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When The Astors Owned New York
Justin Kaplan

When The Astors Owned New York

Blue Bloods and Grand Hotels in a Gilded Age

Viking Press (Jun 01, 2006)
9780670037698
| Hardcover
208 pages | 152 x 231 mm | English
Dewey 647.94097471
LC Classification TX941.W33 .K39 2006
LC Control No. 2005057471

Subject

  • Business & Economics / Economic History
  • Hotels
  • Hotels/ New York (State)/ New York/ History
  • Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (New York, N.Y.)
  • Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (New York, N.Y.)/ History

Plot

This newest book by Pulitzer Prize winner Justin Kaplan is a sparkling combination of biography, social history, architectural appreciation, and pure pleasure Endowed with the largest private fortunes of their day, two heirs of arch-capitalist John Jacob Astor battled with each other for social primacy. William Waldorf Astor (born 1848) and his cousin John Jacob Astor IV (born 1864) led incomparably privileged lives in the blaze of public attention. Novelist, sportsman, and inventor, John Jacob went down with the Titanic, after turbulent marital adventures and service in the Spanish-American War. Collector of art, antiquities, and stately homes, William Waldorf became a British subject and acquired the title of Viscount Astor. In New York during the 1890s and after, the two feuding Astors built monumental grand hotels, chief among them the original Waldorf-Astoria on lower Fifth Avenue. The Astor hotels transformed social behavior. Home of the chafing dish and the velvet rope, the Waldorf-Astoria drew the rich, famous, and fashionable. It was the setting for the most notorious society event of the era—a costume extravaganza put on by its hosts during a time of widespread need and unemployment. The celebrity-packed lobbies, public rooms, lavish suites, and exclusive restaurants of the grand hotels became distinctive theaters of modern life.

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Added Date Jun 16, 2018 19:48:38
Modified Date Jun 16, 2018 19:48:38