Boston Region 1922 - Hotels / Prices
Posted: Mon Feb 25, 2013 7:06 pm
Ok, here are some prices for actual Hotels from ads listed in the Boston Globe. Cost is listed per day/week. This is as of August 1922.
Most of the Hotels had a large amount of rooms like 80 up to 150. Although I get the feeling they were for bachelor types/ or anyone who needed a place for an extended amount of time. Sort of like a YMCA or maybe a motel but with one big building and a lot more rooms. My example is the cost. The typical daily/weekly cost adds up to a monthly cost that is comparable to what you would pay for apartment/boarding house rent as you will see below:
Putnams' Hotel - 284 Huntington Ave. Between the Boston Opera House and Symphony Hall. 10 minutes from the Theater District. 80 rooms, hot and cold running water, electric lights. $7-15/week $1-3/day. Restaurant and cafeteria.
(The above is directly from an add for the Putnam so you can get an idea of a typical listing)
Hotel Edwards - Bowdoin Street (near State House): $1-3/daily or $6-12/weekly
Hotel Lucerne - 66 Causeway Street (next to North Station): $4.50+/week
Hotel Windsor - 18 Bowdoin Street .75c - $1.50/ daily
Hotel Washington - Northampton Street
Majestic Hotel - Bowdoin Square
(I didn't get a price for these two but I assume they are comparable to the others)
What I am wondering about is the respectability of hotels at the time. I keep thinking of it as the place men went when they were kicked out of the house. "Charlie? He's been staying down at the ... hotel ... since they had that fight." Or a place for semi-respectable people with a legitimate reason. Salesmen (up to no good), sailors (up to no good), bachelors (up to no good), visiting professors (definitely up to no good at least in Call of Cthulhu), etc..
Does anyone know if they were thought of as just second class homes or did the typical housewife for example, think of it as a place where drunkards stayed and prostitutes went? Or like anywhere else, it just depended on the places reputation. If you have an idea please mention it. It's not a big deal but I am casually interested. Not just in the reputations either. How they were used at the time, things like that.
Most of the Hotels had a large amount of rooms like 80 up to 150. Although I get the feeling they were for bachelor types/ or anyone who needed a place for an extended amount of time. Sort of like a YMCA or maybe a motel but with one big building and a lot more rooms. My example is the cost. The typical daily/weekly cost adds up to a monthly cost that is comparable to what you would pay for apartment/boarding house rent as you will see below:
Putnams' Hotel - 284 Huntington Ave. Between the Boston Opera House and Symphony Hall. 10 minutes from the Theater District. 80 rooms, hot and cold running water, electric lights. $7-15/week $1-3/day. Restaurant and cafeteria.
(The above is directly from an add for the Putnam so you can get an idea of a typical listing)
Hotel Edwards - Bowdoin Street (near State House): $1-3/daily or $6-12/weekly
Hotel Lucerne - 66 Causeway Street (next to North Station): $4.50+/week
Hotel Windsor - 18 Bowdoin Street .75c - $1.50/ daily
Hotel Washington - Northampton Street
Majestic Hotel - Bowdoin Square
(I didn't get a price for these two but I assume they are comparable to the others)
What I am wondering about is the respectability of hotels at the time. I keep thinking of it as the place men went when they were kicked out of the house. "Charlie? He's been staying down at the ... hotel ... since they had that fight." Or a place for semi-respectable people with a legitimate reason. Salesmen (up to no good), sailors (up to no good), bachelors (up to no good), visiting professors (definitely up to no good at least in Call of Cthulhu), etc..
Does anyone know if they were thought of as just second class homes or did the typical housewife for example, think of it as a place where drunkards stayed and prostitutes went? Or like anywhere else, it just depended on the places reputation. If you have an idea please mention it. It's not a big deal but I am casually interested. Not just in the reputations either. How they were used at the time, things like that.