitts, and Bradley Mayhew, eds., Shanghai, 3rd ed. (Lonely Planet, 2006):104.
  240. ^ History
  241. ^ "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.]
  242. ^ Seth Faison, "What's Doing in Shanghai", The New York Times (19 April 1998); [32]
  243. ^ Jen Lin-Liu et al., eds., Frommer's China, 2nd ed. (John Wiley and Sons, 2006):428.
  244. ^ Ian Buruma, "China: New York ... Or Singapore? The 21st Century Starts Here." The New York Times (18 February 1996); [33]
  245. ^ Mark O'Neill, "Astor House wants to be Shanghai's Raffles", South China Morning Post; reprinted in Asia Africa Intelligence Wire (13 November 2003).
  246. ^ Hibbard, Bund, 129.
  247. ^ Graham Thompson, "Shanghai's Classic Hotels" (28 August 2008)
  248. ^ Mark O'Neill, "Astor House wants to be Shanghai's Raffles", South China Morning Post; reprinted in Asia Africa Intelligence Wire (13 November 2003); [34]
  249. ^ According to Zuo Yan, the hotel office manager, who had worked at the Hotel since 1984. See "Hotel Uncovers Hidden Treasures" (7 May 2004); [35]
  250. ^ "Hidden Treasures".
  251. ^ Jasper Becker, "The Other Side of Shanghai's Success Story" The Independent (11 August 2004); [36] . Retrieved 13 April 2009.
  252. ^ Imogen Fox, "Designer China", The Guardian (27 May 2006);
  253. ^ . Retrieved 13 April 2009.
  254. ^ "The Morning of Shanghai", China Daily (22 November 2006)
  255. ^ Everlasting Regret (2005), IMDB.com
  256. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20110717171930/http://shanghai.urbanatomy.com/index.php/entertainment/1319-is-that-shanghai. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 21 April 2009. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  257. ^ Emma Ashburn, "In the Mood for Lust", The SAIS Observer [johns Hopkins University] 9:2 (February 2009); [37]
  258. ^ "Mei Lanfang";
  259. ^ "Director Chen Kaige to Film in Shanghai", Shanghai Daily (16 January 2008)

Further reading

  • 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". [38]
  • French, Paul. Through the Looking Glass: Foreign Journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao. Hong Kong University Press, 2009.
  • 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
  • Henriot, Christian and Matthew Woodbury. "The Shanghai Bund: A History through Visual Sources" Virtual Shanghai: Shanghai Urban Space in Time (June 2007). http://www.virtualshanghai.net/Article.php?ID=34
  • Johnston, Tess and Deke Erh. A Last Look: Western Architecture in Old Shanghai. Hong Kong: Old China Hand Press, 2004.
  • Lunt, Carroll Prescott. Some Builders of Treaty Port China, 1965.
  • Lunt, Carroll Prescott. Treaty Port: An Intimate History of Shanghai in Metrical Form. Shanghai: The China Digest 1934.
  • Maclellan, J.W. The Story of Shanghai, from the Opening of the Port to Foreign Trade. North-China Herald Office, 1889.
  • 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
  • Tang, Zhenchang, Yunzhong Lu, and Siyuan Lu. Shanghai's Journey to Prosperity, 1842-1949. Commercial Press, 1996.
  • 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.