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- Fort_Sumter_Hotel abstract "The Fort Sumter Hotel is an eight-story condominium building located at 1 King St., Charleston, South Carolina. Work began on April 1, 1923, and guests were accepted starting in April 1924, but the formal opening was on May 6, 1924. The hotel cost $850,000 to build. The 225-room hotel was designed by G. Lloyd Preacher of Atlanta, Georgia.The hotel was the site of a tryst between John F. Kennedy and a Danish woman with connection to the Nazis. On February 6, 1942, just after Kennedy arrived in Charleston for service with naval intelligence, he spent three nights at the Fort Sumter Hotel with a former Miss Denmark, Inga Arvad. The FBI was monitoring Arvad and taped the encounters. The information was then passed to Kennedy's father, Joseph Kennedy, who, in an effort to separate his son from Arvad, had him reassigned to a PT boat in the Pacific, the now famous PT-109. John F. Kennedy remarked, \"They shipped my ass out of town to break us up.\"Starting on July 22, 1942, the hotel was used as the headquarters for the sixth naval district for $80,000 per year.It was refurbished and reopened as a hotel in 1946.In April of 1947, Tennessee Williams and agent Audrey Wood met with Irene Selznick at the Fort Sumter Hotel to discuss her producing his newest play A Streetcar Named Desire (just recently renamed from the original title Poker Night). Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh by John Lahr, 2014, p. 127. In 1956, the hotel considered an expansion of 60 to 100 rooms to accommodate the increase in convention business seen in Charleston.In 1973, the hotel, then operated by Sheraton Hotels, was purchased for $850,000 with plans to convert the building into a condominium project with about 70 units. The condo units were expected to sell from $36,000 to $120,000 for a penthouse unit. The addition of the penthouse units resulted in the creation of an eighth floor, but the change was barely noticeable from outside since it was done by reworking the roof of the building.".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel thumbnail 1_King_Street.JPG?width=300.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageID "41180588".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageLength "4668".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageOutDegree "8".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageRevisionID "660784543".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink Atlanta.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Charleston,_South_Carolina.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink Charleston,_South_Carolina.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink G._Lloyd_Preacher.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink Inga_Arvad.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink John_F._Kennedy.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink Motor_Torpedo_Boat_PT-109.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLink File:1_King_Street.JPG.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fort Sumter Hotel".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel subject Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Charleston,_South_Carolina.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel hypernym Building.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel point "32.788766 -79.938071".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel type Building.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel type SpatialThing.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel comment "The Fort Sumter Hotel is an eight-story condominium building located at 1 King St., Charleston, South Carolina. Work began on April 1, 1923, and guests were accepted starting in April 1924, but the formal opening was on May 6, 1924. The hotel cost $850,000 to build. The 225-room hotel was designed by G. Lloyd Preacher of Atlanta, Georgia.The hotel was the site of a tryst between John F. Kennedy and a Danish woman with connection to the Nazis.".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel label "Fort Sumter Hotel".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel sameAs Q16891378.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel sameAs m.0zdtc_v.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel sameAs Q16891378.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel lat "32.788766".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel long "-79.938071".
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel wasDerivedFrom Fort_Sumter_Hotel?oldid=660784543.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel depiction 1_King_Street.JPG.
- Fort_Sumter_Hotel isPrimaryTopicOf Fort_Sumter_Hotel.