Jump to content

Eagle Hotel (Concord, New Hampshire)

Coordinates: 43°12′25″N 71°32′12″W / 43.20694°N 71.53667°W / 43.20694; -71.53667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eagle Hotel
Eagle Hotel (Concord, New Hampshire) is located in New Hampshire
Eagle Hotel (Concord, New Hampshire)
Eagle Hotel (Concord, New Hampshire) is located in the United States
Eagle Hotel (Concord, New Hampshire)
Location110 N. Main St., Concord, New Hampshire
Coordinates43°12′25″N 71°32′12″W / 43.20694°N 71.53667°W / 43.20694; -71.53667
Built1827
ArchitectMultiple
Part ofDowntown Concord Historic District (ID00000652)
NRHP reference No.78000216[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPSeptember 20, 1978
Designated CPJune 9, 2000

The Eagle Hotel is a historic hotel building at 110 North Main Street in Concord, New Hampshire. Built in 1851, it has been a prominent local landmark since then, and a meeting place for state politicians, given its location across the street from the New Hampshire State House. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.[1]

Description and history

[edit]

The former Eagle Hotel is located on the north side of downtown Concord, on the east side of North Main Street. It is located directly across the street from the New Hampshire State House. It is a five-story masonry structure, with a flat roof and party walls shared with its neighbors. On the ground level, the central four bays have rounded arches leading to the main entrance to the hotel area. The outer bays are taken up by retail storefronts. The second through fourth floors have twelve bays of windows, set in rectangular openings with stone sills and lintels. The fifth floor, separated from the lower floors by a stone stringcourse, has doubled windows in each bay, and is crowned by a parapet.[2]

The oldest portions of this large brick building were built in 1851, on the site of the Eagle Coffee House, which had burned down the year before. As built then, it was four stories in height and twelve bays wide. In 1890, its original gable roof was removed, a fifth floor was built, with a flat roof. At that time the decorative cornice that now adorns the top of the building was added.[2] These alterations were designed by Worcester architect Amos P. Cutting.[3] A place where the politically powerful in the state gathered, it is portrayed in the best-selling novel of 1906, Coniston, as the "Pelican Hotel".[4]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b "NRHP nomination for Eagle Hotel". National Park Service. Retrieved October 24, 2014.
  3. ^ "NRHP nomination for Downtown Concord Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved February 28, 2014.
  4. ^ Henderson, Brooks. Winston Churchill's Country, The Bookman (New York), August 1915, pp. 607, 617