Nacogoches

Nacogoches

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

The Banita Hotel (1896)


 Rulfs was commissioned by Norvell Green Wade, a wealthy farmer from the Liberty Community. 


Giles Haltom, in his 1906 Special Edition of the Daily Sentinel, Described the Banita Hotel as follows. 

" Nacogdoches is particularly fortunate in possessing excellent hotel facilities and they have done a great deal toward making the town popular with the traveling public and are a matter of pride to the citizenship of the city. The Banita Hotel, of which a photo-engraving of which is given in the edition, is one of the largest hostelries in East Texas and has afforded accommodations to the traveling public for the past fifteen years, which is sufficient evidence of its popularity. The Banita is a two-story structure located on the beautiful Banita creek, from which it derives its name. It contains all modern improvements, is nicely furnished throughout, and in every respect is a modern up-to-date hotel that would do credit to a town of double the population of Nacogdoches. The building contains forty large rooms, a large spacious dining room and lobby. The menu is of the highest order, well prepared and wholesome. Polite attendants are maintained in all departments and the service in every respect is all that could be desired."


The Banita Hotel, circa 1900. The Banita Hotel was located on Pilar Street in Nacogdoches.

 

 The two-story Banita Hotel, described aptly in one source, as "Similar to resort hotels on the East Coast," had thirty-two rooms originally. In 1901, Rulfs designed, and his brother William Henry Rulfs built a ten room addition to the east. The addition had long galleries' on two levels and "a number of convivences and comforts to be found in an up-to-date hotel's". 

In an interview in December 1980, Wades Grandson  Richard Wade McKinney said the rooms were furnished with marble top stands with a water pitcher, and had wood stoves for heat. McKinney said the hotel was first painted "brown with white trim;" later accounts site other colors the front corner section housed the office, the lobby and living quarters for the proprietor. There was also a huge attic. The west wing along the Banita Creek housed the kitchen, and behind that behind the kitchen there was a large  woodpile. because of the heat of the kitchen the rooms abode it were used for storage.


John Richard Edward McKinney


Ownership of the Banita stayed in the Wade family  after the death of Wade himself, at first under the management of Mrs. Wade and later, under the ownership of her son-in-law John Richard McKinney (1876-1951). Because Mrs. Wade was an excellent cook the Hotel was a popular "gathering place for locals" during the Wade-McKinney ownership. 

Zeno Cox another son-in-law and third owner of the hotel, turned the Hotel in 1920 into East and West Banita Apartments. Cox called on Rulfs to provide him with direction. 

In 1926 a fire, in which two people were killed, destroyed the west apartments. The old east wing from 1901, remodeled in 1920, still survives today at 210 West Pillar as the Ford Photography Studio.


Photo by CJ McLaughlin

Photo taken by CJ McLaughlin 


Taken from Diedrich Rulfs Designing Modern Nacogdoches by: Jere Jackson, 2014-pg:53.



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