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(BUSINESS--HOTELS.) Records of Pittsburgh's Green Book-listed Ellis Hotel and Shangri-La Lounge, including guest receipts.

(BUSINESS--HOTELS.) Records of Pittsburgh's Green Book-listed Ellis Hotel and Shangri-La Lounge, including guest receipts. Approximately 300 items in one box; condition generally strong. Pittsburgh, PA, 1948-1959

  • Notes: Pittsburgh's famed Ellis Hotel took over the site of the former Hub Hotel at 5 Reed Street in 1951, was a staple of the Negro Traveler's Green Book from 1953 onward, and moved to 2044 Centre Street in 1958, where they also operated the adjacent Shangri-La Lounge.

    The most evocative piece in this lot is the Ellis Hotel receipt book from July to September 1958. It has 75 pages with 4 carbon copy receipts per page, numbered 1-300 (two receipts torn out). Receipts were issued for room rent and sometimes smaller fees, with the information preserved in this carbon copy notebook. The first entry is for the rental of 14 rooms on 7 July 1958 to the Indianapolis Clowns, a barnstorming baseball team who were the last remnant of the Negro Leagues; they paid an additional $3.09 bill a month later (receipt #193). Numerous entries are for jazz or R&B musicians, including Clifford Scott (118), Billy Butler (120), Shep Shepherd (123), Art Blakey (186), George "Bon Bon" Tunnell (188 and 197), Gene Allison (258), Amos Milburn (282), and Clifton Smalls (290). Three members of the Moonglows appear back to back: Prentiss Barnes, Alexander Graves, and Bobby Lester (230, 231, 232). Billy Ford and Lillie Bryant, the singing duo Billy & Lillie, appeared on consecutive pages (261, 267); Steve Gibson and two of his Original Red Caps bandmates George Tindley and Dave Patillo also appeared together (269, 270, 275). The hotel was not just for musicians; Cleveland numbers racket mogul Virgil Ogletree paid for a room (253).

    A few outgoing payments are recorded for trash removal, cleaning supplies, and the like. Frank Ellis also paid several musicians "for playing music at Ellis Hotel." Jazz pianist Eddie Russ's carbon-copy signature appears for his payments of $110 for performing at the hotel (179, 252). Singer Freddy Cole was paid $165 and $675 for performing (203, 229).

    The hotel's regular business expenses are recorded in a volume of check stubs, March to May 1951, with regular payments to the Liquor Control Board, beer distributors, and advertisements in the Pittsburgh Courier. A sheaf of "daily rooms reports" from September to December 1959 (approximately 260 leaves) shows the rates charged for each room, their check in and check out times, and daily income and expenses (but not the names of guests). A typescript "Ellis Hotel Journal 1951" compiled by an accounting service consists of detailed monthly financial reports dating back to December 1948 (presumably covering the previous incarnation as the Hub Hotel)--mostly just dollar amounts, but with occasional notes regarding furniture purchases, jukebox income, and "bought neon sign" (September 1949).

    A folder of loose papers (41 items) includes an illustrated color postcard of the hotel lounge interior. A resolution by the nearby African Orthodox Science Church supports their 1951 liquor license application. A letter to the local YWCA discusses the possibility of buying their building to serve as the hotel's new location: "My present location is in the area that . . . will therefore be purchased by Urban Redevelopment in the not too distant future. . . . Finding a building suitable for a hotel is almost impossible in the district. And once finding it, getting the people out is impossible. So you can see that if I am not fortunate enough to secure the Y, it may be necessary to go out of business completely." 8 letters from prospective guests are accompanied by responses quoting room rates, 1952-1953.

    For a 1951 letter from the Ellis Hotel to the Indianapolis Clowns baseball team, see lot 378 (from a different consignor).

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March 20, 2025 10:30 AM EDT
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