The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.
The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.
There’s luxury and there’s early twentieth-century luxury—think of sipping dry champagne while steaming along on the Orient Express, or sleeping on silken sheets aboard the Titanic. Jet airliners crossing continents had not yet been invented, but high-class hotels were all the rage, and what the White Star Line was to the Atlantic Ocean, the Hotel Astor was to the city of New York.
Located on Broadway in central Manhattan, the eleven-story hotel was built in 1905 and included a roof garden which was like a miniature Central Park, and indoors there were elaborately-themed ballrooms and restaurants, among them the American Indian Grill Room decorated with artefacts collected with the help of the American Museum of Natural History. The hotel used the following slogan to attract guests: "To have stayed at the Astor is to have lived in New York."
The only thing you needed to have lived that life was a fat wallet, as it was just for the rich and the famous of the day. It therefore seems no less than logical that the Astor’s visitors were probably formed the dream customers for any producer of true luxury goods, not least luxury automobiles. Yes, somebody came up with the idea to organise a motor show at the Hotel Astor and as far as we could discover, the first of these shows took place in 1917. The first picture shown here supposedly dates back to that particular year, with the other two dated 1918. Getting those motor cars onto the first floor may have been tricky, but what a sight! What do we see? Feel free to add your spots in the comments below.
We do not know how many motor shows took place at the Astor, but we think the last of them may have taken place in 1939, when the chandeliers were somewhat hidden from view and the lavish ornamental ceilings hidden behind straight wall facings and panels. The Hotel Astor was torn down in 1967 and replaced by a towering glass-and-steel structure.
Words: Jeroen Booij
Picture: Library of Philadelphia