A century after the
Titanic sank, the legacy of the ship’s wealthiest and most famous passenger
lives on quietly at the luxury hotel he built in New York City. John Jacob
Astor IV, who was one of the richest men in America, went down with the ship in
1912 after helping his pregnant wife escape into the last lifeboat. But at the
St Regis, one of Manhattan’s oldest luxury hotels, the aristocratic
sensibilities of the Gilded Age remain intact. Butlers in white ties and black
tailcoats still roam the hallways. The lobby, with its frescoed ceiling and
elaborate marble staircase, has not been altered since Astor died. And the
thousands of leather-bound books that he collected have been preserved on the
same bookshelves for 100 years. This year, in tribute to Astor’s memory, the
hotel worked with a publisher to add a new book to those shelves. ”A Survivor’s
Tale,” which was released this month, is the first-person account of a
passenger who survived the disaster by jumping overboard as the ship
disappeared into the water.
”This was his jewel,”
said Astor’s granddaughter, Jackie Drexel, as she gazed around the hotel one
recent morning. ”My grandfather used to come and walk the stairs frequently
first thing in the morning to make sure everything was running perfectly. He
conceived of it with great pride.” The copper mouldings on the roof have turned
green with age, but inside, the antique furniture and silk wall coverings
hearken back to a more refined era. And the guests wandering its hallways are
still the wealthiest of the wealthy: the hotel is a favourite among royal
families and celebrities hoping to keep a low-profile and avoid the paparazzi. ”The
key element to everything in the hotel is the discretion,” said Paul Nash, the
general manager. ”We have heads of state, royal families, entertainers, politicians.”
When Astor built the St Regis in 1904, it overlooked Fifth Avenue’s row of
mansions and, at just 18 stories high, was the tallest skyscraper in the city.
It was modelled after the extravagant hotels of Europe that had not yet become
ubiquitous in the US.
At that time, it was
common for the very rich to live in luxurious hotels like the St Regis for long
stretches of time. According to Nash, that hasn’t changed, either: The hotel’s
presidential suite, which costs a cool $21,000 per night, is routinely occupied
by the same guests for three months straight. ”They can walk around the hotel
like it’s their home, and nobody will disturb them,” explained 25-year-old
Jennifer Giacche, one of the hotel’s butlers. While the uniform looks like it
was plucked from the set of a period drama, the St Regis butlers’ job
responsibilities have evolved over the years to meet the needs of 21st-century
jetsetters. They still pour coffee and fluff pillows, but the butlers of today
_ a rarity at modern hotels _ are really more like highly educated personal
assistants who speak several languages, not the stuffy servants portrayed on
TV’s ”Downton Abbey.” ”Our guests may travel by private jet, but they’re also
probably wearing blue jeans and a white T-shirt,” Nash said. Using ”e-butler,” the
hotel’s personalized smartphone app, guests can start issuing instructions to
their butler before they even check in, whether it’s ordering a limousine or a
bottle of champagne. Visitors preparing for an extended stay often want the
furniture in their rooms completely rearranged. One of the most memorable
requests came from a guest who wanted her bathtub filled with chlorinated pool
water (which the butlers obliged without asking why). Like his guests, Astor
enjoyed a pampered existence as a member of one of New York’s most powerful
families. But he was also a keen inventor _ creating an early form of air
conditioning by blowing cold air over the hotel’s wall vents _ and an avid
bibliophile. With the help of Thornwillow Press, a small publisher of
limited-edition books, the hotel is in the process of restoring and cataloguing
the nearly 3,000 books that Astor left behind. ”If John Jacob Astor were to
walk through the rooms, it would be entirely familiar to him,” said Luke Ives
Pontifel, Thornwillow’s founder. ”He would recognize the books on the shelves.
It’s a time capsule.”
On April 4, the St Regis held a small dinner in the hotel
library to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Titanic’s sinking. The
guests, who included some of Astor’s descendants, were dressed in fur and
feathers as they perused his books and dined on food inspired by the last meal
served aboard the ship. They also received copies of ”A Survivor’s Tale,” which
was written by Jack Thayer and is being published publicly for the first time
with the permission of his family. Thayer, who was 17 years old then, recounted
how his mother escaped in a lifeboat, but his father perished along with most
of the men on board. Thayer survived by clinging to a lifeboat for hours in the
freezing sea, listening to the wailing of the passengers who froze to death. “It
sounded like locusts on a midsummer night, in the woods in Pennsylvania,” he
wrote. Astor was last spotted smoking a cigar on the deck. His body was later
pulled out of the sea. His wife gave birth to a son weeks later. “I think he stayed to the
very end, putting people in lifeboats,” said Drexel, his granddaughter. “He
never tried to escape himself.” Drexel believes he would have been pleased with
the way his legacy has been preserved at the St Regis. If he had survived the
sinking, she believes he would have built many more hotels in his lifetime. “It
makes me proud to speak of him,” she said. “I wish I’d known him. I wish my dad
had known him. I think that’s the saddest — that dad never had a chance to meet
him.”
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