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Conrad Hilton

Conrad Nicholson Hilton (December 25, 1887 – January 3, 1979) was an American businessman who founded the Hilton Hotels chain. From 1912 to 1916, Hilton was a Republican representative in the first New Mexico Legislature, but became disillusioned with the "inside deals" of politics. In 1919, he purchased his first hotel, the Mobley Hotel in Cisco, Texas, for $40,000, and subsequently capitalized on the oil boom. The rooms were rented out in eight-hour shifts. He continued to buy and sell hotels, and eventually established the world's first international hotel chain. When he died in 1979, he left the bulk of his estate to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation.

Conrad Hilton
Hilton in 1962
Member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
from the 2nd district
In office
1912–1916
Preceded byLegislature established
Succeeded byQuianu Robinson
Personal details
Born
Conrad Nicholson Hilton

(1887-12-25)December 25, 1887
San Antonio, Socorro County, New Mexico Territory, U.S.
DiedJanuary 3, 1979(1979-01-03) (aged 91)
Santa Monica, California, U.S.
Resting placeCalvary Hill Cemetery, Dallas, Texas, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouses
Mary Adelaide Barron
(m. 1925; div. 1934)
(m. 1942; div. 1947)
Mary Frances Kelly
(m. 1976)
Children
RelativesHilton family
OccupationHotelier
Known forHilton Hotels & Resorts

Early life edit

 
Quianu Robinson

Hilton was born in San Antonio, Socorro County, New Mexico, to Norwegian-born Augustus Halvorsen Hilton (1854–1919) and Mary Genevieve Laufersweiler, a devout Catholic of German descent.[1] He attended the Goss Military Academy (since renamed as the New Mexico Military Institute) and St. Michael's College (later called the Santa Fe University of Art and Design), and the New Mexico School of Mines (now New Mexico Tech). From 1912 to 1916, Hilton was a Republican representative in the first New Mexico Legislature, when the state was newly formed. Hilton became frustrated with the "bureaucracy, slowness, cheating, lying, and inside deals of politics,"[1] and in 1916, he refused to run for a fourth term, instead endorsing his longtime political ally, Quianu Robinson.[2]

He served two years in the United States Army during World War I. After completing Officer Training School, he became a second lieutenant, and served in Paris in the Quartermaster Corps.[3] While Conrad was in France with the army after the war, his father was killed in a car accident.[4]

The most enduring influences to shape Hilton's philanthropic philosophy, beyond that of his parents, were the Catholic Church and his sisters. He credited his mother with guiding him to prayer and the church whenever he was troubled or dismayed—from the boyhood loss of a beloved pony, to severe financial losses during the Great Depression. His mother continually told him that prayer was the best investment he would ever make.[4]

Career edit

As a young boy, Hilton developed entrepreneurial skills working at his father's general store in Socorro County, New Mexico, which was partially converted into a 10-room hotel.[5][6] This was followed by varied experiences, including a stint as a representative in New Mexico's first State Legislature, and a career decision to become a banker.

 
Mobley Hotel in Cisco, Texas.

It was intending to buy a bank that he arrived in Texas at the height of the Texas oil boom. In 1919, he bought his first hotel instead, the 40-room Mobley Hotel in Cisco, Texas,[5] when a bank purchase fell through. The hotel did such brisk business that rooms changed hands as often as three times a day, and the dining room was converted into additional rooms to meet the demand.[4][7] He went on to buy and build hotels throughout Texas, including the high-rise Dallas Hilton, which opened in 1925; the Abilene Hilton in 1927; Waco Hilton in 1928; and El Paso Hilton in 1930. The first hotel outside of Texas that Hilton built was in 1939 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Today, it is known as the Hotel Andaluz. During the Great Depression, Hilton was nearly forced into bankruptcy and lost several of his hotels. Nevertheless, he was retained as manager of a combined chain, and eventually regained control of his remaining eight hotels.

Over the next decade, he expanded west to California and east to Chicago and New York, crowning his expansions with such acquisitions as the Stevens Hotel in Chicago (then the world's largest hotel; it was renamed the Conrad Hilton), and the fabled Waldorf-Astoria in New York City. He formed the Hilton Hotels Corporation in 1946, and Hilton International Company in 1948.

During the 1950s and 1960s, Hilton Hotels' worldwide expansion facilitated both American tourism and overseas business by American corporations. It was the world's first international hotel chain, at the same time establishing a certain worldwide standard for hotel accommodations. In 1954, Hilton Hotels bought The Hotels Statler Company, Inc. for $111 million, then the world's largest real estate transaction. In all, Hilton eventually owned 188 hotels in 38 cities across the U.S., including the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C.; the Palmer House in Chicago; and the Plaza Hotel and Waldorf-Astoria in New York City, along with 54 hotels abroad. He later purchased the Carte Blanche Credit Company and an interest in the American Crystal Sugar Company, as well as other enterprises.

Hilton received honorary degrees from the University of Detroit (1953), DePaul University (1954), Barat College (1955), Adelphi College (1957), Sophia University, Tokyo (1963), and the University of Albuquerque (1975). Hilton's autobiography, Be My Guest,[8] was published in 1958 by Prentice Hall. In 1966, Hilton was succeeded as president by his son, Barron, and was elected chairman of the board.

Personal life edit

In 1925, Hilton married Mary Adelaide Barron (1906–1966). They had three sons, Conrad Hilton Jr., Barron Hilton, and Eric Hilton, before divorcing in 1934.[citation needed]

In 1942, Hilton married actress Zsa Zsa Gabor. They had one child, a daughter, Francesca Hilton, before divorcing in 1947. Gabor wrote in her 1991 autobiography One Lifetime Is Not Enough that she became pregnant by Hilton only after he raped her during their marriage.[9] Francesca died in 2015, at age 67, from a stroke.[10]

In 1950, Hilton bought Casa Encantada at 10644 Bellagio Road in Bel Air, Los Angeles, and occupied the house until he died in 1979. Hilton described his enchantment with the house as "... a case of love at first sight... I couldn't resist it, one of the fabulous houses of the world." He renamed the property the Casa Encantada ("enchanted house").[11]

In 1957, Hilton was initiated as a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity at New Mexico State University.[12]

In 1976, Hilton married Mary Frances Kelly. Their marriage lasted until his death three years later in 1979.

On January 3, 1979, Hilton died of pneumonia[13] at the age of 91. He was interred at Calvary Hill Cemetery, a Catholic cemetery in Dallas, Texas. He left US$500,000 (equivalent to $1.7 million in 2023) to his two surviving sons, US$100,000 (equivalent to $340,000 in 2023) to his daughter, Francesca, and US$10,000 (equivalent to $34,000 in 2023) to each of his nieces and nephews.[citation needed]

Hilton family fortune edit

In 1969, James C. Taylor presented plans to build a hospitality college on the campus of the University of Houston to Barron Hilton. Barron then presented the plans to his father, who donated US$1.5 million (equivalent to $9.6 million in 2023) for the completion of the project. The Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management opened to students in September 1969.[citation needed]

The bulk of Conrad Hilton's estate was left to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation,[citation needed] which he established in 1944. His son, Barron Hilton, who spent much of his career helping build the Hilton Hotels Corporation, contested the will—despite having left the company as acting president, chief executive officer, and chairman of the board of directors. A settlement was reached, and as a result, Barron Hilton received 4 million shares of the hotel enterprise, the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation received 3.5 million shares, and the remaining 6 million shares were placed in the W. Barron Hilton Charitable Remainder Unitrust.[citation needed] Upon Barron Hilton's death, Unitrust assets were transferred to the Hilton Foundation,[14] of which Barron previously served on the Board of Directors as chairman.[15]

In 1983, the Hilton Foundation donated US$21.3 million (equivalent to $54.8 million in 2023) to expand facilities and increase endowment. That gift led to the construction of the South Wing, which opened in 1989, and added 94,000 square feet (8,700 m2) of education and meeting space to Hilton College.[citation needed]

On December 25, 2007, Barron Hilton announced that he would leave about 97% of his fortune, then estimated at US$2.36 billion (equivalent to $3.3 billion in 2023),[15] to a charitable unitrust that would eventually be merged with the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation.[16] By leaving his estate to the Foundation, Barron not only donated the fortune he had amassed on his own, but also returned to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation the Hilton family fortune amassed by his father, which otherwise would have gone to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation 30 years earlier, had Barron not contested his father's will.[17]

Legacy edit

Autobiographies edit

  • Be My Guest: Autobiography of Conrad Hilton (Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1958)
  • Inspirations of an Innkeeper (privately printed, 1963)

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Hoover, Gary (April 24, 2018). "Conrad Hilton: The Dreamer Who Conquered an Industry". Archbridge Institute. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
  2. ^ The Silver Spade: The Conrad Hilton Story. Farrar, Straus and Young. 1954.
  3. ^ "Determination in adversity: the story of Conrad Hilton", The Insider: The Magazine of Glion Institute of Higher Education, October 22, 2020. Retrieved July 14, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c "Be My Guest" by Conrad Hilton, copyright 1958 by the Prentice Hall Press
  5. ^ a b The Handbook of Texas Online (Texas State Historical Association).
  6. ^ The never-ending quest to build a hotel in space.
  7. ^ Associated Press. "Modest Inn at Cisco Began Hotel String of Conrad Hilton," Big Spring Daily Herald, November 21, 1963, p. 12-A.
  8. ^ Be My Guest, Autobiography of Conrad Hilton March 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. ^ Bennetts, Leslie (September 6, 2007). "It's a Mad, Mad, Zsa Zsa World". Vanity Fair. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  10. ^ Lee, Kurtis (January 6, 2015). "Francesca Hilton, daughter of Zsa Zsa Gabor and Conrad Hilton, dies at 67". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  11. ^ Jeffrey Hyland (2008). The Legendary Estates of Beverly Hills. Random House. ISBN 978-0-8478-3162-3.
  12. ^ "Distinguished Alumni". Tau Kappa Epsilon. Retrieved December 7, 2023.
  13. ^ Long, Trish (January 4, 1979). "Conrad Hilton dies at 91". El Paso Times.
  14. ^ "Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Announces the Death of Barron Hilton".
  15. ^ a b . Planned Giving Design Center, LLC. December 26, 2007. Archived from the original on March 19, 2011. Retrieved April 2, 2011.
  16. ^ "Hilton fortune to go to charity". BBC News. December 27, 2007. Retrieved April 26, 2010.
  17. ^ "Conrad Hilton". The Philanthropy Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 23, 2023.

Sources edit

  • Alef, Daniel. Conrad N. Hilton: Reveled in Hotel Deals (Titans of Fortune Publishing, 2009)
  • Bolton, Whitney. The Silver Spade; the Conrad Hilton Story. with a foreword by Conrad Hilton (New York: Farrar, Straus and Young, 1954)
  • Comfort, Mildred Houghton. Conrad N. Hilton, Hotelier (Minneapolis: T.S. Denison & Company, Inc., 1965)
  • Dabney, Thomas Ewing. The Man Who Bought the Waldorf: The Life of Conrad N. Hilton (Duell Sloan & Pearce, 1950)
  • Oppenheimer, Jerry. House of Hilton: From Conrad to Paris: A Drama of Wealth, Power, and Privilege (Three Rivers Press. 2007)
  • Hilton, Conrad N. Be My Guest (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1958)

External links edit

  • Biography: Conrad Hilton, The Innkeeper to The World November 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine (Video)
  • Conrad N. Hilton College at University of Houston
  • Conrad Hilton, Collector of Hotels (New York Times Magazine, 1949)
  • (Time, 1963)
  • (Time, 1949)
  • (Time, 1949)
  • Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
  • San Angelo's Heartbreak Hotel History of second Hilton hotel built in San Angelo, TX in 1928, and Conrad Hilton's bankruptcy (San Angelo Live!, 2007)
  • – image slideshow by Life
  • Conrad N. Hilton early life in New Mexico

conrad, hilton, this, article, about, former, hotel, hilton, chicago, chain, hotels, hilton, conrad, hotels, conrad, nicholson, hilton, december, 1887, january, 1979, american, businessman, founded, hilton, hotels, chain, from, 1912, 1916, hilton, republican, . This article is about Conrad Hilton Sr For his son see Conrad Hilton Jr For the former Conrad Hilton hotel see Hilton Chicago For the chain of hotels by Hilton see Conrad Hotels Conrad Nicholson Hilton December 25 1887 January 3 1979 was an American businessman who founded the Hilton Hotels chain From 1912 to 1916 Hilton was a Republican representative in the first New Mexico Legislature but became disillusioned with the inside deals of politics In 1919 he purchased his first hotel the Mobley Hotel in Cisco Texas for 40 000 and subsequently capitalized on the oil boom The rooms were rented out in eight hour shifts He continued to buy and sell hotels and eventually established the world s first international hotel chain When he died in 1979 he left the bulk of his estate to the Conrad N Hilton Foundation Conrad HiltonHilton in 1962Member of the New Mexico House of Representatives from the 2nd districtIn office 1912 1916Preceded byLegislature establishedSucceeded byQuianu RobinsonPersonal detailsBornConrad Nicholson Hilton 1887 12 25 December 25 1887San Antonio Socorro County New Mexico Territory U S DiedJanuary 3 1979 1979 01 03 aged 91 Santa Monica California U S Resting placeCalvary Hill Cemetery Dallas Texas U S Political partyRepublicanSpousesMary Adelaide Barron m 1925 div 1934 wbr Zsa Zsa Gabor m 1942 div 1947 wbr Mary Frances Kelly m 1976 wbr ChildrenConrad Jr BarronEricFrancescaRelativesHilton familyOccupationHotelierKnown forHilton Hotels amp Resorts Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 3 1 Hilton family fortune 4 Legacy 5 Autobiographies 6 Citations 7 Sources 8 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Quianu Robinson Hilton was born in San Antonio Socorro County New Mexico to Norwegian born Augustus Halvorsen Hilton 1854 1919 and Mary Genevieve Laufersweiler a devout Catholic of German descent 1 He attended the Goss Military Academy since renamed as the New Mexico Military Institute and St Michael s College later called the Santa Fe University of Art and Design and the New Mexico School of Mines now New Mexico Tech From 1912 to 1916 Hilton was a Republican representative in the first New Mexico Legislature when the state was newly formed Hilton became frustrated with the bureaucracy slowness cheating lying and inside deals of politics 1 and in 1916 he refused to run for a fourth term instead endorsing his longtime political ally Quianu Robinson 2 He served two years in the United States Army during World War I After completing Officer Training School he became a second lieutenant and served in Paris in the Quartermaster Corps 3 While Conrad was in France with the army after the war his father was killed in a car accident 4 The most enduring influences to shape Hilton s philanthropic philosophy beyond that of his parents were the Catholic Church and his sisters He credited his mother with guiding him to prayer and the church whenever he was troubled or dismayed from the boyhood loss of a beloved pony to severe financial losses during the Great Depression His mother continually told him that prayer was the best investment he would ever make 4 Career editAs a young boy Hilton developed entrepreneurial skills working at his father s general store in Socorro County New Mexico which was partially converted into a 10 room hotel 5 6 This was followed by varied experiences including a stint as a representative in New Mexico s first State Legislature and a career decision to become a banker nbsp Mobley Hotel in Cisco Texas It was intending to buy a bank that he arrived in Texas at the height of the Texas oil boom In 1919 he bought his first hotel instead the 40 room Mobley Hotel in Cisco Texas 5 when a bank purchase fell through The hotel did such brisk business that rooms changed hands as often as three times a day and the dining room was converted into additional rooms to meet the demand 4 7 He went on to buy and build hotels throughout Texas including the high rise Dallas Hilton which opened in 1925 the Abilene Hilton in 1927 Waco Hilton in 1928 and El Paso Hilton in 1930 The first hotel outside of Texas that Hilton built was in 1939 in Albuquerque New Mexico Today it is known as the Hotel Andaluz During the Great Depression Hilton was nearly forced into bankruptcy and lost several of his hotels Nevertheless he was retained as manager of a combined chain and eventually regained control of his remaining eight hotels Over the next decade he expanded west to California and east to Chicago and New York crowning his expansions with such acquisitions as the Stevens Hotel in Chicago then the world s largest hotel it was renamed the Conrad Hilton and the fabled Waldorf Astoria in New York City He formed the Hilton Hotels Corporation in 1946 and Hilton International Company in 1948 During the 1950s and 1960s Hilton Hotels worldwide expansion facilitated both American tourism and overseas business by American corporations It was the world s first international hotel chain at the same time establishing a certain worldwide standard for hotel accommodations In 1954 Hilton Hotels bought The Hotels Statler Company Inc for 111 million then the world s largest real estate transaction In all Hilton eventually owned 188 hotels in 38 cities across the U S including the Mayflower Hotel in Washington D C the Palmer House in Chicago and the Plaza Hotel and Waldorf Astoria in New York City along with 54 hotels abroad He later purchased the Carte Blanche Credit Company and an interest in the American Crystal Sugar Company as well as other enterprises Hilton received honorary degrees from the University of Detroit 1953 DePaul University 1954 Barat College 1955 Adelphi College 1957 Sophia University Tokyo 1963 and the University of Albuquerque 1975 Hilton s autobiography Be My Guest 8 was published in 1958 by Prentice Hall In 1966 Hilton was succeeded as president by his son Barron and was elected chairman of the board Personal life editIn 1925 Hilton married Mary Adelaide Barron 1906 1966 They had three sons Conrad Hilton Jr Barron Hilton and Eric Hilton before divorcing in 1934 citation needed In 1942 Hilton married actress Zsa Zsa Gabor They had one child a daughter Francesca Hilton before divorcing in 1947 Gabor wrote in her 1991 autobiography One Lifetime Is Not Enough that she became pregnant by Hilton only after he raped her during their marriage 9 Francesca died in 2015 at age 67 from a stroke 10 In 1950 Hilton bought Casa Encantada at 10644 Bellagio Road in Bel Air Los Angeles and occupied the house until he died in 1979 Hilton described his enchantment with the house as a case of love at first sight I couldn t resist it one of the fabulous houses of the world He renamed the property the Casa Encantada enchanted house 11 In 1957 Hilton was initiated as a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity at New Mexico State University 12 In 1976 Hilton married Mary Frances Kelly Their marriage lasted until his death three years later in 1979 On January 3 1979 Hilton died of pneumonia 13 at the age of 91 He was interred at Calvary Hill Cemetery a Catholic cemetery in Dallas Texas He left US 500 000 equivalent to 1 7 million in 2023 to his two surviving sons US 100 000 equivalent to 340 000 in 2023 to his daughter Francesca and US 10 000 equivalent to 34 000 in 2023 to each of his nieces and nephews citation needed Hilton family fortune edit In 1969 James C Taylor presented plans to build a hospitality college on the campus of the University of Houston to Barron Hilton Barron then presented the plans to his father who donated US 1 5 million equivalent to 9 6 million in 2023 for the completion of the project The Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management opened to students in September 1969 citation needed The bulk of Conrad Hilton s estate was left to the Conrad N Hilton Foundation citation needed which he established in 1944 His son Barron Hilton who spent much of his career helping build the Hilton Hotels Corporation contested the will despite having left the company as acting president chief executive officer and chairman of the board of directors A settlement was reached and as a result Barron Hilton received 4 million shares of the hotel enterprise the Conrad N Hilton Foundation received 3 5 million shares and the remaining 6 million shares were placed in the W Barron Hilton Charitable Remainder Unitrust citation needed Upon Barron Hilton s death Unitrust assets were transferred to the Hilton Foundation 14 of which Barron previously served on the Board of Directors as chairman 15 In 1983 the Hilton Foundation donated US 21 3 million equivalent to 54 8 million in 2023 to expand facilities and increase endowment That gift led to the construction of the South Wing which opened in 1989 and added 94 000 square feet 8 700 m2 of education and meeting space to Hilton College citation needed On December 25 2007 Barron Hilton announced that he would leave about 97 of his fortune then estimated at US 2 36 billion equivalent to 3 3 billion in 2023 15 to a charitable unitrust that would eventually be merged with the Conrad N Hilton Foundation 16 By leaving his estate to the Foundation Barron not only donated the fortune he had amassed on his own but also returned to the Conrad N Hilton Foundation the Hilton family fortune amassed by his father which otherwise would have gone to the Conrad N Hilton Foundation 30 years earlier had Barron not contested his father s will 17 Legacy editThe Conrad N Hilton Foundation was established in 1944 by Conrad N Hilton Its mission is the alleviation of human suffering worldwide Conrad N Hilton Humanitarian Prize created in 1996 by The Conrad N Hilton Foundation The Conrad N Hilton College is a hospitality college of the University of Houston named after Conrad Hilton The Conrad N Hilton Library at the Hyde Park campus of the Culinary Institute of America The Conrad N Hilton Chair in Business Ethics The Hilton Distinguished Entrepreneur Award and the Conrad N Hilton Endowed Chair of Entrepreneurship at the College of Business Administration Loyola Marymount University In 2009 actor Chelcie Ross played the role of Conrad Connie Hilton in the television show Mad Men for six episodes Autobiographies editBe My Guest Autobiography of Conrad Hilton Prentice Hall Inc 1958 Inspirations of an Innkeeper privately printed 1963 Citations edit a b Hoover Gary April 24 2018 Conrad Hilton The Dreamer Who Conquered an Industry Archbridge Institute Retrieved December 21 2020 The Silver Spade The Conrad Hilton Story Farrar Straus and Young 1954 Determination in adversity the story of Conrad Hilton The Insider The Magazine of Glion Institute of Higher Education October 22 2020 Retrieved July 14 2021 a b c Be My Guest by Conrad Hilton copyright 1958 by the Prentice Hall Press a b The Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association The never ending quest to build a hotel in space Associated Press Modest Inn at Cisco Began Hotel String of Conrad Hilton Big Spring Daily Herald November 21 1963 p 12 A Be My Guest Autobiography of Conrad Hilton Archived March 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bennetts Leslie September 6 2007 It s a Mad Mad Zsa Zsa World Vanity Fair Retrieved May 29 2023 Lee Kurtis January 6 2015 Francesca Hilton daughter of Zsa Zsa Gabor and Conrad Hilton dies at 67 Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 29 2023 Jeffrey Hyland 2008 The Legendary Estates of Beverly Hills Random House ISBN 978 0 8478 3162 3 Distinguished Alumni Tau Kappa Epsilon Retrieved December 7 2023 Long Trish January 4 1979 Conrad Hilton dies at 91 El Paso Times Conrad N Hilton Foundation Announces the Death of Barron Hilton a b Barron Hilton to Donate 97 of Estate to Hilton Foundation Planned Giving Design Center LLC December 26 2007 Archived from the original on March 19 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Hilton fortune to go to charity BBC News December 27 2007 Retrieved April 26 2010 Conrad Hilton The Philanthropy Hall of Fame Retrieved May 23 2023 Sources editAlef Daniel Conrad N Hilton Reveled in Hotel Deals Titans of Fortune Publishing 2009 Bolton Whitney The Silver Spade the Conrad Hilton Story with a foreword by Conrad Hilton New York Farrar Straus and Young 1954 Comfort Mildred Houghton Conrad N Hilton Hotelier Minneapolis T S Denison amp Company Inc 1965 Dabney Thomas Ewing The Man Who Bought the Waldorf The Life of Conrad N Hilton Duell Sloan amp Pearce 1950 Oppenheimer Jerry House of Hilton From Conrad to Paris A Drama of Wealth Power and Privilege Three Rivers Press 2007 Hilton Conrad N Be My Guest Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall Inc 1958 External links editBiography Conrad Hilton The Innkeeper to The World Archived November 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine Video Conrad N Hilton College at University of Houston Conrad Hilton s Secret of Success Conrad Hilton Collector of Hotels New York Times Magazine 1949 Innkeeper to the World Time 1963 The Key Man Time 1949 Waldorf Astoria as Hotels No 16 Time 1949 Conrad N Hilton Foundation San Angelo s Heartbreak Hotel History of second Hilton hotel built in San Angelo TX in 1928 and Conrad Hilton s bankruptcy San Angelo Live 2007 Mad Men See the Real Conrad Hilton image slideshow by Life Conrad N Hilton early life in New Mexico Portal nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conrad Hilton amp oldid 1221719311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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