Santa Monica’s Historic Fairmont Miramar Hotel
A Celebrity Hideaway
By Valerie Summers
My mother has always insisted that a change is better than
a rest. With this in mind, I booked a weekend stay at one of Santa Monica’s
landmark hotels, the Fairmont Miramar, situated on the bluffs overlooking the
blue Pacific Ocean. I eagerly anticipated my stay as I made my way up the long
driveway to the lobby passing under the Miramar Family Moreton Bay Fig Tree.
The enormous century old tree stands more than 80 feet high with a very
impressive 120 foot network of branches.
The now posh hotel began as a residence for John P. Jones,
a former senator from Nevada who made his fortune mining silver back in the late
1800’s. He arrived in Southern California with plans to build a railroad and
harbor to transport his silver bouillon to the U.S. Mint in San Francisco.
Together with his business partner, Colonel Robert Baker, he created the town of
Santa Monica and decided on the perfect location to build his family mansion at
what is now the corner of Wilshire and Ocean Park. He fell in love with the
beautiful vista and so did I.
During the time Jones and
his family called the Miramar their home, many of the nation’s leading artists
and public figures vacationed there. Guests enjoyed the lush sub-tropical
gardens containing rare, exotic plants brought to California from every part of
the world and today’s guests continue to appreciate the hotel’s verdant
landscape and pool area.
Jones named his residence Miramar, Spanish for “view of the
sea.” Eventually he donated some of the city’s finest property on the bluff
just across the street from what is now the Fairmont Miramar which walkers,
runners, sunbathers and sightseers continue to enjoy. The family sold their
home shortly before the Senator died in 1912 to King C. Gillette, the inventor
of the safety razor. He rarely visited the area and in 1921 the estate was sold
to hotelier Gilbert Stevenson. One of the new owner’s earliest and most popular
changes was to convert the Senator’s elegant and well-stocked library to a
bar. The prosperity of the Roaring Twenties turned Santa Monica into a
popular seaside resort with the Miramar as the city’s leading hotel.
In 1924, a brick building was constructed to provide
apartments for guests who planned lengthy stays at the beach. One of the first
to move in was a very young unknown actress named Greta Garbo. She became the
first of many celebrities who favored the Miramar as their getaway including
Senator and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, Marilyn Monroe, Cary Grant, Doris Day, Louis
Jordon and Susan Hayward, Eleanor Roosevelt, Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren
and aviator Charles Lindbergh who all enjoyed the privacy of the garden
bungalows. During the 1990’s, to name a few, the hotel welcomed Steven
Spielberg, Barbra Streisand, Rosa Parks, Denzel Washington and Quincy Jones.
More recently President Bill Clinton, Hugh Hefner, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Helen
Mirren, Paul Newman, Shaquille O’Neal, Gyyneth Paltrow, Sean Penn, Hilary Swank
and our own governator Arnold Schwarznegger have been counted among the guests.
The hotel continues as the site of numerous entertainment industry meetings and
gatherings and has been featured in a plethora of popular TV shows and movies.
A variety of other owners of the hotel came and went and in
1999, Maritz, Wolffe & Co., a private investment fund that owns several of the
world’s finest hotels and resorts became the new owners. They brought the
Fairmont Hotels and Resorts on board to manage the property at which time a 16
million dollar renovation was undertaken.
Entering the luxuriously modern lobby
with gleaming marble floors, elegant seating arrangements and glorious floral
displays, the hotel’s history drifted from my mind as I was swept up into all
the conveniences of the 21st century. Before proceeding to my guest room on the
8th floor, I headed toward The Grille, an indoor-outdoor casually elegant dining
area, its walls filled with photographs of Hollywood celebrities of today and
yesteryear. Making my way out onto the patio, I stopped to admire the huge and
beautiful koi and playful turtles in the rock pond and made a mental note to
return at cocktail hour.
As a woman who often travels alone, I was pleased to
discover the hotel’s “Single & The City” room package which includes a deluxe
room, continental breakfast and amenity kit with information and maps of
interesting things to do while visiting Santa Monica. GM Paul Ohm pointed out
that “Santa Monica is not only a safe city for the male or female traveler, but
because it is a popular beach city destination, the list of things to do is
quite extensive and includes historic walking tours, working out at the 4th
Street Stairs, catching the latest improve comedy show or checking out the shops
and restaurants along the Third Street Promenade.” A spa element is also
available for this package as an add-on option by Exhale Mind Body Spa.
When I finally arrived at my well
appointed, tranquil guest room I was delighted to find a terrace which
overlooked the gardens and pool to the east and Palisades Park and Pacific to
the west. There was no question that this is where I would enjoy breakfast the
next morning. As planned, I later stopped at the Koi Pond for a cocktail that
evening before strolling one block over to catch the night life at the always
lively Third Street Promenade.
Mother was partially right. The change was wonderful but
so was the rest at the historic Fairmont Miramar Hotel.
For information:
The Fairmont Miramar Hotel
101 Wilshire Blvd.
Santa Monica, CA 90401
310/576-7777
www.fairmont.com
Images: Valerie Summers
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