At the same site as the first hotel, Francis Cornwall Sherman built a new structure, breaking ground on May 1, 1860, and opening the new structure to guests on July 1, 1861.[3] The structure was designed by William W.

The Southern Hotel was a historic hotel located at the corner of 4th Street and Walnut Street and stretching between 4th and 5th Streets in St. Louis, Missouri. The building was built at the location of the Old Southern Hotel which burned in 1877. This 1877 hotel fire and the loss of life that occurred here made this the worst hotel disaster in St. Louis history. The new Southern Hotel had white marble, extensive fresco work, a rotunda, and a wide promenade. The hotel was owned by Robert G.

 In 1859 Broadway near Madison Square saw the opening of two magnificent new hotels.  Amos R. Eno opened his Fifth Avenue Hotel, which engulfed the block front from 23rd Street to 24th, on August 23, 1859.   But his was not the first.  By January that year another white marble had opened, the St. James.

Referred to as Victoria in Bædeker Switzerland (1877) Route 28 page 109


 

Westminster Hotel, cor. of Irving Place and 16th St. New York Roberts & Palmer Prop

From Explanatory Notes:  

The current hotel was founded by Henry Willard, a former Chief Steward on The Steamer "Niagara" on the Hudson River, personally suggested by “Ogle” Tayloe’s second wife, Miss Phoebe Warren, formerly of Troy, New York, in 1847; when he leased the six buildings, combined them into a single structure, and enlarged it into a four-story hotel he renamed Willard's Hotel.[2][8]

The Windsor Hotel was located at 575 Fifth Avenue (at the corner of East 47th Street) in ManhattanNew York.

The Hotel Wolcott at 4 West 31st Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues in the Midtown East neighborhood of ManhattanNew York City, United States was bu

Young's Hotel (1860–1927) in BostonMassachusetts, was located on Court Street in the Financial District,[1] in a building designed by William Washburn.