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THE DRISKILL HOTEL
by Clayton Stapleton
Updated
07/11/05 13:55 GMT
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AUSTIN, TEXAS - The hotel located at
604 Brazos Street in Austin opened its doors to the public on
December 20, 1886, a dream came true for cattle baron,
Jesse Lincoln Driskill. Driskill had purchased the site for
his future hotel in 1885 - an entire city block for $7,500. The
venture, once finished, cost the outrageous $400,000 and
quickly became the premier "frontier queen" hostelry.
Jasper N. Preston and Sons of Austin designed the original
cream-colored brick and limestone building, which was apparently
inspired by H. H. Richardson's recently completed Ames Building in
Boston. Driskill had busts of himself and his two sons, Tobe and
Bud, installed over each entrance. In October 1898,
Austin's first long-distance telephone call was placed from the
lobby. |
Since Austin was the capital city of the
state, the Driskill Hotel was the place to be seen if you were a
political figure. Many deals and compromises that effected the state
of Texas and the world where made within the
walls of the Driskill, and former US President Lyndon Johnson often watched election returns
at
the Driskill. Indeed, history has been made within its walls.
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Some say that Colonel Driskill (an
honorary title bestowed on him by the Confederate army during the
Civil War) loved his hotel so much that his spirit remains on the
property he purchased so long ago. According to
Austin
Ghost Tours, Driskill makes his presence known by the smell of
cigar smoke. He is believed to turn bathroom lights on and off in
several guest rooms on the top floors of the hotel.
Another apparition is the
four-year-old daughter of a US Senator. She haunts the grand
staircase leading from the mezzanine down to the lobby. The little
girl was playing unattended with a ball when she slipped and fell to
the marble floor at the bottom of the stairs and was killed. The
front desk staff has heard the child bouncing the ball down the
steps and giggling.
In the early 1990s, a Houston woman
took a trip to the Driskill to try and recuperate from a wedding
that her fiancé called off at the last minute . Staying in Room 29,
she decided the best way to help herself would be to go on a week-long shopping spree with her fiancé's credit cards. She was
last seen coming out of the elevator on the fourth floor with her
arms filled with numerous bags and packages, and her body was discovered
three days later when the housekeepers became concerned that she
hadn't left the room to eat. Her body was found lying in the bathtub;
she
had shot herself in the stomach, muffling the sound with a pillow.
The Austin Police Department crime scene photographer reported that it
was a sad to see such a young women commit suicide when she
could have had a long, happy life ahead of her.
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The Driskill Hotel
604 Brazos Street |

The Lobby of the Driskill |
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An Austin Ghost Tour guide tells the story
of two women who wanted to see a ghost and had heard the story of the
Houston woman. At the time, the fourth floor was undergoing restoration
and wasn't open for overnight stays, so the ladies got a room on the
other side of the hotel. The women stayed out late visiting Sixth
Street and came in around 2 AM. Being curious, they decided to stop the
elevator on the fourth floor and have a look around. However, when
they saw the hallways were lined with plastic and all of the beautiful
paintings had been removed from the walls, they decided it wasn't such
a good ideal to be walking around there after all, and they called he elevator
back. When the elevator door opened, a
young women stepped out with her arms full of bags and packages; she
walked past them without saying a word and headed down the dark
plastic-lined hallway. The two ladies wondered and
how the woman could have done any shopping at that time of night.
Following her down the hallway they asked if the renovations were
bothering her. She replied, "No, It's not bothering me," then
went into Room 29. The women became troubled and decided to
get to their floor as fast as they could. The next day, they asked the
front desk clerk why someone was staying in Room 29, since they were told no one could stay on that floor during the
repairs. The clerk assured them no one was staying on the floor and
took the two ladies up to Room 29. The group found
the room still draped in plastic, without a bed, and with a bathroom
sink sitting in the middle of the floor. The ladies then realized they
had seen the ghost of the "Houston Bride."
Many other ghosts have been seen roaming the
hallways and rooms of the Driskill. What Was Then recommends
Austin
Ghost Tours for a firsthand look at the hotel and to learn more
about the many guests still checked in at the Driskill.
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