Join the Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center in Celebrating the Grand Old Lady's 125th Anniversary
With 125 Days of Celebration, we will highlight the hotel's historical, social and economic ties to Roanoke Valley
The Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center, a Doubletree hotel, celebrates its 125th anniversary later this year with 125 days of celebration that will include special events and exhibits open to the public in recognition of the hotel's historical, social and economic ties to the Roanoke Valley.
As the community's social centerpiece since the birth of Roanoke, the Hotel Roanoke is planning events to pay tribute to the community, its employees and the many thousands of guests who have called it home.
As we celebrate our 125th Anniversary we invite you to share fond remembrances of past experiences at The Hotel Roanoke by signing our online guestbook. Take a moment to tell us about your first date in the Regency Room, a holiday spent in the hotel, your tenure, or a family member's tenure, as a past employee, etc. We appreciate your stories and thank you for being a part of our 125 years of grand hospitality. View/sign our online guestbook ».
HOTEL ROANOKE HISTORY
In 1882, Roanoke was a little town named Big Lick when enterprising railroad magnate Frederick J. Kimball chose it as the site of a railroad juncture and a major city. After Kimball combined two of his railroads into the Norfolk and Western Railroad, he built his vision of a comprehensive community with the Hotel Roanoke as its grand centerpiece. Travelers coming to the city or breaking a tiring rail journey made the Hotel Roanoke their haven. The Hotel opened its doors for the first time on Christmas Eve 1882.
1882-1989
Built in a wheat field on a little hill, the Hotel Roanoke began as a rambling wooden structure of less than three dozen rooms. As the city grew, the railroad consistently provided resources for hotel additions, remodeling and furnishings to maintain the Hotel's reputation for excellence. Even in the Depression year of 1931, the railroad spent $225,000 for a wing with 75 rooms, a 60-car garage and such "modern" amenities as circulating ice water, movable telephones and electric fans. By then the Hotel's "Queen Anne" appearance had evolved into something Tudorean, the finishing touches of which were added in the major alterations of 1937-38, when Hotel Roanoke acquired its distinctive facade and entrance. Added too were new public rooms, most of which today's guests will recognize. The history of the Hotel has been carefully preserved over the years.
In 1989, Norfolk Southern Corp., direct descendant of Kimball's Norfolk and Western Railroad, concluding that its transportation business meant rail service, not room service, closed the Hotel it had owned and operated for 107 years and gave it to the Virginia Tech Real Estate Foundation.
1993- Present
After being closed for four years, in 1993 the Hotel Roanoke began a multi-million dollar restoration and remodeling renovation project, funded by a package of public and private financing in conjunction with the City of Roanoke and Virginia Tech.
Re-opening in April 1995, Hotel Roanoke carefully preserved the past with touches such as an antique-filled lobby, original Czech-made chandeliers, a restored Regency Room (home of the signature Peanut Soup), Pine Room (formerly an Officers' Club in World War II), and the Palm Court, the original ceiling of which was painted to show the constellations as they appeared in the skies the day the first train came to Roanoke in 1852. Simultaneously, the Hotel Roanoke embraced the future by building a 63,000 square-foot meeting space, featuring state-of-the-art technology and accommodating more than 1,200 people, evolving into the Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center.
Special Guests: From Travelers and Locals to Presidents and Beauty Queens
In addition to railroad travelers and businessmen, out-of-towners in the 19th century came to Hotel Roanoke to enjoy long vacations in the mountain air. The Hotel's deep verandas, concealed from summer sun by fragrant wisteria, invited relaxation. Since the time of the Hotel's original guests have come Presidents of the United States, governors, millionaires, theater and sports stars, attendees for political and business conventions, and Miss Virginia competitors. Not as celebrated as these notables, but perhaps more important - since they have always formed the core of the Hotel's business - are countless thousands of Roanokers. From meetings, bridge parties, dances, teas and luncheons from the old days to the present, they turned the Hotel into Roanoke's social and cultural center.