The Eola
Hotel in Natchez was built in 1927 and designed by the architectural firm of
Weiss, Dreyfous & Seiferth, Inc. of New Orleans. Weiss, Dreyfous &
Seiferth designed a number of prominent public buildings in the 1920-1930s,
many of them commissioned by Louisiana Governor Huey P. Long, including the “new” Louisiana
State Capitol in Baton Rouge and several buildings on the campus of Louisiana
State University. In addition to the Eola Hotel (right), the firm also designed the
Jung Hotel and Pontchartrain Hotel
in New Orleans, all in the late 1920s. They also worked on a number of
commercial buildings and experimented with more modern designs in the 1930s,
including the iconic Walgreen Drug Store on Canal Street in New Orleans
(below, right), completed in 1938. 
Financing
for the new hotel came from the Natchez Investment Corporation, whose president
and president of the board of directors were brothers Leon M. Levy and Isidore
Levy, respectively. Upon completion, the hotel was leased to the Eola Hotel
Corporation, composed mostly of members of the Natchez Investment Corporation.
Built at a cost of $750,000, the seven-story hotel at the corner of Pearl
Street and Main Street included a coffee shop, dining room (known as the “Palm
Room”), auditorium, banquet hall and a rooftop garden. Linking the Main Street
façade with the lobby on the Pearl Street façade was a long hall known as “Peacock
Alley,” which originally included a series of recessed arches with settees in
each archway. The hotel was named for Isidore’s daughter, Eola Levy, who was born
in New Orleans in 1893 and died prior to the grand opening of the hotel on July
1, 1927, an event hailed by the Natchez Democrat as a great “symbol of civic
progress.” This photo (above) was taken just two weeks after the hotel opened. Unfortunately, within a few years, the Natchez Investment Corporation
faltered and ultimately defaulted on its mortgage, a victim of the Great
Depression. As a result, the hotel and its contents were sold at auction in
1931.
This glass came from the old Eola Hotel, and includes
the slogan "Where the Old South Still Lives"
(Photo courtesy of Kevin O'Malley, Jackson, MS)
PHOTO AND IMAGE SOURCES:
(1) Natchez Eola exterior: http://www.tripadvisor.com
(2) Solis Seiferth: http://knowla.org
(3) Walgreens on Canal: http://www.flickr.com
(4) Eola (1927): http://knowla.org
(5) Eola interior: http://www.expedia.com
(1) Natchez Eola exterior: http://www.tripadvisor.com
(2) Solis Seiferth: http://knowla.org
(3) Walgreens on Canal: http://www.flickr.com
(4) Eola (1927): http://knowla.org
(5) Eola interior: http://www.expedia.com
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