Wilde’s Lodgings in San Francisco
Oscar Wilde arrived on the west coast by overland train on Sunday, March 26, 1882.
His train terminated at Oakland, from where he was taken by carriage to the wharf for the ferry-boat crossing to San Francisco. He was accompanied by many members of the press and a reception committee which had ferried over to Oakland at 8:00 AM that morning to meet him.
In San Francisco he was whisked away to The Palace Hotel, the largest and one of the most luxurious hotels in the world, which was to be his base for the duration of his two weeks stay in California where he lectured ten times, the first at Platt's Hall in San Francisco where lectured four times.
HISTORICAL NOTE
Built: 1873-75 (William Chapman Ralston)
Opened: October 2, 1875
Height: 120 feet (37 m); San Francisco's tallest building for over a decade
Guest rooms: 755
Destroyed (fire): Wednesday, April 18, 1906, following the San Francisco earthquake
Replaced by: the "New" Palace Hotel, opened on December 19, 1909 (extant)
The original Palace Hotel was built by San Francisco banker and entrepreneur William Chapman Ralston who heavily depended on his shaky banking empire to help finance the $5 million project. Although Ralston's Bank of California collapsed in late August 1875, and Ralston himself unexpectedly drowned in San Francisco Bay on the same day that he lost control of the institution, it did not interfere with the opening of the Palace Hotel two months later on October 2, 1875. Ralston's business partner in the project was U.S. Senator William Sharon who had helped cause the collapse of the Bank when he dumped his stock in the Comstock Lode. Sharon ended up in control of the hotel as well as both the Bank and Ralston's debts both of which he paid off at just pennies on the dollar. (Wikipedia)
WILDE WRITES FROM SAN FRANCISCO
Complete Letters, p.158 (courtesy Merlin Holland)
INTERVIEW WITH WILDE AT THE PALACE HOTEL
People I Have Met: Short Sketches of Many Prominent Persons
Mary Watson, Francis, Valentine & Company, 1890
Images are taken from the Bruce C. Cooper Collection online at Central Pacific Railroad Photographic History Museum (cprr.org) and used in accordance with this web site's fair use policy of public domain material .
For more images and information about The Palace Hotel see cprr.org/Museum/Palace_Hotel_SF/