The History

The Park Hotel

The Park Hotel opened in 1915, at a time when other buildings were either newly completed, under construction, or on the drawing board. Frank Davis, who had previously been the manager of the Maxwell House in Nashville, was the Park Hotel’s first manager. The hotel’s owner was also one of its first tenants - the Realty Trust Company, with J.S. Rodriguez as its president, A.W. Chambliss as vice-president, and Emmett S. Newton as treasurer.

The prominent and prolific local architect Reuben Harrison Hunt designed the Park Hotel. Much of the financing, material, and labor came from the Chattanooga area, a fact noted in an advertisement (“a testimonial to home industry”) taken out by those who built the hotel. The Renaissance-styled hostelry was nine stories, and had 105 rooms. A solarium was on the ninth floor. Through any one of the solarium’s three glass sides, a guest could view the surrounding mountains and ridges. Guests of the hotel admired the marble floors and walls in the lobby and oak flooring in the rooms. Each room had its own bath and telephone (novel furnishings in 1915), and the structure was said to be fire-proof.

Guests of the Park Hotel likely included traveling vaudeville entertainers who performed at the shows at the nearby Bijou and Tivoli theaters. Other customers stayed overnight while in town to conduct business at the court house or at Chattanooga businesses. The Park may have occasionally welcomed the overflow of lodgers from the Read House and Hotel Patten when conventions were in town.

Newell Tower

By the 1960’s, however, many downtown hotels were in decline due to changes of the jet age. In 1963, Lester and Ruth Auerswald leased The Park as a retirement hotel. Mr. Auerswald was in the nuclear engineering division at Combustion Engineering, while his wife was operator of the Ridge Manor Nursing Home. Mrs. Auerswald, a registered nurse, had advocated the establishment of retirement centers to help the elderly to continue to maintain their own residences. She felt that the Park Hotel’s location in proximity to hospitals, stores, and churches would be a plus.

By 1964, however, the retirement center was having financial difficulty. This was followed by the announcement in 1978 that the Hamilton County government would acquire the building for $260,000 in order to provide additional space for offices. The county had previously acquired the adjacent Elks Building, and converted it to offices.

In 1981, it was announced that an $850,000 make-over would be given to the former Park Hotel - now called the Newell Towers for the former sheriff of Hamilton County, Frank Newell. Like the Hamilton Bank (now First Tennessee), Loveman’s, Miller’s, and smaller downtown buildings, the old-fashioned appearance of The Park would be hidden by modern-looking porcelain enameled panels. The first two floors, though, were left as Reuben H. Hunt had designed them.