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The Read House Hotel

The Read House Hotel is a historic hotel in Chattanooga, Tennessee, founded in 1872. The 141-room main building dates to 1926, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for Hamilton County.[2][3] The 100-room rear wing was added in 1962, originally as a motel.[4]

Read House
LocationChattanooga, Tennessee
Coordinates35°02′46″N 85°18′39″W / 35.04611°N 85.31083°W / 35.04611; -85.31083
Built1926
ArchitectWilliam Holabird & Martin Roche
NRHP reference No.76001780[1]
Added to NRHPDecember 23, 1976

History edit

Origins edit

 
The Crutchfield House, circa 1864

The first hotel on the site, the Crutchfield House, opened in 1847.[5] It was constructed by future Chattanooga Mayor Thomas Crutchfield Sr.,[6] directly across from the Union Depot.[7] The railways were the main source of business and imports to the town and this constant flow of business allowed the Crutchfield House to prosper. Thomas Crutchfield, Sr. died in 1850, and his son, Thomas Crutchfield, Jr., also a future mayor of Chattanooga,[8] took over the hotel.[9]

Jefferson Davis stayed at the Crutchfield House on January 21, 1861, while traveling home to Mississippi after resigning from the United States Senate. Davis delivered a speech in favor of secession in the hotel's dining room,[10] causing future congressman William Crutchfield (Thomas Crutchfield, Jr.'s brother) to deliver a fiery speech of his own, denouncing Davis as a "renegade and a traitor," and saying that Tennessee would not be "hood winked, bamboozled and dragged into your Southern, codfish, aristocratic, tory blooded, South Carolina mobocracy."[11] A duel nearly resulted between the men and the argument at the hotel was widely reported as tensions grew on the eve of the Civil War.

In 1862, the hotel served as the headquarters for the local Confederate garrison. That winter, Confederate General Samuel Jones, commander of the Department of East Tennessee, converted the hotel to a military hospital. Chattanooga was occupied by the Union on September 9, 1863, and the 92nd Illinois Infantry Regiment placed its regimental colors atop the hotel to signal their control of the town. The hotel later served as a hospital for Union soldiers wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga.[12] The Crutchfield House survived the war, but caught fire and burned down in 1867.[13] After the fire, the Crutchfield family chose not to rebuild.

First Read House Hotel edit

Civil War surgeon John T. Read[14] had previously owned a hotel with his wife Caroline in their hometown of McMinnville, Tennessee, which had similarly burned down. They moved to Chattanooga in 1871 and purchased a three-story office building that had been built on the site of the Crutchfield House.[15] Read converted that structure to a 45-room hotel, the Read House Hotel, which opened on New Year's Day 1872.[16] In 1879, he sold the hotel to his 19-year-old son, Samuel R. Read,[17] who expanded the hotel to 202 rooms by 1902.[18]

Modern Read House Hotel edit

In 1925, the majority of the original structure was torn down. It was replaced with the current 10-story Read House Hotel, opened on July 5, 1926.[19][20] The new hotel was designed by the Chicago firm Holabird & Roche, in the Georgian style and constructed by the George A. Fuller Construction Company of Washington, D.C., at a cost of $2.7 million.[21] The new wing had 280 rooms, while the remaining portion of the old structure had an additional 120 rooms, which were kept in operation until the new wing was completed, so the hotel did not need to fully close during construction.[22] Samuel R. Read died in 1942,[23] and in 1943 the hotel was sold to Albert Noe, Jr. He died four years later, and his son Albert Noe III assumed control of the hotel. In 1962, Noe built a six-story motel wing with an underground garage and an outdoor pool in the rear of the hotel, to appeal to travelers on the newly constructed Interstate Highway System.[24] It is today known as the "Manor" wing.[25] Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company bought the hotel from Noe in 1968[26] and retained the National Hotel Company to manage it.[27]

In 1978, the hotel was sold to the owners of the nearby Chattanooga Choo-Choo Hotel and renamed the Choo-Choo Read House.[28] A nightclub was added on the mezzanine, the Grand Central Station Disco,[29] which remained in business until 1980. Soon after, the hotel became a Best Western franchise and was renamed the Best Western Choo-Choo Read House.[30] The hotel would go through seven different owners between 1980 and 2000, as its luster slowly dimmed.[31] Radisson Hotels assumed management in 1986 and the hotel became the Radisson Read House.[32]

After an $11 million renovation in 2004, Sheraton Hotels assumed management and the hotel became the Sheraton Read House, reopening on November 18, 2004.[33] The hotel dropped its affiliation with Sheraton in 2015[34] and became The Read House Historic Inn & Suites.[35][36] On August 30, 2016, the hotel was purchased by Avocet Hospitality Group of Charleston, SC.[37] The hotel was renovated at a cost of $27 million, which included the movement of the main entrance from Broad Street to its original location on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, in front of the hotel, the addition of multiple dining outlets and the renovation of all guest rooms. The hotel reopened in 2018 as The Read House.[38] In 2022, the hotel celebrated its 150th anniversary.[39]

Famous visitors edit

In the heart of Chattanooga, the Read House has hosted many celebrities and politicians. Among them are presidents Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt,[40] William McKinley, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, as well as Edwin Booth, Gene Autry, Elvis Presley,[41] Oprah Winfrey, Gary Cooper, Winston Churchill, Bing Crosby, Walt Disney, Bob Hope, and Al Capone.[42] Capone stayed in the Read House a short time during his federal trial in the early 20th century. Custom iron bars were added to the windows in the room Capone resided in (Room 311), and remain there to this day.[43]

Room 311 edit

Perhaps the thing the Read House is most known for is the haunting of room 311. Many believe the room harbors the spirit of a woman named Annalisa Netherly. There are many legends as to who this woman was and how she became the famous spirit to haunt the hotel, but it is most well known that Ms. Netherly was a prostitute in Chattanooga during 1920s and 1930's. She supposedly resided in room 311 for an extended time. While details are hazy, Ms. Netherly in fact died in that very room. Some legends have it that she was found soaking in the tub with her head almost completely decapitated- more than likely done by a jealous lover or husband. Other legends say that as she took a gentleman suitor to her room and he later directed his time and attention elsewhere to another woman. This supposedly left her broken hearted and suicidal, and it was then that Ms. Netherly took her own life.[44] People who have stayed in room 311 say that Ms. Netherly hates men, especially those who smoke. Many guests that have stayed in the room, including Al Capone, have made it through the night without any paranormal activity, while others report it being heavy during their stay.

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. ^ Gay Morgan Moore (2011). Chattanooga's Forest Hills Cemetery. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 35–. ISBN 978-0-7385-8694-6. from the original on 2018-03-01. When the Crutchfield House burned in 1867, Thomas Read leased the property and built the Read House. ... here) managed his father's hotel and, upon his death, purchased the block and opened the current Read House Hotel in 1926.
  3. ^ Susan Sawyer (4 June 2013). MYTHS & MYSTERIES OF TENNESSEE: TRUE S. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 125–. ISBN 978-0-7627-9582-6. from the original on 1 March 2018. century, the magnificent Read House became one of the first commercial establishments in the city to boast electric lights. In 1926 ... In 1977 the Read House was named to the National Register of Historic Places as a prime example of period ...
  4. ^ "Historic Section of Read House Opens After $27 Million Renovation". 10 October 2018.
  5. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  6. ^ "1849 Thomas Crutchfield, Sr".
  7. ^ "American Roads Travel Magazine". www.americanroads.net. from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  8. ^ "1859 Thomas Crutchfield, Jr".
  9. ^ Oliver Perry Temple, Mary Boyce Temple (ed.), "William Crutchfield," Notable Men of Tennessee (Cosmopolitan Press, 1912), pp. 109-113.
  10. ^ "Crutchfield House Historical Marker".
  11. ^ William C. Davis, Jefferson Davis: The Man and His Hour (LSU Press, 1996), p. 296.
  12. ^ "Crutchfield House Historical Marker".
  13. ^ Lyn Wilkerson (1 November 2000). Roads Less Traveled: Exploring America's Past on Its Back Roads. iUniverse. pp. 240–. ISBN 978-0-595-14761-8. from the original on 1 March 2018. Read House Hotel 1926 (West 9th Street and Broad Street) The Read House occupies a site used for hotel purposes since 1847, when the Crutchfield House was established.
  14. ^ Brown, Alan (2014-05-14). Haunted Tennessee: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Volunteer State. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-4648-9. from the original on 2016-05-16.
  15. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  16. ^ Best Books on (1939). Tennessee; a Guide to the State. Best Books on. pp. 259–. ISBN 978-1-62376-041-0. from the original on 2018-03-01. 1872 as the Read House. Under the management of Dr. and Mrs. John T. Read the hotel was well known for its hospitality and splendid cuisine. The uTin Banquet," given at the Read House in 1888, celebrated the success of the local ...
  17. ^ "Read House Hotel".
  18. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  19. ^ https://centralhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/1926ocr.pdf
  20. ^ https://chattanoogahistory.com/pdf/1928_July1_Chattanooga%2520Times%2520Jubilee_p20.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3I41vzyzK2YcWKOluHy8yj
  21. ^ "Read House Hotel".
  22. ^ Willy, John (1926). "The Hotel Monthly".
  23. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  24. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  25. ^ "Historic Section of Read House Opens After $27 Million Renovation". 10 October 2018.
  26. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  27. ^ "Read House Hotel".
  28. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  29. ^ https://digital-collections.library.utc.edu/digital/api/collection/p16877coll9/id/9058/download
  30. ^ "What's Doing in Chattanooga". The New York Times. 21 June 1981.
  31. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  32. ^ "Chattanooga wakes up".
  33. ^ "Sheraton Read House Celebrates "Return to Splendor"". 19 November 2004.
  34. ^ "Read House plans revamp, dropping Sheraton name | Chattanooga Times Free Press". 10 October 2014.
  35. ^ "The grand Read House Hotel and it famously haunted room 311 – OffBeat Tennessee". OffBeat Tennessee. from the original on 2015-10-31. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  36. ^ Pare, Mike (10 October 2014). Read House plans revamp, dropping Sheraton name 2015-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, Chattanooga Times Free Press
  37. ^ "Avocet Hospitality Group Acquires The Read House; Multi-Million-Dollar Renovation Planned For The Historic Chattanooga Property". 31 August 2016. from the original on 2016-11-05. Retrieved 2016-11-05.
  38. ^ "Downtown Chattanooga's Read House rediscovers its past during renovation [photos] | Chattanooga Times Free Press". 10 October 2018.
  39. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House celebrates 150 years as longest continuously operated hotel in the South | Chattanooga Times Free Press". 19 February 2022.
  40. ^ Willy, John (1926). "The Hotel Monthly".
  41. ^ "Chattanooga's Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary". October 2022.
  42. ^ Libby Wann (October 1990). Chattanooga: delivering the dream. Towery Pub. pp. 141–. ISBN 978-0-9628128-0-4. from the original on 2018-03-01. Throughout the years, thousands of celebrities have slept and dined in the Read House. ... Nixon, Winston Churchill, Gloria Swanson, Benny Goodman, Bob Hope, Gene Autry, John Barry- more, Tom Thumb, Dizzy Dean, and Al Capone.
  43. ^ Coleman, Christopher Kiernan (2011-01-01). Ghosts and Haunts of Tennessee. John F. Blair, Publisher. ISBN 978-0-89587-512-9. from the original on 2016-06-03.
  44. ^ Penot, Jessica; Petulla, Amy (2011-01-01). Haunted Chattanooga. The History Press. ISBN 978-1-60949-255-7. from the original on 2016-05-11.

External links edit

  Media related to Read House (Chattanooga, Tennessee) at Wikimedia Commons

  • The Read House Hotel official website

read, house, hotel, historic, hotel, chattanooga, tennessee, founded, 1872, room, main, building, dates, 1926, listed, national, register, historic, places, hamilton, county, room, rear, wing, added, 1962, originally, motel, read, houseu, national, register, h. The Read House Hotel is a historic hotel in Chattanooga Tennessee founded in 1872 The 141 room main building dates to 1926 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for Hamilton County 2 3 The 100 room rear wing was added in 1962 originally as a motel 4 Read HouseU S National Register of Historic PlacesShow map of TennesseeShow map of the United StatesLocationChattanooga TennesseeCoordinates35 02 46 N 85 18 39 W 35 04611 N 85 31083 W 35 04611 85 31083Built1926ArchitectWilliam Holabird amp Martin RocheNRHP reference No 76001780 1 Added to NRHPDecember 23 1976 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 First Read House Hotel 1 3 Modern Read House Hotel 2 Famous visitors 3 Room 311 4 References 5 External linksHistory editOrigins edit nbsp The Crutchfield House circa 1864 The first hotel on the site the Crutchfield House opened in 1847 5 It was constructed by future Chattanooga Mayor Thomas Crutchfield Sr 6 directly across from the Union Depot 7 The railways were the main source of business and imports to the town and this constant flow of business allowed the Crutchfield House to prosper Thomas Crutchfield Sr died in 1850 and his son Thomas Crutchfield Jr also a future mayor of Chattanooga 8 took over the hotel 9 Jefferson Davis stayed at the Crutchfield House on January 21 1861 while traveling home to Mississippi after resigning from the United States Senate Davis delivered a speech in favor of secession in the hotel s dining room 10 causing future congressman William Crutchfield Thomas Crutchfield Jr s brother to deliver a fiery speech of his own denouncing Davis as a renegade and a traitor and saying that Tennessee would not be hood winked bamboozled and dragged into your Southern codfish aristocratic tory blooded South Carolina mobocracy 11 A duel nearly resulted between the men and the argument at the hotel was widely reported as tensions grew on the eve of the Civil War In 1862 the hotel served as the headquarters for the local Confederate garrison That winter Confederate General Samuel Jones commander of the Department of East Tennessee converted the hotel to a military hospital Chattanooga was occupied by the Union on September 9 1863 and the 92nd Illinois Infantry Regiment placed its regimental colors atop the hotel to signal their control of the town The hotel later served as a hospital for Union soldiers wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga 12 The Crutchfield House survived the war but caught fire and burned down in 1867 13 After the fire the Crutchfield family chose not to rebuild First Read House Hotel edit Civil War surgeon John T Read 14 had previously owned a hotel with his wife Caroline in their hometown of McMinnville Tennessee which had similarly burned down They moved to Chattanooga in 1871 and purchased a three story office building that had been built on the site of the Crutchfield House 15 Read converted that structure to a 45 room hotel the Read House Hotel which opened on New Year s Day 1872 16 In 1879 he sold the hotel to his 19 year old son Samuel R Read 17 who expanded the hotel to 202 rooms by 1902 18 Modern Read House Hotel edit In 1925 the majority of the original structure was torn down It was replaced with the current 10 story Read House Hotel opened on July 5 1926 19 20 The new hotel was designed by the Chicago firm Holabird amp Roche in the Georgian style and constructed by the George A Fuller Construction Company of Washington D C at a cost of 2 7 million 21 The new wing had 280 rooms while the remaining portion of the old structure had an additional 120 rooms which were kept in operation until the new wing was completed so the hotel did not need to fully close during construction 22 Samuel R Read died in 1942 23 and in 1943 the hotel was sold to Albert Noe Jr He died four years later and his son Albert Noe III assumed control of the hotel In 1962 Noe built a six story motel wing with an underground garage and an outdoor pool in the rear of the hotel to appeal to travelers on the newly constructed Interstate Highway System 24 It is today known as the Manor wing 25 Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company bought the hotel from Noe in 1968 26 and retained the National Hotel Company to manage it 27 In 1978 the hotel was sold to the owners of the nearby Chattanooga Choo Choo Hotel and renamed the Choo Choo Read House 28 A nightclub was added on the mezzanine the Grand Central Station Disco 29 which remained in business until 1980 Soon after the hotel became a Best Western franchise and was renamed the Best Western Choo Choo Read House 30 The hotel would go through seven different owners between 1980 and 2000 as its luster slowly dimmed 31 Radisson Hotels assumed management in 1986 and the hotel became the Radisson Read House 32 After an 11 million renovation in 2004 Sheraton Hotels assumed management and the hotel became the Sheraton Read House reopening on November 18 2004 33 The hotel dropped its affiliation with Sheraton in 2015 34 and became The Read House Historic Inn amp Suites 35 36 On August 30 2016 the hotel was purchased by Avocet Hospitality Group of Charleston SC 37 The hotel was renovated at a cost of 27 million which included the movement of the main entrance from Broad Street to its original location on Martin Luther King Jr Blvd in front of the hotel the addition of multiple dining outlets and the renovation of all guest rooms The hotel reopened in 2018 as The Read House 38 In 2022 the hotel celebrated its 150th anniversary 39 Famous visitors editIn the heart of Chattanooga the Read House has hosted many celebrities and politicians Among them are presidents Ulysses S Grant Rutherford B Hayes Grover Cleveland Theodore Roosevelt 40 William McKinley Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan as well as Edwin Booth Gene Autry Elvis Presley 41 Oprah Winfrey Gary Cooper Winston Churchill Bing Crosby Walt Disney Bob Hope and Al Capone 42 Capone stayed in the Read House a short time during his federal trial in the early 20th century Custom iron bars were added to the windows in the room Capone resided in Room 311 and remain there to this day 43 Room 311 editPerhaps the thing the Read House is most known for is the haunting of room 311 Many believe the room harbors the spirit of a woman named Annalisa Netherly There are many legends as to who this woman was and how she became the famous spirit to haunt the hotel but it is most well known that Ms Netherly was a prostitute in Chattanooga during 1920s and 1930 s She supposedly resided in room 311 for an extended time While details are hazy Ms Netherly in fact died in that very room Some legends have it that she was found soaking in the tub with her head almost completely decapitated more than likely done by a jealous lover or husband Other legends say that as she took a gentleman suitor to her room and he later directed his time and attention elsewhere to another woman This supposedly left her broken hearted and suicidal and it was then that Ms Netherly took her own life 44 People who have stayed in room 311 say that Ms Netherly hates men especially those who smoke Many guests that have stayed in the room including Al Capone have made it through the night without any paranormal activity while others report it being heavy during their stay References edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 Gay Morgan Moore 2011 Chattanooga s Forest Hills Cemetery Arcadia Publishing pp 35 ISBN 978 0 7385 8694 6 Archived from the original on 2018 03 01 When the Crutchfield House burned in 1867 Thomas Read leased the property and built the Read House here managed his father s hotel and upon his death purchased the block and opened the current Read House Hotel in 1926 Susan Sawyer 4 June 2013 MYTHS amp MYSTERIES OF TENNESSEE TRUE S Rowman amp Littlefield pp 125 ISBN 978 0 7627 9582 6 Archived from the original on 1 March 2018 century the magnificent Read House became one of the first commercial establishments in the city to boast electric lights In 1926 In 1977 the Read House was named to the National Register of Historic Places as a prime example of period Historic Section of Read House Opens After 27 Million Renovation 10 October 2018 Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 1849 Thomas Crutchfield Sr American Roads Travel Magazine www americanroads net Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 10 12 1859 Thomas Crutchfield Jr Oliver Perry Temple Mary Boyce Temple ed William Crutchfield Notable Men of Tennessee Cosmopolitan Press 1912 pp 109 113 Crutchfield House Historical Marker William C Davis Jefferson Davis The Man and His Hour LSU Press 1996 p 296 Crutchfield House Historical Marker Lyn Wilkerson 1 November 2000 Roads Less Traveled Exploring America s Past on Its Back Roads iUniverse pp 240 ISBN 978 0 595 14761 8 Archived from the original on 1 March 2018 Read House Hotel 1926 West 9th Street and Broad Street The Read House occupies a site used for hotel purposes since 1847 when the Crutchfield House was established Brown Alan 2014 05 14 Haunted Tennessee Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Volunteer State Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 4648 9 Archived from the original on 2016 05 16 Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 Best Books on 1939 Tennessee a Guide to the State Best Books on pp 259 ISBN 978 1 62376 041 0 Archived from the original on 2018 03 01 1872 as the Read House Under the management of Dr and Mrs John T Read the hotel was well known for its hospitality and splendid cuisine The uTin Banquet given at the Read House in 1888 celebrated the success of the local Read House Hotel Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 https centralhistory files wordpress com 2012 02 1926ocr pdf https chattanoogahistory com pdf 1928 July1 Chattanooga 2520Times 2520Jubilee p20 pdf amp usg AOvVaw3I41vzyzK2YcWKOluHy8yj Read House Hotel Willy John 1926 The Hotel Monthly Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 Historic Section of Read House Opens After 27 Million Renovation 10 October 2018 Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 Read House Hotel Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 https digital collections library utc edu digital api collection p16877coll9 id 9058 download What s Doing in Chattanooga The New York Times 21 June 1981 Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 Chattanooga wakes up Sheraton Read House Celebrates Return to Splendor 19 November 2004 Read House plans revamp dropping Sheraton name Chattanooga Times Free Press 10 October 2014 The grand Read House Hotel and it famously haunted room 311 OffBeat Tennessee OffBeat Tennessee Archived from the original on 2015 10 31 Retrieved 2015 10 12 Pare Mike 10 October 2014 Read House plans revamp dropping Sheraton name Archived 2015 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Chattanooga Times Free Press Avocet Hospitality Group Acquires The Read House Multi Million Dollar Renovation Planned For The Historic Chattanooga Property 31 August 2016 Archived from the original on 2016 11 05 Retrieved 2016 11 05 Downtown Chattanooga s Read House rediscovers its past during renovation photos Chattanooga Times Free Press 10 October 2018 Chattanooga s Read House celebrates 150 years as longest continuously operated hotel in the South Chattanooga Times Free Press 19 February 2022 Willy John 1926 The Hotel Monthly Chattanooga s Read House Celebrates Milestone Anniversary October 2022 Libby Wann October 1990 Chattanooga delivering the dream Towery Pub pp 141 ISBN 978 0 9628128 0 4 Archived from the original on 2018 03 01 Throughout the years thousands of celebrities have slept and dined in the Read House Nixon Winston Churchill Gloria Swanson Benny Goodman Bob Hope Gene Autry John Barry more Tom Thumb Dizzy Dean and Al Capone Coleman Christopher Kiernan 2011 01 01 Ghosts and Haunts of Tennessee John F Blair Publisher ISBN 978 0 89587 512 9 Archived from the original on 2016 06 03 Penot Jessica Petulla Amy 2011 01 01 Haunted Chattanooga The History Press ISBN 978 1 60949 255 7 Archived from the original on 2016 05 11 External links edit nbsp Media related to Read House Chattanooga Tennessee at Wikimedia Commons The Read House Hotel official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Read House Hotel amp oldid 1179542160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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