Broadway Mansions: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox building |
{{Infobox building |
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|name = Broadway Mansions |
|name = Broadway Mansions |
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|native_name = 百老汇大厦 |
|native_name = 百老汇大厦 |
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|image = Broadway Mansions |
|image = 20112-Shanghai, Broadway Mansions.jpg |
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|image_size = |
|image_size = |
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|caption = Broadway Mansions |
|caption = Broadway Mansions, 2013 |
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|location = 20 Bei Suzhou Road, [[Hongkou District]], [[Shanghai]], China |
|location = 20 Bei Suzhou Road, [[Hongkou District]], [[Shanghai]], China |
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|status = Complete |
|status = Complete |
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|start_date = 1930 |
|start_date = 1930 |
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|elevator_count = |
|elevator_count = |
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|cost = $10 million (Mexican) (approximately US$3.4 million) |
|cost = $10 million (Mexican) (approximately US$3.4 million) |
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|floor_area = 24,596 |
|floor_area = {{convert|24,596|m2|sp=us}} |
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|architect = B. Flazer, [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer and Turner]] |
|architect = B. Flazer, [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer and Turner]] |
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|structural_engineer= John William Barrow, [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer and Turner]] |
|structural_engineer= John William Barrow, [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer and Turner]] |
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|main_contractor = Ye Guang Estate Property Company |
|main_contractor = Ye Guang Estate Property Company |
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|developer = Shanghai Land Investment Company |
|developer = Shanghai Land Investment Company |
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|owner = Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集)<ref name="hengshanhotels.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.hengshanhotels.com/en/hotels/ | |
|owner = Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集)<ref name="hengshanhotels.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.hengshanhotels.com/en/hotels/ |access-date=7 May 2009 |url-status=dead |title=Hengshan Member Hotels |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090421210249/http://www.hengshanhotels.com/en/hotels/ |archive-date=21 April 2009 }}</ref> since at least 1985.<ref name="http://www.broadwaymansions.com"/><ref name="langhamhotels.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.langhamhotels.com/pdf/pr_20071026.pdf |access-date=7 May 2009 }}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> |
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|management = |
|management = |
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|references = |
|references = {{URL|broadwaymansions.com}} |
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}} |
}} |
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[[File:Broadway Mansion.jpg|alt=High resolution photograph of the building in 1994|thumb|Broadway Mansion in 1994]] |
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'''Broadway Mansions''' ({{zh|s=百老汇大厦|t=百老匯大廈|p=Bǎilǎohuì Dàshà}}) is a nineteen-floor [[Art Deco]] five |
The '''Broadway Mansions''' ({{zh|s=百老汇大厦|t=百老匯大廈|p=Bǎilǎohuì Dàshà}}, [[Shanghainese]]: ''Pahlowe Dusa'') is a nineteen-floor [[Art Deco]] five-star hotel in [[Shanghai, China]].<ref>It is described in 1993 as "Shanghai's best known building"; see "Shanghai", ''The New Encyclopædia Britannica'', 15th ed., Vol. 27 (Encyclopædia Britannica, 1993):274;</ref><ref name="Dmitri Kessel 1985">Dmitri Kessel, ''On Assignment: Dmitri Kessel, Life photographer'' (Abrams, 1985):149.</ref><ref>Noël Barber, ''The Fall of Shanghai: The Communist Take-over in 1949'' (Macmillan, 1979):96.</ref> and was for over five decades one of the primary symbols of Shanghai.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.broadwaymansions.com/en/about3_1.htm |access-date=4 May 2009 |url-status=dead |title=The history in Broadway Mansions Hotel|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080929030335/http://www.broadwaymansions.com/en/about3_1.htm |archive-date=29 September 2008 }}</ref><ref>Sidney Shapiro, ''An American in China: Thirty Years in the People's Republic'' (New World Press, 1979):55.</ref> |
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Completed in 1934, the same year as the 19 feet taller [[Park Hotel, Shanghai|Park Hotel]]. Upon its completion it became the tallest apartment building in Shanghai and remained so for several decades.<ref name=" |
Completed in 1934, the same year as the 19 feet taller [[Park Hotel, Shanghai|Park Hotel]]. Upon its completion it became the tallest apartment building in Shanghai and remained so for several decades.<ref name="Time">{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,794751,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110131050405/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,794751,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=31 January 2011 |title=China: The Weary Wait |magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |date=23 May 1949 |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> Located near the confluence of [[Suzhou Creek]] and the [[Huangpu River]], as well as the northern end of [[The Bund (Shanghai)|The Bund]], it was built by the architectural and engineering firm of [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer and Turner]], and its completion in 1935 heralded the commencement of the [[high-rise]] building era in Asia.<ref>Georges Binder, ''Tall Buildings of Asia & Australia'' (Images Publishing, 2001):ifc.</ref> It was Shanghai's "closest approach to a modern American [[skyscraper]]".<ref>Bruce Douglass and Ross Terrill, ''China and Ourselves: Explorations and Revisions by a New Generation'' (Beacon Press, 1971):90.</ref> It commands possibly the best view of the Bund and Huangpu.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smh.com.au/travel/bright-lights-old-city-20081113-62zc.html?page=-1 |access-date=8 May 2009 |url-status=dead |title=Bright lights, old city |work=smh.com.au |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104092927/http://www.smh.com.au/travel/bright-lights-old-city-20081113-62zc.html?page=-1 |archive-date=4 November 2012 }}</ref> |
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Originally |
Originally called "The Broadway Mansions", it was renamed "Shanghai Mansions" by the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]] in 1951, but reverted to its original name after China opened up again to the West. The Broadway Mansions has been owned and operated by the Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集团) since at least 1985.<ref name="http://www.broadwaymansions.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.broadwaymansions.com/ |title=上海大厦 位于 上海 - 网上预订豪华酒店客房 外滩 |website=Broadwaymansions.com |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> |
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==Location== |
==Location== |
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The Broadway Mansions Hotel is located at 20 Bei Suzhou Road (formerly 1 Broadway),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archives.sh.cn/shjy/shzg/201212/t20121213_37490.html |title=老上海的百老汇大厦(附图)-上海档案信息网 |website=Archives.sh.cn |date= |
The Broadway Mansions Hotel is located at 20 Bei Suzhou Road (formerly 1 Broadway),<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.archives.sh.cn/shjy/shzg/201212/t20121213_37490.html |title=老上海的百老汇大厦(附图)-上海档案信息网 |website=Archives.sh.cn |date=13 December 2012 |access-date=5 December 2015 |archive-date=3 August 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200803001806/http://www.archives.sh.cn/shjy/shzg/201212/t20121213_37490.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> [[Shanghai]], in the North Bund area of the [[Hongkou District]].<ref name="http://www.broadwaymansions.com"/> It is at the northern end of the [[Waibaidu Bridge]] (Garden Bridge). It is at the corner of Bei Suzhou Road, Huangpu Road, and Daming Road (formerly Broadway), and is less than {{convert|30|m|sp=us}} from the [[Suzhou Creek]],<ref>Kang Yan and Robert Hale Smitheram, ''Deciphering Shanghai, 1990–2000'' (Australian-Chinese Press, 2002):215.</ref> close to its confluence with the [[Huangpu River]]. It is also bounded by Haining Road at the rear, and Wusong Road South on the west. It is across Daming Road from the [[Astor House, Shanghai|Astor House Hotel]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.broadwaymansions.com/en/location/|title=Location Shanghai Hotel - Broadway Mansions Hotel Shanghai The Bund}}</ref> Before the mansions were constructed, a building owned by the British firm Shanghai electric construction company stood on its site. |
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==History== |
==History== |
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===Broadway Mansions ( |
===Broadway Mansions (1934–1951)=== |
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[[Image:Sh 1930s broadway-mansions-bridge.JPG|thumb|left|300px|The Broadway Mansions in the 1930s]] |
[[Image:Sh 1930s broadway-mansions-bridge.JPG|thumb|left|300px|The Broadway Mansions in the 1930s]] |
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Construction for the Broadway Mansions was started in 1930, and completed by October 1934, and cost $10 million (Mexican) (approximately US$3.4 million at that time).<ref>" |
Construction for the Broadway Mansions was started in 1930, and completed by October 1934, and cost $10 million (Mexican) (approximately US$3.4 million at that time).<ref>"Shanghai Offices of Times Searched; Chief Correspondent to Make a Protest to Japan - His Apartment Also Visited", ''[[The New York Times]]'' (19 August 1937):2; "The unit of Chinese currency is the yuan, a silver dollar loosely called Mexican. Since it fluctuates less in terms of Chinese commodities than in terms of gold, it is the only fair measure of Chinese values. Hence the dollars throughout this article are Mexican, unless otherwise indicated. The present value of the Mexican dollar is about thirty-four cents." See "The Shanghai Boom", ''Fortune'' 11:1 (January 1935); {{cite web |url=http://www.talesofoldchina.com/reading/fortune.php |title=Tales of Old China |access-date=5 December 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230338/http://www.talesofoldchina.com/reading/fortune.php |archive-date=3 March 2016}}; Chang Huei Hsin, "Essays of the History of Chinese Currencies", (Tai Young Publication Co. 1994); "Mexican Eagle Dollars"; http://www.sycee-on-line.com/Mexico_dollars.htm</ref> The Mansions was "originally built in 1934 as an exclusive residential hotel by the British".<ref>J. D. Brown and Sharon Owyang, ''Frommer's Shanghai'', 3rd ed. (John Wiley and Sons, 2004):75.</ref> The Mansions was built by Ye Guang Estate Property Company,<ref>{{cite web|author=Christian Henriot |url=http://www.virtualshanghai.net/Image.php?ID=1436 |title=Broadway Mansions | none |website=Virtualshanghai.net |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.chinatoday.com.cn/English/chinatours/shanghai.htm |title=Shanghai |website=www.chinatoday.com.cn |access-date=26 January 2022 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120722005808/http://www.chinatoday.com.cn/English/chinatours/shanghai.htm |archive-date=22 July 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref> for the Shanghai Land Investment, Company<ref>Kenneth Frampton and Guan Zhaoye, ''World Architecture 1900-2000: A Critical Mosaic'', Vol. 9 (Springer, 2000):59.</ref> controlled by Sir [[Victor Sassoon]].<ref>犹Pan Guang (潘光), ''Jews in China'' 太人在中国: [中英文本], 3rd ed. (五洲传播出版社, 2005):1896.</ref> Additionally, Sassoon owned the [[Cathay Mansions]], another apartment building in the French Concession.<ref>Peter Shen, ''Villa Shen: An Old Shanghai Story'' (Pelanduk Pub., 1997).</ref> Along with the two other tallest buildings in Shanghai, (the [[Peace Hotel|Palace Hotel]] and [[Peace Hotel|Sassoon House]]), these skyscrapers were all owned by [[Baghdad]]i Jews.<ref>''Journal of Indian History'' [Dept. of History, University of Kerala] 68-71 (1992):129; Roman Malek, ''From Kaifeng--to Shanghai: Jews in China'' (Steyler, 2000):354.</ref> The chairman of the board was [[Harry Edward Arnhold]] (born 16 January 1879 in Hong Kong), a Briton of German ancestry who had been educated in Britain,<ref>Robert A. Bickers, ''Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949'' (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132</ref><ref>Carl T. Smith, "The German Speaking Community in Hong Kong 1846-1918", 26-30.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://sunzi1.lib.hku.hk/hkjo/view/44/4402104.pdf |title=Hong Kong Journals Online |website=Sunzi1.lib.hku.hk |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> the chairman of the Sassoon-controlled Arnhold & Company,<ref>Arnhold & Co., a trading company that became a leading distributor of building materials and engineering equipment, was founded as the German-registered Arnhold & Karberg & Co. in 1866 on [[Shamian Island|Shameen Island]] in Canton (Guangzhou) by Jacob Arnhold and Peter Karsberg, and opened branches in Hong Kong (1867) and Shanghai (1881), and had 37 branches by 1901 (see also Carl T. Smith, "The German Speaking Community in Hong Kong 1846-1918", 26-30.; http://sunzi1.lib.hku.hk/hkjo/view/44/4402104.pdf; and "About Arnhold: History'; http://www.arnhold.com.hk/en/about-arnhold/history/); including branches in Hankow, Tientsin (Tianjin), Peking (Beijing), Mukden, London and New York (see E. C. Knuth, ''The Empire of "The City": The Secret History of British Financial Power'' (Book Tree, 2006):72). From 1897 to 1910, at least one of the Arnhold family was chairman of the company's board of directors: Jacob Arnhold (1897–1900), Philipp Arnhold (1900–1905; and 1906-1910); and Harry E. Arnhold (1905–1906). (see Frans-Paul van der Putten, ''Corporate Behaviour and Political Risk: Dutch companies in China, 1903–1941'' (Research School of Asian, African and Amerindian Studies, Leiden University, 2001):74.) Due to hostility to German companies as a consequence of [[World War I]], and the seizure of German companies by the British and their allies, H.E. Arnhold and his brother, Charles Herbert Arnhold (born 19 September 1881 in London), "advertised themselves out of the well-known [[Anglo-German]] concern, Arnhold, Karberg & Co.". (see Edward Manico Gull, ''British Economic Interests in the Far East'' (International Secretariat, Institute of Pacific Relations, 1943):119; ''The Law Journal Reports'' 85 (E.B. Ince, 1916):133.), which had four equal partners: the two Arnhold brothers; Ernest Goetz, a Swiss born German subject; and Max Niclassen, of Berlin, Germany (see Ernest Charles Meldon Trehern and Albert Wallace Grant, ''Prize Cases Heard and Decided in the Prize Court During the Great War, Great Britain High Court of Justice, Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty Division, High Court of Justice'' Vol. 1(Stevens, 1916):644-645). Initially they formed the firm of Messrs. H.E. Arnhold (China), but on 1 October 1917, they incorporated its successor, Arnhold Brothers Limited (China), in Hong Kong, under the British ordinances, but with headquarters in Shanghai (see ''Asia: Journal of the American Asiatic Association'' 18:11 (November 1918):984), which was reconstituted as a British company after 1919. Sir [[Victor Sassoon]] became the majority shareholder in 1923 after a merger (see C.R. Maguire, ''China Stock and Share Handbook'' (Office of the ''North-China Daily News and Herald'', ltd., 1925, 100 for list of directors). According to Stella Dong, its "most attractive asset was the Cathay Land Company, ownership of which gave Sir Victor control of a number of apartment buildings and a hotel in the International Settlement as well as choice housing estates in the French Concession". (See Stella Dong, ''Shanghai: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City 1842-1949'' (HarperCollins, 2001):218-219). Arnhold's served as a front for Sassoon's political interests in the International Settlement. (See Robert A. Bickers, ''Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949'' (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132). Headquartered in the Arnhold Building at 6 Kiukiang Road, Shanghai (see Allister Macmillan, ''Seaports of the Far East: Historical and Descriptive, Commercial and Industrial, Facts, Figures, & Resources'', 2nd ed. (W.H. & L. Collingridge, 1925):57) until its relocation in 1930 to the third floor of [[Sassoon House]] at 1 Nanking Road (see Stanley Jackson, ''The Sassoons'' (Dutton, 1968):217; Ernest O. Hauser, ''Shanghai: City for Sale'' (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):284.), Arnhold & Co. flourished until 1949 when, with the change of Government in China, the headquarters relocated to Hong Kong. Mr. Maurice Green who had been associated with the company since the Sassoon takeover, acquired the controlling interest in Arnhold in 1957 (see About Us; History).</ref> a former Chairman of the British Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai (1923);<ref>''The China Who's Who ... (foreign)'' (Kelley & Walsh, 1924):18.</ref> |
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and the sometime chairman of the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]] (SMC).<ref>According to Ernest O. Hauser, "Arnhold was Sir Victor's lieutenant." (See Ernest O. Hauser, ''Shanghai: City for Sale'' (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):284), or as Bickers put it more bluntly: "Harry was his man on the SMC." (see Robert A. Bickers, ''Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, |
and the sometime chairman of the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]] (SMC).<ref>According to Ernest O. Hauser, "Arnhold was Sir Victor's lieutenant." (See Ernest O. Hauser, ''Shanghai: City for Sale'' (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):284), or as Bickers put it more bluntly: "Harry was his man on the SMC." (see Robert A. Bickers, ''Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949'' (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132) Arnhold reelection as a member of the SMC in 1930 was defeated due to his "reformist" tendencies. He also attracted [[antisemitic]] and anti-German hostility. Arnhold's defeat was warmly welcomed, as the diplomats disliked him. "Not an attractive personality", noted Sir [[Miles Lampson]], the then British Minister. However, Arnhold reemerged as a settler community leader in the 1930s, serving on the committee of serving on the committee of the British Residents' Association, and then back on the SMC from 1932 to 1937, chairing it in 1934-37. See Robert A. Bickers, ''Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949'' (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132.</ref> The primary developer and financer of the Broadway Mansions was Dr. Maurice Benjamin who had "financed and built much of the Shanghai coast".<ref>Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, ''Treasures of Taliesin: Seventy-Seven Unbuilt Designs'', 2nd ed. (Pomegranate, 1999):29.</ref> Benjamin, who was one of the more prominent landowners and businessmen in Shanghai, considered an expert on real estate,<ref name="Maisie J. Meyer 2003"/> was also a leading board member of the Shanghai Land Investment Company,<ref>{{cite book |title= The Quest of Noel Croucher: Hong Kong's Quiet Philanthropist|last= England|first= Vaudine |authorlink= |year= 1998|publisher= [[Hong Kong University Press]]|location= |isbn= 9789622094734|page=45 |url= |accessdate=}}</ref> and a former member of the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]] (1920–1921),<ref>Robert Bickers and Christian Henriot, ''New Frontiers: Imperialism's New Communities in East Asia, 1842–1953'' (Manchester University Press ND, 2000):45.</ref> According to Maisie Meyer, "Broadway Mansions was hailed as Maurice Benjamin's masterpiece."<ref name="Maisie J. Meyer 2003"/> |
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In the years before the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]], "[[Hongkou District|Honkew]]'s only outstanding building was the Broadway Mansion."<ref>Sigmund Tobias, ''Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai'' (University of Illinois Press, 1999):24-25.</ref> On its completion, "this monumental [[pyramid]] was one of Shanghai's two tallest buildings."<ref name="publishing.yudu.com"/> From its inception, it "had been a headquarters for Japanese commercial activity |
In the years before the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]], "[[Hongkou District|Honkew]]'s only outstanding building was the Broadway Mansion."<ref>Sigmund Tobias, ''Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai'' (University of Illinois Press, 1999):24-25.</ref> On its completion, "this monumental [[pyramid]] was one of Shanghai's two tallest buildings."<ref name="publishing.yudu.com"/> From its inception, it "had been a headquarters for Japanese commercial activity",<ref>Jim Yoshida, ''The Two Worlds of Jim Yoshida'' (Morrow, 1972):128.</ref> due to its proximity to Shanghai's Little Tokyo, comprising the [[Yangpu District|Yangpu]] and [[Hongkou District|Hongkou]] districts. In 1932, Little Tokyo comprised {{convert|4.25|sqmi|km2|sigfig=2}} out of the entire {{convert|8.3|sqmi|km2|sigfig=2}} of the International Settlement, and had about 30,000 Japanese residents,<ref>Beverley Jackson, ''Shanghai Girl Gets All Dressed up'' (Ten Speed Press, 2005).</ref> while there about 20,000 other foreigners in both the International Settlement and French Concession combined.<ref name="talesofoldchina1">{{cite web |url=http://www.talesofoldchina.com/reading/fortune.php |title=Tales of Old China |access-date=5 December 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230338/http://www.talesofoldchina.com/reading/fortune.php |archive-date=3 March 2016}}</ref> The area was dominated and controlled by the Japanese military.<ref>[[Edna Lee Booker]], ''News Is My Job - A Correspondent in War Torn China'' (New York: MacMillan, 1940):15; Christian Henriot, "Little Japan in Shanghai: An Insulated Community, 1875-1945" in Robert Bickers and Christian Henriot, eds., ''New Frontiers: Imperialism's New Communities in East Asia, 1842–1952'' (Manchester University Press, 2000):146-169.</ref> After the surrender of non-foreign Shanghai in November 1937, the International Settlement north of the Suzhou Creek, became almost exclusively Japanese in population. |
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====Second Sino-Japanese War ( |
====Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945)==== |
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The Japanese military commandeered the Broadway Mansions at 11.00am on 17 August 1937, with all non-Japanese residents were ordered to evacuate from the Broadway Mansions by Japanese military sailors, often at the point of a [[bayonet]].<ref>Peter O'Connor, ''Japanese Propaganda : To our American friends II, |
The Japanese military commandeered the Broadway Mansions at 11.00am on 17 August 1937, with all non-Japanese residents were ordered to evacuate from the Broadway Mansions by Japanese military sailors, often at the point of a [[bayonet]].<ref>Peter O'Connor, ''Japanese Propaganda : To our American friends II, 1934–38'', Vol. 9 (Global Oriental, 2005):184; United States Naval Institute, ''Proceedings'' Vol. 65 (1939):176.</ref> Soon the Japanese flag fluttered over the Broadway Mansions, to the great delight of Japanese admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]] who toured Shanghai in April 1938.<ref>Joshua A. Fogel, ''The Literature of Travel in the Japanese Rediscovery of China, 1862–1945'' (Stanford University Press, 1996):199.</ref> The Mansions became a ''[[de facto]]'' Japanese possession. The Journal of the American Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines in discussing accommodation in Shanghai indicated: "Broadway Mansions? No. That's out. It is ... mostly empty and in darkness. Some Japanese military are there, that is all. It is a British property, Shanghai's newest and best apartment hotel. Another [[indemnity]] is accumulating."<ref>''Journal'', |
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By American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, 5.</ref> Within a year most of the Mansions was rented to Japanese tenants.<ref>"Explosives Hurled at Property Owned by Japanese-Street Patrols Are Reinforced", ''The New York Times'' (7 July 1938):10.</ref> According to testimony presented to a US Congress sub-committee, "Broadway Mansion is the "brain" of all Japanese control in Shanghai. Here most of the important combined policy meetings are held."<ref>Anthony Kubek, ''The Amerasia Papers: A Clue to the Catastrophe of China. United States Congress: Senate Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws'' Vol. 1(U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1970):279.</ref> The Mansions was used as the headquarters of the Japanese Army Liaison Office.<ref>Jim Yoshida, with Bill Hosokawa, ''The Two Worlds of Jim Yoshida'' (Morrow, 1972):127.</ref> Before December 1941, the Japanese military government held weekly (and later bi-weekly) press conferences at the Broadway Mansions,<ref>William H. McDougall, ''If I Get Out Alive: World War II Letters & Diaries of William H. McDougall Jr'' (University of Utah Press, 2007):35; Violet Sweet Haven, ''Gentlemen of Japan: a Study in Rapist Diplomacy'' (Ziff-Davis publishing company, 1944):70; Eric Downton, ''Wars Without End'' (Stoddart, 1987):52. [[Philip J. Jaffe]], ''Amerasia'' 3 (1940):90.</ref> and had offices there, including its transportation office.<ref>Gus Lee, ''Chasing Hepburn: A Memoir of Shanghai, Hollywood, and a Chinese Family's Fight for Freedom'' (Harmony Books, 2003):440.</ref> Foreigners who transgressed the Japanese rules of the territory occupied by Japan were held for questioning in the Mansions.<ref>Dora Sanders Carney, ''Foreign Devils had Light Eyes: A Memoir of Shanghai 1933-1939'' (Dorset Pub., 1980):222.</ref> |
By American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, 5.</ref> Within a year most of the Mansions was rented to Japanese tenants.<ref>"Explosives Hurled at Property Owned by Japanese-Street Patrols Are Reinforced", ''The New York Times'' (7 July 1938):10.</ref> According to testimony presented to a US Congress sub-committee, "Broadway Mansion is the "brain" of all Japanese control in Shanghai. Here most of the important combined policy meetings are held."<ref>Anthony Kubek, ''The Amerasia Papers: A Clue to the Catastrophe of China. United States Congress: Senate Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws'' Vol. 1(U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1970):279.</ref> The Mansions was used as the headquarters of the Japanese Army Liaison Office.<ref>Jim Yoshida, with Bill Hosokawa, ''The Two Worlds of Jim Yoshida'' (Morrow, 1972):127.</ref> Before December 1941, the Japanese military government held weekly (and later bi-weekly) press conferences at the Broadway Mansions,<ref>William H. McDougall, ''If I Get Out Alive: World War II Letters & Diaries of William H. McDougall Jr'' (University of Utah Press, 2007):35; Violet Sweet Haven, ''Gentlemen of Japan: a Study in Rapist Diplomacy'' (Ziff-Davis publishing company, 1944):70; Eric Downton, ''Wars Without End'' (Stoddart, 1987):52. [[Philip J. Jaffe]], ''Amerasia'' 3 (1940):90.</ref> and had offices there, including its transportation office.<ref>Gus Lee, ''Chasing Hepburn: A Memoir of Shanghai, Hollywood, and a Chinese Family's Fight for Freedom'' (Harmony Books, 2003):440.</ref> Foreigners who transgressed the Japanese rules of the territory occupied by Japan were held for questioning in the Mansions.<ref>[[Dora Sanders Carney]], ''Foreign Devils had Light Eyes: A Memoir of Shanghai 1933-1939'' (Dorset Pub., 1980):222.</ref> |
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After December 1938, as a result of a meeting of Japanese military authorities and the Japanese-appointed [[puppet regime]] [[Reformed Government of the Republic of China]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://flagspot.net/flags/cn_j_nj2.html |title=Reorganized National Government of the ROC |website=Flagspot.net |date= |
After December 1938, as a result of a meeting of Japanese military authorities and the Japanese-appointed [[puppet regime]] [[Reformed Government of the Republic of China]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://flagspot.net/flags/cn_j_nj2.html |title=Reorganized National Government of the ROC |website=Flagspot.net |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> led by [[Liang Hongzhi]] in [[Nanjing]], which led to the formation "the Jiangsu-Zhejiang-Anhui Opium Suppression Bureau (Su Zhe Wan jinyanju) on the fifth floor of the Broadway Mansions. ... They were empowered to control the import and distribution of [[opium]], to enforce licensing conditions for opium [[The Hongs|hongs]] and smokers, and to collect revenues from opium sales. ... All fifty-eight licensed opium hongs in Shanghai ... had to pick up their opium requisitions from the bureau on the fifth floor of the Broadway Mansions."<ref>Frederic E. Wakeman, ''The Shanghai Badlands: Wartime Terrorism and Urban Crime, 1937–1941'' (Cambridge University Press, 2002):13; see also Shuxi Xu, ''Japan and the Third Powers'' No. 11 (Kelly & Walsh, 1941):202.</ref> The Reformed Government (and its successor, the [[Wang Jingwei Government|Reorganized Government]] of [[Wang Jingwei]]) had its Foreign Affairs Bureau on the fourth floor of the Broadway Mansions.<ref>Frederic E. Wakeman, ''The Shanghai Badlands: Wartime Terrorism and Urban Crime, 1937–1941'' (Cambridge University Press, 2002):62.</ref> |
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=====Sale of Broadway Mansions (March 1939)===== |
=====Sale of Broadway Mansions (March 1939)===== |
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In an unsuccessful |
In an unsuccessful attempt to increase the number of Japanese [[ratepayer]]s and thus gain a majority on the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]], which governed the International Settlement,<ref>Electoral [[gerrymander]]ing, sanctioned and aided by London, prevented the Japanese achieving a majority on the SMC in 1940. See Robert A. Bickers, ''Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949'' (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):157.</ref> a Japanese [[joint stock company]] purchased the Broadway Mansions in 21 March 1939 at a considerable loss to its owners for $5,000,000, with the considerable hesitation of H.E. (Harry) Arnhold, the chairman of the board.<ref>Madeleine Constance Munday, ''Rice Bowl Broken'' (National Book Association, 1947):113; ''The China Weekly Review'' 88-89 (11 March 1939):109; ''The China Weekly Review'' 88-89 (1 April 1939):131.</ref> At that time ''The China Weekly Review'' reported: "One of the most luxurious hotels in Shanghai, Broadway Mansions has 156 hotel suites, 56 apartments, and eight offices and stores."<ref>''The China Weekly Review'' 88-89 (11 March 1939):46; Hallett Abend, ''My Life in China 1926-1941'' (Reprint: Read Books, 2007):337.</ref> Many non-[[missionary]] foreigners were interned at the Broadway Mansions after the bombing of [[Pearl Harbor]] in December 1941.<ref>''China at War'' 8:1 (January 1942):38; "Shanghai Americans Safe But Harassed", ''The New York Times'' (13 March 1942):4; Columbia University East Asian Institute, ''Contemporary China'', Vol. 1 (Westview Press, 1976):17.</ref> |
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====Highlights ( |
====Highlights (1945–1949)==== |
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=====US Military occupancy ( |
=====US Military occupancy (1945–1949)===== |
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After the Japanese surrender in August 1945, and the subsequent evacuation of its Japanese tenants and occupants, the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]] assumed ownership of the Broadway Mansions.<ref name="Brown & Owyang, 75">Brown & Owyang, 75.</ref> The Council leased part of the Mansions to the foreign correspondents and the remainder to the United States military,<ref>Freda Utley, Last Chance in China (Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1947):91; Russell Lord and |
After the Japanese surrender in August 1945, and the subsequent evacuation of its Japanese tenants and occupants, the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]] assumed ownership of the Broadway Mansions.<ref name="Brown & Owyang, 75">Brown & Owyang, 75.</ref> The Council leased part of the Mansions to the foreign correspondents and the remainder to the United States military,<ref>Freda Utley, Last Chance in China (Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1947):91; Russell Lord and Kate Kalkman Lord, ''Forever the Land: A Country Chronicle and Anthology'' (Harper, 1950):285.</ref> where it became the headquarters for the American Military Mission that advised [[Chiang Kai-shek]] and the Nationalist government of the [[Republic of China (1912–1949)|Republic of China]].<ref>Jean Bowie Shor, ''After You, Marco Polo'', 4th ed. (McGraw-Hill, 1955):61.</ref> The first five or six floors of the Broadway Mansions was occupied by officers of the U.S. Military Aid Group in China (MAGIC) and their dependents,<ref>Harrison Forman, ''Blunder in Asia'' (Didier, 1950):12; Jack Birns, Carolyn Wakeman, and Ken Light, ''Assignment, Shanghai: Photographs on the Eve of Revolution'' (University of California Press, 2003):98.</ref> with 400 billets being provided at the Mansions.<ref>Emanuel Goldberg, ''The Stars and Stripes in China'' (University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1947):41.</ref> The ground floor hosted a small American army hospital.<ref>Hlavacek, 172.</ref> American [[fighter pilot]] Bill Dunn, one of the first to occupy the Mansions in August 1945, recalled: "In Shanghai we were billeted at the Broadway Mansions, a beautiful European-style hotel. There was only one problem: the rooms had no beds. Japanese officers had been billeted there, and they didn't use our type of bed, just sleeping mats. We got in touch with the hotel manager, who soon had a flock of Chinese setting up beds for us."<ref>William R. Dunn, ''Fighter Pilot: The First American Ace of World War II'' (Reprint: University Press of Kentucky, 1996):171.</ref> About this time the manager was Michael Alexis Melgunow, a [[White Movement|White Russian]] [[émigré]], who had previously been the head [[chauffeur]].<ref>''United States Congressional Serial Set'', Vol. 6 (U.S.G.P.O., 1956):HR2551, 6.</ref> After the alleged rape of two Chinese girls by American marines, approximately 5,000 anti-American Chinese university students marched on 1 January 1947 on the Broadway Mansions, at that time home for 200 U.S. servicemen and their dependents, demanding the American military (which they likened to the British imperialists and the Japanese aggressors) leave China.<ref>Henry B. Lieberman, "5,000 Parade in Shanghai", ''The New York Times'' (2 January 1947):11; Spencer Moosa, "Chinese Demand Americans Leave", ''The Evening Independent'' (1 January 1947):2.</ref> |
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The American-owned ''China Weekly Review'' attributed the cause of the Chinese hostility to the "outrageous conduct" of American military police and other Army and Marine" personnel.<ref>" |
The American-owned ''China Weekly Review'' attributed the cause of the Chinese hostility to the "outrageous conduct" of American military police and other Army and Marine" personnel.<ref>"Us Troops Criticized", ''The New York Times'' (14 September 1947); and "Anti-American Feeling in China Laid to Yanks", ''Chicago Tribune'' (14 September 1947).</ref> |
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=====Foreign Correspondents' Club of China ( |
=====Foreign Correspondents' Club of China (1945–1949)===== |
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Also immediately after [[World War II]], the Mansions hosted the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China,<ref>Pegge Parker Hlavacek, ''Alias Pegge Parker'' (iUniverse, 2003):62.</ref> which had been founded in [[Chongqing]] on 18 May 1943,<ref>Hsüan ch'uan pu, |
Also immediately after [[World War II]], the Mansions hosted the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China,<ref>Pegge Parker Hlavacek, ''Alias Pegge Parker'' (iUniverse, 2003):62.</ref> which had been founded in [[Chongqing]] on 18 May 1943,<ref>Hsüan ch'uan pu, Xing zheng yuan, and Xin wen ju, ''China Handbook'' (Macmillan, 1944):534.</ref> in its upper four floors,<ref>Robert H. Giles, Robert W. Snyder, and Lisa DeLisle, eds., ''Covering China'' (Transaction Publishers, 2001):22; Bruce Douglass and Ross Terrill, ''China and Ourselves: Explorations and Revisions by a New Generation'' (Beacon Press, 1971):90; Paul Gordon Lauren, ''The China Hands' Legacy: Ethics and Diplomacy'' (Westview Press, 1987):173.</ref> and billeted its members and their families,<ref>Paolo Alberto Rossi, ''The Communist Conquest of Shanghai: A Warning to the West'' (Twin Circle, 1970):109.</ref> until soon after the establishment of the People's Republic of China in October 1949.<ref name="Dmitri Kessel 1985" /><ref name="Brown & Owyang, 75"/> American journalist John Robinson Beal explained: "It's easy to understand why the correspondents prefer Shanghai. One lives comfortably at the Broadway Mansions, ... one of the [[Far East]]'s finest hotels, waited on hand and foot by servants",<ref>John Robinson Beal, ''Marshall in China'' (Doubleday Canada, 1970):133, 21.</ref> making it "the most decorous press club in Asia".<ref>Pegge Parker Hlavacek, ''Alias Pegge Parker'' (Reprint: iUniverse, 2003):62.</ref> Journalist Richard Hughes joked that "Most of the correspondents lived there, incestuously".<ref>Richard Hughes, ''Foreign Devil: Thirty Years of Reporting from the Far East'' (Deutsch, 1972):279.</ref> |
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The bar was located in the penthouse on the 17th floor.<ref>Giles, ''et al''., 22.</ref> The parties held in the Foreign Correspondents' Club were notorious. While there was intense fighting in the rural areas of China during the escalating [[Chinese Civil War]], this "did not prevent the parties in the foreign correspondents' club atop the eighteen-story Broadway Mansions, where dancing went on under gaily colored lights."<ref name="Jack Belden 1970">Jack Belden, ''China Shakes the World'' (Monthly Review Press, 1970):366.</ref> "on its top floor foreigners and their [[White Movement|White Russian]] mistresses used to dance the sultry Shanghai nights away."<ref>Ross Terrill, ''Flowers on an Iron Tree: Five Cities of China'' (Little, Brown, 1975):6.</ref> At these parties, "White Russian [[Mistress (lover)|mistresses]] mingled with the American wives and [[black market]] speculators with military personnel",<ref>Bert Cochran, ''Harry Truman and the Crisis Presidency'' (Funk & Wagnalls, 1973):305.</ref> who all cursed the Chinese, including both the Communists and [[Chiang Kai-shek]].<ref name="Jack Belden 1970" /> Along with the decline in value of the Chinese currency, both gambling and opium-smoking increased, as did concerns about what to do with their White Russian mistresses should the Communists triumph and evict them from China.<ref>Harrison Evans Salisbury, ''China: 100 Years of Revolution'' (Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1983):195.</ref> The Mansions also hosted a popular [[brothel]] in this period of American occupancy.<ref>Sophia Knight, ''Window on Shanghai: Letters from China, |
The bar was located in the penthouse on the 17th floor.<ref>Giles, ''et al''., 22.</ref> The parties held in the Foreign Correspondents' Club were notorious. While there was intense fighting in the rural areas of China during the escalating [[Chinese Civil War]], this "did not prevent the parties in the foreign correspondents' club atop the eighteen-story Broadway Mansions, where dancing went on under gaily colored lights."<ref name="Jack Belden 1970">Jack Belden, ''China Shakes the World'' (Monthly Review Press, 1970):366.</ref> "on its top floor foreigners and their [[White Movement|White Russian]] mistresses used to dance the sultry Shanghai nights away."<ref>Ross Terrill, ''Flowers on an Iron Tree: Five Cities of China'' (Little, Brown, 1975):6.</ref> At these parties, "White Russian [[Mistress (lover)|mistresses]] mingled with the American wives and [[black market]] speculators with military personnel",<ref>Bert Cochran, ''Harry Truman and the Crisis Presidency'' (Funk & Wagnalls, 1973):305.</ref> who all cursed the Chinese, including both the Communists and [[Chiang Kai-shek]].<ref name="Jack Belden 1970" /> Along with the decline in value of the Chinese currency, both gambling and opium-smoking increased, as did concerns about what to do with their White Russian mistresses should the Communists triumph and evict them from China.<ref>Harrison Evans Salisbury, ''China: 100 Years of Revolution'' (Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1983):195.</ref> The Mansions also hosted a popular [[brothel]] in this period of American occupancy.<ref>Sophia Knight, ''Window on Shanghai: Letters from China, 1965–67'' (Deutsch, 1967):131.</ref> |
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While Edward Ward in 1947 considered the Mansions to be "one of the most modern luxury blocks of flats",<ref>Edward Ward, ''Chinese Crackers'' (Lane, 1947):106.</ref> Harrison Forman, noticing the changes in the Mansions since its [[wiktionary:halcyon days|halcyon days]] before the war, reflected on his return, "Now it looked rundown and motheaten."<ref>Harrison Forman, ''Blunder in Asia'' (Didier, 1950):12.</ref> American [[Pulitzer Prize]]–winning journalist [[Keyes Beech]]<ref>{{cite news|author=John T. McQuiston|title=Keyes Beech, 76, Correspondent in Asia for Five Decades, Is Dead|newspaper= |
While Edward Ward in 1947 considered the Mansions to be "one of the most modern luxury blocks of flats",<ref>Edward Ward, ''Chinese Crackers'' (Lane, 1947):106.</ref> Harrison Forman, noticing the changes in the Mansions since its [[wiktionary:halcyon days|halcyon days]] before the war, reflected on his return, "Now it looked rundown and motheaten."<ref>Harrison Forman, ''Blunder in Asia'' (Didier, 1950):12.</ref> American [[Pulitzer Prize]]–winning journalist [[Keyes Beech]]<ref>{{cite news|author=John T. McQuiston|title=Keyes Beech, 76, Correspondent in Asia for Five Decades, Is Dead|newspaper=The New York Times|date=16 February 1990|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/02/16/nyregion/keyes-beech-76-correspondent-in-asia-for-five-decades-is-dead.html|access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> described the Broadway Mansions as "a steel and concrete apartment hotel that shot eighteen stories up from the bank of Soochow Creek, an American pillar of plenty",<ref name="Keyes Beech 1954">Keyes Beech, ''Tokyo and Points East'' (Doubleday, 1954):29.</ref> but indicated that "the best thing about the Broadway Mansions was the view".<ref name="Keyes Beech 1954" /> In May 1949 the Broadway Mansions was still the tallest apartment building in Shanghai,<ref name="Time"/> but described as a "building with dull red brick".<ref>Noël Barber, ''The Fall of Shanghai: The Communist Take-Over in 1949'' (Macmillan, 1979):33.</ref> |
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====The Battle of Broadway Mansions (25–27 May 1949)==== |
====The Battle of Broadway Mansions (25–27 May 1949)==== |
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From 25 May 1949, during the [[Chinese Civil War]], one of the few significant battles in Shanghai was, what foreign residents called, "The Battle of Broadway Mansions", where for two days there was fierce fighting in the vicinity of the Broadway Mansions between the forces of the [[ |
From 25 May 1949, during the [[Chinese Civil War]], one of the few significant battles in Shanghai was, what foreign residents called, "The Battle of Broadway Mansions", where for two days there was fierce fighting in the vicinity of the Broadway Mansions between the forces of the [[Kuomintang]] and the [[People's Liberation Army]].<ref>Odd Arne Westad, ''Decisive Encounters: The Chinese Civil War, 1946–1950'' (Stanford University Press, 2003):250-251; Mariano Ezpeleta, ''Red Shadows over Shanghai'' (ZITA Pub. Corp., 1972):188.</ref> From 30 April 1949 retreating Nationalist soldiers took possession of the Broadway Mansions, the nearby Central Post Office and the Embankment apartment complex.<ref>Mariano Ezpeleta, ''Red Shadows over Shanghai'' (ZITA Pub. Corp., 1972):188.</ref> One hundred regulars from the army of the [[Republic of China (1912–1949)|Republic of China]] commanded by a major, occupied the Broadway Mansions, as part of the Kuomintang's defense of Shanghai against the invading [[People's Liberation Army]].<ref>"Shanghai Tightens Security Program", ''The New York Times'' (1 May 1949):43; "Shanghai Troops Occupy Hotels; Man Gun Posts in Skyscrapers; Raw Country Recruits With Field Equipment Billeted in Luxury Buildings on Main Streets -- May Day Parades Banned", ''The New York Times'' (2 May 1949):3.</ref> Eventually, just over one thousand Nationalists defended the Broadway Mansions,<ref>Jeremy Brown and Paul Pickowicz, ''Dilemmas of Victory: The Early Years of the People's Republic of China'' (Harvard University Press, 2007):391.</ref> where they had entrenched themselves on the upper floors, where they could shoot from the windows and from the roof.<ref>Alun Falconer, ''New China: Friend or Foe?'' (Naldrett Press, 1950):13; Harrison Forman, ''Blunder in Asia'' (Didier, 1950):73; Jeremy Brown and Paul Pickowicz, ''Dilemmas of Victory: The Early Years of the People's Republic of China'' (Harvard University Press, 2007):391.</ref> From the roof of Broadway Mansions, just above the Foreign Press Club, the [[Kuomintang]] [[sniper]]s could rake the approaches to the [[Waibaidu Bridge]] by the advancing Communist forces.<ref>Noël Barber, ''The Fall of Shanghai: The Communist Take-over in 1949'' (Macmillan, 1979):149, 96.</ref> There about two hundred foreigners trapped within the Mansions during the battle,<ref>Barber, 149.</ref> who were terrified for their safety. Peter Townsend recalls: "When you go out on the [[parapet]] of Broadway Mansions a bullet whistles above your head and you duck and crawl back on your hands and knees."<ref>Peter Townsend, ''China Phoenix: The Revolution in China'' (Cape, 1955):73; see also Roy Rowan, ''Chasing the Dragon: A Veteran Journalist's Firsthand Account of the 1946-9 Chinese Revolution'' (The Lyons Press, 2008):215.</ref> |
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Journalist Edwin Palmer Hoyt, whose apartment was in the Broadway Mansions, described the defeat of the [[ |
Journalist Edwin Palmer Hoyt, whose apartment was in the Broadway Mansions, described the defeat of the [[Kuomintang]]: "The rot of the Kuomintang was definitely showing, nowhere more tragically than on Soochow Creek, just below the windows of the Broadway Mansions Hotel, the press hotel for the correspondents. From the windows of their comfortable apartments, they could look out at the steaming mass of humanity crowded beneath."<ref>Edwin Palmer Hoyt, ''The Rise of the Chinese Republic: From the Last Emperor to Deng Xiaoping'' (McGraw-Hill, 1989):333.</ref> Townsend reported during the final stages of the battle, "They're hanging on at Broadway Mansions ... for nothing."<ref>Townsend, 73.</ref> According to Brown and Pickowicz, "The thousand or so Nationalists defending Broadway Mansions could have been subdued by the Communists in an hour if the latter had wanted to do so."<ref>Brown & Pickowicz, 391.</ref> The hoisting of the red flag with five yellow stars of the People's Republic of China on the roof of the Broadway Mansions on 27 May 1949 signified the final conquest of Shanghai by the People's Liberation Army.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> |
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====Highlights ( |
====Highlights (1949–1951)==== |
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After the surrender of Shanghai to the [[People's Liberation Army]] on 27 May 1949, and especially after the declaration of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, the circumstances changed dramatically for the residents of the Broadway Mansions. According to Ross Terrill, "Foreign journalists drifted out of China to other assignments. The Foreign Correspondents Club in Broadway Mansions unraveled. Its Chinese staff were paid off; waiters were given leftover [[mustard (condiment)|mustard]]....Today there are no dances, but you can get a good view" from the roof.<ref>Ross Terrill, ''Flowers on an Iron Tree: Five Cities of China'' (Little, Brown, 1975):81.</ref> On 20 June 1949 the remaining 11 foreigners residing in the Broadway Mansions were ordered to leave to make room for political and military workers.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2810012|title=21 Jun 1949 - |
After the surrender of Shanghai to the [[People's Liberation Army]] on 27 May 1949, and especially after the declaration of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, the circumstances changed dramatically for the residents of the Broadway Mansions. According to Ross Terrill, "Foreign journalists drifted out of China to other assignments. The Foreign Correspondents Club in Broadway Mansions unraveled. Its Chinese staff were paid off; waiters were given leftover [[mustard (condiment)|mustard]]. ... Today there are no dances, but you can get a good view" from the roof.<ref>Ross Terrill, ''Flowers on an Iron Tree: Five Cities of China'' (Little, Brown, 1975):81.</ref> On 20 June 1949 the remaining 11 foreigners residing in the Broadway Mansions were ordered to leave to make room for political and military workers.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2810012|title=21 Jun 1949 - Communists Order Foreigners Out of Shanghai Mansions |website=Ndpbeta.nla.gov.au |date=21 June 1949 |access-date=5 December 2015 }}</ref> By 1950 the Shanghai branch of the Chinese Government Information Office, had its headquarters in the Broadway Mansions.<ref>Alun Falconer, ''New China: Friend or Foe?'' (Naldrett Press, 1950):13.</ref> |
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===Shanghai Mansions ( |
===Shanghai Mansions (1951–1969)=== |
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On 1 May 1951 the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]], who had assumed ownership in 1945, renamed the Mansions as "'Shanghai dasha' or the Grand Building of Shanghai",<ref>Xudong Zhang, ''Postsocialism and Cultural Politics: China in the Last Decade of the Twentieth Century'' (Duke University Press, 2008):225.</ref> or as more popularly known in English, "the Shanghai Mansions".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chinadiscounthotel.com/shanghai/mansions/broadway_mansions_hotel_shanghai.html|title=Broadway Mansions Hotel, Shanghai |
On 1 May 1951, the [[Shanghai Municipal Council]], who had assumed ownership in 1945, renamed the Mansions as "'Shanghai dasha' or the Grand Building of Shanghai",<ref>Xudong Zhang, ''Postsocialism and Cultural Politics: China in the Last Decade of the Twentieth Century'' (Duke University Press, 2008):225.</ref> or as more popularly known in English, "the Shanghai Mansions".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chinadiscounthotel.com/shanghai/mansions/broadway_mansions_hotel_shanghai.html|title=Broadway Mansions Hotel, Shanghai |website=Chinadiscounthotel.com|access-date=4 May 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091007062717/http://www.chinadiscounthotel.com/shanghai/mansions/broadway_mansions_hotel_shanghai.html|archive-date=7 October 2009|url-status=dead}}</ref> Apparently, in 1957, the Mansions was also known as the 'Golden River Hotel',<ref>James M. Bertram, ''Return to China'' (Heinemann, 1957):187.</ref> which ''[[The Times]]'' journalist James Bertram (1910–1980) described as "an elaborate Western-style hotel-cum-apartment-house that has survived the war years and the Japanese occupation without visible change."<ref>Bertram, 187.</ref> In 1956 British novelist and film producer Rubeigh James Minney,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://minney.org.uk/rjminney.htm |title=Rubeigh James Minney, a brief history |website=Minney.org.uk |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> who visited Shanghai in 1956, referred to the Shanghai Mansions' store on the ground floor: "On the ground floor there is a very superior general store",<ref>Rubeigh James Minney, ''Next Stop--Peking: Record of a 16,000 Mile Journey Through Russia, Siberia, and China'' (G. Newnes, 1957):129.</ref> where, "the atmosphere was much more elegant: by contrast one might say it was on the [[Harrods]] level."<ref>Minney, 131.</ref> |
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In 1965 the Mansions was described as "the huge ugly building in Shanghai |
In 1965, the Mansions was described as "the huge ugly building in Shanghai".<ref>''Far Eastern Economic Review'' 50 (1965):113.</ref> Belgian journalist Jacques Marcuse concurred with that assessment, describing the Mansions in 1967 as "that tall yet squat ugly building".<ref>Jacques Marcuse, ''The Peking Papers: Leaves from the Notebook of a China Correspondent'' (Dutton, 1967):183.</ref> while in the same year, Sally Backhouse, after describing "slab-like buildings that towered above the rest, holed by myriad windows and grimy with dirt, like dry old discolored cheese", indicated that "the largest of these was the famous 'Broadway Mansions', in [[capitalist]] days a block of luxury flats and rented buildings."<ref>Sally Backhouse, ''Nine Dragons: An Encounter with the Far East'' (H. Hamilton, 1967):200.</ref> Another resident described the Mansions in the mid-1960s as a huge hotel, but "Shanghai Mansion is not the most luxurious hotel in Shanghai."<ref>Sophia Knight, ''Window on Shanghai: Letters from China, 1965–67'' (Deutsch, 1967):28.</ref> |
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====Shanghai Mansion Incident (23–24 February 1967)==== |
====Shanghai Mansion Incident (23–24 February 1967)==== |
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On 23 February 1967, a "grave incident" occurred at the Shanghai Agricultural Department,<ref name="British Broadcasting Corporation 1967">British Broadcasting Corporation, Monitoring Service, ''Summary of World Broadcasts'' (Monitoring Service of the British Broadcasting Corp, 1967).</ref> that became known as the Shanghai Mansions Incident.<ref>''Current Scene: Developments in Mainland China'' 5-7 (1967):17.</ref> During the period of the Shanghai Revolution (or January Revolution) of January 1967, which led to the short-lived [[Shanghai People's Commune]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.workers.org/marcy/cd/samsupp/suppress/suppr04.htm |title=China 1977: End of the Revolutionary Mao Era: The Shanghai Commune and the rightist reaction |website=Workers.org |date= |
On 23 February 1967, a "grave incident" occurred at the Shanghai Agricultural Department,<ref name="British Broadcasting Corporation 1967">British Broadcasting Corporation, Monitoring Service, ''Summary of World Broadcasts'' (Monitoring Service of the British Broadcasting Corp, 1967).</ref> that became known as the Shanghai Mansions Incident.<ref>''Current Scene: Developments in Mainland China'' 5-7 (1967):17.</ref> During the period of the Shanghai Revolution (or January Revolution) of January 1967, which led to the short-lived [[Shanghai People's Commune]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.workers.org/marcy/cd/samsupp/suppress/suppr04.htm |title=China 1977: End of the Revolutionary Mao Era: The Shanghai Commune and the rightist reaction |website=Workers.org |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> on 20 February, men "were sent to the Shanghai mansion to urge the [striking] workers to go back to their agricultural production posts."<ref name="British Broadcasting Corporation 1967"/> On 23 February 1967, an "[[expatriate]] rebel group which had set up headquarters in the Shanghai Mansions, staged an assault on the Revolutionary Committee's economic department".<ref>United States Dept. of State, International Information Administration, Documentary Studies Section, United States Information Agency, ''Problems of Communism'' Vol. 17 (Documentary Studies Section, International Information Administration, 1968):17.</ref> On 24 February 1967, the evening the Shanghai Commune was renamed the Shanghai Municipal Revolutionary Committee at the instigation of [[Mao Zedong]], "the committee sent some 'representatives' on a 'fact-finding investigation' to ... the Shanghai Mansion, the site of an apparently large but undetermined colony of returnees from the countryside."<ref>Ezra F. Vogel, L. Culman, and Margie Sargent, ''The Cultural Revolution in the Provinces'' (East Asian Research Center, Harvard University; distributed by Harvard University Press, 1971):88.</ref> These 'counter-revolutionary" forces were suppressed, and the [[Leadership|ring leader]]s were punished.<ref>Lynn M. Lubkeman, ''The Origins of the Shanghai People's Commune of 1967'' (University of Wisconsin--Madison., 1978):171.</ref> However, after this incident "they continued to deploy large numbers around the Shanghai Mansions day and night, beating up public security personnel."<ref>''Problems of Communism'', 17.</ref> |
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===Anti-Imperialism Building ( |
===Anti-Imperialism Building (c. 1969-1972)=== |
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During the [[Cultural Revolution]], the Mansions was renamed the Anti-Imperialism Building by Chinese [[Red Guards (China)|Red Guards]].<ref>Michael Schoenhals, ''China's Cultural Revolution, 1966-1969: Not a Dinner Party'' (M.E. Sharpe, 1996):145.</ref> |
During the [[Cultural Revolution]], the Mansions was renamed the Anti-Imperialism Building by Chinese [[Red Guards (China)|Red Guards]].<ref>Michael Schoenhals, ''China's Cultural Revolution, 1966-1969: Not a Dinner Party'' (M.E. Sharpe, 1996):145.</ref> |
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===Shanghai Mansions Hotel ( |
===Shanghai Mansions Hotel (c. 1972 to c. 1996)=== |
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By 1973, the Mansions was renamed in English the Shanghai Mansions Hotel,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,906934,00.html |title= |
By 1973, the Mansions was renamed in English the Shanghai Mansions Hotel,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,906934,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081214075015/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,906934,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=14 December 2008 |title=China: A Reporter Revisits Shanghai |magazine=Time |date=19 March 1973 |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> but retained its Chinese name. By 1973 the Mansions was the third-choice accommodation provided for Overseas Chinese: "If there isn't enough room at these two hotels, then Overseas Chinese are put into the sky scraping Shanghai Mansions Hotel overlooking the Bund.<ref>Ruth Lor Malloy, ''A Guide to the People's Republic of China for Travelers of Chinese Ancestry'' (Published 1973):37.</ref> During the 1970s the Mansion was also the primary residence for "foreign experts".<ref>Stephen Fitzgerald and Pamela Hewitt, ''China in the Seventies: Australian Perspectives'' (Contemporary China Centre, Australian National University, 1980):60.</ref> Edoarda Masi, an Italian language teacher, who lived at the Mansions for a year between 1976 and 1977,<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8QchAAAAMAAJ&q=Dasha |title=China Winter: Workers, Mandarins, and the Purge of the Gang of Four |author=Edoarda Masi |date=2006-12-01 |publisher=Dutton |access-date=2015-12-05|isbn=9780525107644 }}</ref> described the Mansions as "a [[mastodon]] among the low buildings that surround it; walls, plumbing, closets are all solid."<ref>Edoarda Masi, ''China Winter: Workers, Mandarins, and the Purge of the Gang of Four'' (Dutton, 1982):50.</ref> Referring to the Mansion's popularity, Masi indicated: "Depending on the time of year, this large room is half empty or crowded with tourists. The Dasha, which is known in English as Shanghai Mansions, for long [[Layover|stopover]]s.<ref>Masi, 138.</ref> By 1978 the Mansions was used increasingly as a hotel for visitors from [[Third World]] countries,<ref>''Orientations'' 9 (Pacific Communications Ltd., 1978):32.</ref> thus improving the accommodation situation in Shanghai.<ref>''New Times'' 11 (1978):31.</ref> |
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An American academic who stayed at the Mansions in the summer of 1982, said: "With its somewhat shabby decor, the hotel lobby at Shanghai Mansions was a hangout in the evenings for the African and Middle Eastern students of Shanghai."<ref>Eugene Cooper, ''Adventures in Chinese Bureaucracy: A Meta-Anthropological Saga'' (Nova Publishers, 2000):11.</ref> By 1984, "The Shanghai Mansions, consisting of a main and a side building, is a hotel accommodating foreign tourists, businessmen, overseas Chinese."<ref>Gu Gan, ''Touring Metropolitan Shanghai'' (The Publishing House, 1984):230.</ref> At that time the Mansions had 370 guest rooms (including some deluxe [[Suite (hotel)|suites]]) and 1,468 beds.<ref>Gu Gan, ''Touring Metropolitan Shanghai'' (The Publishing House, 1984):231.</ref> In 1985 one visitor referred to the "Thirties fortress of Shanghai Mansions, its thick brick walls pocked by black windows.<ref>Helena Drysdale, ''Alone Through China & Tibet'' (Constable, 1986):89.</ref> The General Manager of the Mansions from 1985 to at least 1999 was Tao Pei Tai (born 1 August 1946), who was also Deputy General Manager of Hengshan Group Holding Co., the owner of the Mansion.<ref>''Who's Who of the Asian Pacific Rim'' (Barons Who's Who, 1999):381.</ref> In 1989 a double room in the Mansions was US$50 per night.<ref>{{cite news|author=Sheryl WuDunn|title=The Waterfront Heart of the City|newspaper= |
An American academic who stayed at the Mansions in the summer of 1982, said: "With its somewhat shabby decor, the hotel lobby at Shanghai Mansions was a hangout in the evenings for the African and Middle Eastern students of Shanghai."<ref>Eugene Cooper, ''Adventures in Chinese Bureaucracy: A Meta-Anthropological Saga'' (Nova Publishers, 2000):11.</ref> By 1984, "The Shanghai Mansions, consisting of a main and a side building, is a hotel accommodating foreign tourists, businessmen, overseas Chinese."<ref>Gu Gan, ''Touring Metropolitan Shanghai'' (The Publishing House, 1984):230.</ref> At that time the Mansions had 370 guest rooms (including some deluxe [[Suite (hotel)|suites]]) and 1,468 beds.<ref>Gu Gan, ''Touring Metropolitan Shanghai'' (The Publishing House, 1984):231.</ref> In 1985 one visitor referred to the "Thirties fortress of Shanghai Mansions, its thick brick walls pocked by black windows.<ref>Helena Drysdale, ''Alone Through China & Tibet'' (Constable, 1986):89.</ref> The General Manager of the Mansions from 1985 to at least 1999 was Tao Pei Tai (born 1 August 1946), who was also Deputy General Manager of Hengshan Group Holding Co., the owner of the Mansion.<ref>''Who's Who of the Asian Pacific Rim'' (Barons Who's Who, 1999):381.</ref> In 1989 a double room in the Mansions was US$50 per night.<ref>{{cite news|author=Sheryl WuDunn|title=The Waterfront Heart of the City|newspaper=The New York Times|date=22 January 1989|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/01/22/travel/the-waterfront-heart-of-the-city.html?scp=5&sq=Shanghai%20Mansions&st=cse&pagewanted=3|access-date=2015-12-05}}</ref> One 1991 Chinese travel guide extolled the service ethic of the Mansion: "The Shanghai Mansions adheres strictly to the guideline of "guests first, service first, courtesy first and tidiness first".<ref>建設部建設雜誌社, ''Zhongguo fan dian da quan: tu ce'' (測繪出版社, 1991):177.</ref> However, after September 1993 the Mansions was no longer the dominant landmark in the Shanghai landscape: |
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<blockquote>The announcement of the [[metropolis]] has also changed. It is no longer the magnificent [[art deco]] [[silhouette]] of the Shanghai Dasha [Shanghai Mansions] or the [[Waibaidu Bridge|Waibaidu metallic bridge]] which marks the beginning of the center city and [[The Bund (Shanghai)|the Bund]] but, much further upstream, the [[Yangpu Bridge|Yangpu stayed-girder bridge]]. Completed in 1993, it has become the huge waterway entrance into the city, as role reclaimed, the [[Nanpu Bridge]] located downstream.<ref>Bjørn B Erring, Harald Høyem, and Synnøve Vinsrygg, ''The Horizontal Skyscraper'' (Tapir Academic Press, 2002):206.</ref></blockquote> |
<blockquote>The announcement of the [[metropolis]] has also changed. It is no longer the magnificent [[art deco]] [[silhouette]] of the Shanghai Dasha [Shanghai Mansions] or the [[Waibaidu Bridge|Waibaidu metallic bridge]] which marks the beginning of the center city and [[The Bund (Shanghai)|the Bund]] but, much further upstream, the [[Yangpu Bridge|Yangpu stayed-girder bridge]]. Completed in 1993, it has become the huge waterway entrance into the city, as role reclaimed, the [[Nanpu Bridge]] located downstream.<ref>Bjørn B Erring, Harald Høyem, and Synnøve Vinsrygg, ''The Horizontal Skyscraper'' (Tapir Academic Press, 2002):206.</ref></blockquote> |
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While acknowledging that "the view to the river from the rooftop terrace |
While acknowledging that "the view to the river from the rooftop terrace ... is breathtaking", one 1993 guidebook warned, "Unfortunately, its location can become a [[wikt:drawback|drawback]] in the evening, as the [[sonorous]] horns of the river barges pose a constant challenge to sleep."<ref>Fredric M. Kaplan, Arne J. De Keijzer, and Julian M. Sobin, ''The China Guidebook 1993-94'', 13th ed. (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1993):591.</ref> In 1995 the Shanghai Mansions was evaluated by the State Tourism Bureau, and named one of the twelve national best star hotels.<ref>Shanghai she hui ke xue yuan, ''Shanghai Economy Year Book'' (Shanghai Economy Yearbook Editorial and Publishing Agency, 1995):161.</ref> |
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===Broadway Mansions Hotel ( |
===Broadway Mansions Hotel (c. 1996 to today)=== |
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[[File:Broadway Mansions pic 1.jpg|thumb|Broadway Mansions at night, 2009]] |
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By 1996, the Mansions was again renamed - this time a reversion to a name similar to its original name - the Broadway Mansions Hotel, reflecting the increased openness to the West as a result of the reforms of [[Deng Xiaoping]], and the shift from providing long-term residential apartment accommodation to that of a hotel. At that time the Mansions was described as "rather dull compared to other Shanghai hotels |
By 1996, the Mansions was again renamed - this time a reversion to a name similar to its original name - the Broadway Mansions Hotel, reflecting the increased openness to the West as a result of the reforms of [[Deng Xiaoping]], and the shift from providing long-term residential apartment accommodation to that of a hotel. At that time the Mansions was described as "rather dull compared to other Shanghai hotels".<ref>Alan Samagalski, Robert Strauss, and Michael Buckley, ''China: A Travel Survival Kit'', 2nd ed. (Lonely Planet Publications, 1988):354.</ref> |
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The Hotel was partially renovated in 2003 |
The Hotel was partially renovated in 2003.<ref name="Brown & Owyang, 75"/><ref>Damian Harper ''et al''., ''China'', 8th ed. (Lonely Planet, 2002):342.</ref> |
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==Ownership== |
==Ownership== |
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The Broadway Mansions has been owned and operated by the Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集)<ref name="hengshanhotels.com"/> since at least 1985.<ref name="http://www.broadwaymansions.com"/><ref name="langhamhotels.com"/> The current president is Mr. Mu Xiangyang.<ref>{{cite web |
The Broadway Mansions has been owned and operated by the Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集)<ref name="hengshanhotels.com"/> since at least 1985.<ref name="http://www.broadwaymansions.com"/><ref name="langhamhotels.com"/> The current president is Mr. Mu Xiangyang.<ref>{{cite web |
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| url = http://www.spafinder.com/NewsReleases/November19/Langham.pdf |
| url = http://www.spafinder.com/NewsReleases/November19/Langham.pdf |
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| title = Langham Hotels International Expands |
| title = Langham Hotels International Expands into Shanghai With Its First Art-Deco Boutique Hotel |
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| author = Lemberg, M. |
| author = Lemberg, M. |
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| access-date = 13 January 2016 | date = 15 November 2007 |
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| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120219153531/http://www.spafinder.com/NewsReleases/November19/Langham.pdf |
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| archive-date = 19 February 2012 |
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| archivedate = 2012-02-19 |
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}}</ref> The Hengshan Hotels and Resorts owns five other hotels in Shanghai, |
}}</ref> The Hengshan Hotels and Resorts owns five other hotels in Shanghai, including the [[Astor House, Shanghai|Astor House Hotel]], across the road from the Broadway Mansions.<ref name="hengshanhotels.com"/> |
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==Amenities== |
==Amenities== |
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The Broadway Mansions was the first hotel in Shanghai to have a restaurant on the top of the building.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> Today the Broadway Mansions Hotel has six [[restaurant]]s,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.agoda.com/asia/china/shanghai/broadway_mansion_hotel.html |title=Broadway Mansions Hotel Shanghai, China |website=Agoda.com |date= |
The Broadway Mansions was the first hotel in Shanghai to have a restaurant on the top of the building.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> Today the Broadway Mansions Hotel has six [[restaurant]]s,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.agoda.com/asia/china/shanghai/broadway_mansion_hotel.html |title=Broadway Mansions Hotel Shanghai, China |website=Agoda.com |date=14 October 2015 |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> and is famous for its [[Huaiyang cuisine]].<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> |
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==Architecture== |
==Architecture== |
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According to Professor Anne Warr, |
According to Professor Anne Warr, |
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<blockquote>Despite the uncertainties of the 1930s, in particular the increasing Japanese control over Chinese territory, the growing influence of the Communist Party, and the corruption of the Nationalist Government, Shanghai boomed. The first American style [[Art Deco]] [[skyscraper]] appeared on [[The Bund (Shanghai)|The Bund]] just as the American economy collapsed and Shanghai was about to enter its most dynamic decade. At the end of the 1920s as Europe and America went into financial depression, shiploads of unemployed foreigners arrived in Shanghai seeking their fortune. In three years, Shanghai’s foreign population almost doubled, from 36,500 in 1930 to 70,000 in 1933. Architects abandoned the [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]] styles of earlier decades and whole-heartedly embraced Art Deco and Modernism....During this period, clashing concepts of [[nationalism]], [[imperialism]] and [[Internationalism (politics)|internationalism]] were reflected in the architecture. Internationalism from [[New York City|New York]] permeated Shanghai in the form of [[skyscraper]]s and the latest Hollywood movies, while Japanese imperialism filtered into every corner.<ref>{{cite web |
<blockquote>Despite the uncertainties of the 1930s, in particular the increasing Japanese control over Chinese territory, the growing influence of the Communist Party, and the corruption of the Nationalist Government, Shanghai boomed. The first American style [[Art Deco]] [[skyscraper]] appeared on [[The Bund (Shanghai)|The Bund]] just as the American economy collapsed and Shanghai was about to enter its most dynamic decade. At the end of the 1920s as Europe and America went into financial depression, shiploads of unemployed foreigners arrived in Shanghai seeking their fortune. In three years, Shanghai’s foreign population almost doubled, from 36,500 in 1930 to 70,000 in 1933. Architects abandoned the [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]] styles of earlier decades and whole-heartedly embraced Art Deco and Modernism. ... During this period, clashing concepts of [[nationalism]], [[imperialism]] and [[Internationalism (politics)|internationalism]] were reflected in the architecture. Internationalism from [[New York City|New York]] permeated Shanghai in the form of [[skyscraper]]s and the latest Hollywood movies, while Japanese imperialism filtered into every corner.<ref>{{cite web |
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| url = http://www.livingspace.sh.cn/content.php?t=arti&s=retc&type=article&id=57 |
| url = http://www.livingspace.sh.cn/content.php?t=arti&s=retc&type=article&id=57 |
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| title = shanghai architectural history: 1921-1949 |
| title = shanghai architectural history: 1921-1949 |
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| author = Warr, Anne |
| author = Warr, Anne |
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| access-date = 2016-01-13 | date = 2008| website = livingspace.sh.cn |
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}}</ref></blockquote> |
}}</ref></blockquote> |
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The Broadway Mansions was designed by Mr. B. Flazer,<ref>One source suggests the correct name is "Freizer"; See Alan Balfour and Shiling Zheng, ''Shanghai'' (World Cities series) (Wiley-Academy, 2002):93; see also: Françoise Ged, ''Shanghai'' (Institut français d'architecture, 2000):28; Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'' (MIT Press, 2004):58.</ref> and the structural engineer who supervised construction was John William Barrow,<ref>''RIBA Journal'' [Royal Institute of British Architects] 60 (1953):466.</ref> both of the architectural firm of [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer & Turner]].<ref>Ged, 28; Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'' (MIT Press, 2004):58.</ref> Palmer & Turner, who designed many of Shanghai's major buildings (13 buildings on [[The Bund (Shanghai)|the Bund]] alone),<ref>Damian Harper and David Eimer, ''Shanghai'', 4th ed. (Lonely Planet, 2008):43.</ref> was one of the oldest architectural firms in the world,<ref>Banister Fletcher and Dan Cruickshank, ''Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture'', 20th ed. (Architectural Press, 1996):1610</ref> and was founded by British architect William Salway (1844–1902) in [[Hong Kong]] in 1868.<ref>Antonia Brodie, ed., ''Directory of British Architects 1834-1914: L-Z'', 2nd ed. (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2001):532.</ref> British architect Clement Palmer (1857–1952) joined the firm in 1883,<ref>Brodie, 309).</ref> while [[structural engineer]] Arthur Turner (born 1858) joined the next year. Palmer and Turner became partners in 1891. In 1912 they established a branch in Shanghai managed by British architect, George Leopold "Tug" Wilson (1881–1967).<ref name="publishing.yudu.com">{{cite web|url=http://publishing.yudu.com/A6znj/MODV11N1/resources/index.htm?referrerUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.modernismmagazine.com%2Fviewonline.html&skipFlashCheck=true |title=Modernism Spring 2008 |website=Publishing.yudu.com |date= |
The Broadway Mansions was designed by Mr. B. Flazer,<ref>One source suggests the correct name is "Freizer"; See Alan Balfour and Shiling Zheng, ''Shanghai'' (World Cities series) (Wiley-Academy, 2002):93; see also: Françoise Ged, ''Shanghai'' (Institut français d'architecture, 2000):28; Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'' (MIT Press, 2004):58.</ref> and the structural engineer who supervised construction was John William Barrow,<ref>''RIBA Journal'' [Royal Institute of British Architects] 60 (1953):466.</ref> both of the architectural firm of [[P & T Architects & Engineers Ltd|Palmer & Turner]].<ref>Ged, 28; Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'' (MIT Press, 2004):58.</ref> Palmer & Turner, who designed many of Shanghai's major buildings (13 buildings on [[The Bund (Shanghai)|the Bund]] alone),<ref>Damian Harper and David Eimer, ''Shanghai'', 4th ed. (Lonely Planet, 2008):43.</ref> was one of the oldest architectural firms in the world,<ref>Banister Fletcher and Dan Cruickshank, ''Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture'', 20th ed. (Architectural Press, 1996):1610</ref> and was founded by British architect William Salway (1844–1902) in [[Hong Kong]] in 1868.<ref>Antonia Brodie, ed., ''Directory of British Architects 1834-1914: L-Z'', 2nd ed. (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2001):532.</ref> British architect Clement Palmer (1857–1952) joined the firm in 1883,<ref>Brodie, 309).</ref> while [[structural engineer]] Arthur Turner (born 1858) joined the next year. Palmer and Turner became partners in 1891. In 1912 they established a branch in Shanghai managed by British architect, George Leopold "Tug" Wilson (1881–1967).<ref name="publishing.yudu.com">{{cite web|url=http://publishing.yudu.com/A6znj/MODV11N1/resources/index.htm?referrerUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.modernismmagazine.com%2Fviewonline.html&skipFlashCheck=true |title=Modernism Spring 2008 |website=Publishing.yudu.com |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref><ref>Antonia Brodie and Mark Girouard, ''Directory of British Architects 1834-1914: L-Z'', 2nd. ed. (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2001):1025</ref><ref>Banister Fletcher and Dan Cruickshank, ''Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture'', 20th ed. (Architectural Press, 1996):1550</ref><ref>Fiona Lindsay Shen, "Shanghai Sino Deco", ''Modernism'' (Spring 2008):92</ref><ref name="livingspace1">{{cite web|url=http://www.livingspace.sh.cn/content.php?type=article&id=56 |access-date=8 May 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090401050537/http://www.livingspace.sh.cn/content.php?type=article&id=56 |archive-date=1 April 2009 |title=Living Space }}</ref> Palmer & Turner designed many of the buildings on [[The Bund (Shanghai)|The Bund]], including the [[Neo-Renaissance]] style [[Union Building, Shanghai|Union Building]] (1916), its first work in Shanghai, and the first building in Shanghai to use a steel structure;<ref>{{cite web |
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| url = http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/union_building.htm |
| url = http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/union_building.htm |
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| title = Union Building |
| title = Union Building |
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| author = Fieldhouse, Simon |
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}}</ref> the Neo-Renaissance [[Mercantile Bank of India, London and China]] building (1916); the [[Yokohama Specie Bank Building, Shanghai|Yokohama Specie Bank Building]] (1920s); and the [[Neoclassical architecture|neo-classical]] [[HSBC Building, Shanghai|HSBC Building]] (1921–1923);<ref>{{cite web |
}}</ref> the Neo-Renaissance [[Mercantile Bank of India, London and China]] building (1916); the [[Yokohama Specie Bank Building, Shanghai|Yokohama Specie Bank Building]] (1920s); and the [[Neoclassical architecture|neo-classical]] [[HSBC Building, Shanghai|HSBC Building]] (1921–1923);<ref>{{cite web |
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| url = http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/shanghai.htm#HSBC%20Bank |
| url = http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/shanghai.htm#HSBC%20Bank |
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| title = Shanghai - HSBC Bank |
| title = Shanghai - HSBC Bank |
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| author = Fieldhouse, Simon |
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}}</ref> the |
}}</ref> the adjacent [[Greek Revival architecture|Greek Revival]] [[Neoclassical architecture|neo-classical]] [[Customs House, Shanghai|Customs House]] (1927).<ref>{{cite web |
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| url = http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/shanghai.htm#Customs%20House |
| url = http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/shanghai.htm#Customs%20House |
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| title = Shanghai - Customs House |
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| author = Fieldhouse, Simon |
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}}</ref> Wilson had supervised construction of the majority of British buildings along The Bund until their new client, Sir [[Victor Sassoon]] tilted them towards Art Deco and Modernism at the end of the 1920s,<ref name="livingspace1"/> and such buildings as the [[Art Deco]] [[Peace Hotel|Sassoon House]] (1926–1929);<ref>{{cite web |
}}</ref> Wilson had supervised construction of the majority of British buildings along The Bund until their new client, Sir [[Victor Sassoon]] tilted them towards Art Deco and Modernism at the end of the 1920s,<ref name="livingspace1"/> and such buildings as the [[Art Deco]] [[Peace Hotel|Sassoon House]] (1926–1929);<ref>{{cite web |
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| title = Peace Hotel |
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}}</ref> the [[Yangtze Insurance Building]]; the Broadway Mansions (1934); and subsequently the [[Old Bank of China Building, Shanghai]] (1937).<ref>{{cite web |
}}</ref> the [[Yangtze Insurance Building]]; the Broadway Mansions (1934); and subsequently the [[Old Bank of China Building, Shanghai]] (1937).<ref>{{cite web |
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The Broadway Mansions is "a brick patterned [[Art Deco]] apartment block...[that] would not have looked out of place in [[Manhattan]]",<ref>Layla Dawson, ''China's New Dawn: An Architectural Transformation'' (Prestel, 2005):22.</ref> and is an example of the [[Art Deco]] or [[Streamline Moderne]] style of architecture that emerged in the 1920s and flourished in the 1930s<ref name="Peter G 2004">Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'' (MIT Press, 2004):58.</ref> The Broadway Mansions is a [[steel-framed]] red brick building "in the stepped [[skyscraper]] mode",<ref>Patricia Bayer, ''[[Art Deco Architecture: Design, Decoration and Detail from the Twenties and Thirties]]'' (H.N. Abrams, 1992):85.</ref> that is 78 |
The Broadway Mansions is "a brick patterned [[Art Deco]] apartment block ...[that] would not have looked out of place in [[Manhattan]]",<ref>Layla Dawson, ''China's New Dawn: An Architectural Transformation'' (Prestel, 2005):22.</ref> and is an example of the [[Art Deco]] or [[Streamline Moderne]] style of architecture that emerged in the 1920s and flourished in the 1930s<ref name="Peter G 2004">Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'' (MIT Press, 2004):58.</ref> The Broadway Mansions is a [[steel-framed]] red brick building "in the stepped [[skyscraper]] mode",<ref>Patricia Bayer, ''[[Art Deco Architecture: Design, Decoration and Detail from the Twenties and Thirties]]'' (H.N. Abrams, 1992):85.</ref> that is {{convert|78|m|sp=us}} in height,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://garudamagazine.com/features.php?id=18 |access-date=8 May 2009 |title=Garuda Magazine }}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> with a total floor space of {{convert|24,596|m2|sp=us}}. Steel-framed structures were used in Shanghai from 1916 onwards, originally for eight- to ten-story buildings, but by the 1930s, for up to twenty-four stories.<ref>Fletcher, 1550.</ref> The building's [[floor plan]] was modeled after the Chinese character for the number eight,<ref name="Ren, 2006">Edward Denison and Guang Yu Ren, ''Building Shanghai: The Story of China's Gateway'' (Wiley-Academy, 2006):153.</ref> which is a symbol of luck and prosperity.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=103746 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040621085106/http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=103746 |url-status=usurped |archive-date=21 June 2004 |title=Broadway Mansions, Shanghai | 103746 |website=Emporis.com |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> The [[facade]] of the Broadway Mansions was one of its distinctive features. The design of the Mansions was "influenced by [[Modern architecture|modernism]]", and like "most apartment buildings in Shanghai featured a simple and modern style of exterior".<ref>Junhua Lü, Peter G. Rowe, and Jie Zhang, ''Modern Urban Housing in China, 1840–2000'' (Prestel, 2001):96.</ref> |
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According to Peter Rowe and Seng Kuan, after describing the Metropole Hotel and Hamilton House, also designed by Palmer & Turner about the same time: "A similar approach to both architecture and place making was taken almost simultaneously by B. Flazer, with the curved symmetric stepped-back facade of the Broadway Mansions. ... The firm of Palmer and Turner was to continue with [[curvilinear]] plan forms in the organic layout of the large Embankment Building of 1933.<ref name="Peter G 2004"/> The Mansions had a roof top garden, and even a squash court.<ref name="Maisie J. Meyer 2003">Maisie J. Meyer, ''From the Rivers of Babylon to the Whangpoo: A Century of Sephardi Jewish Life in Shanghai'' (University Press of America, 2003):70.</ref> Initially the Mansions had 370 guest rooms,<ref>Laurent Metzger, ''Les Lauriers de Shanghai: Des Concessions Internationales à la Métropole Moderne'' (Editions Olizane, 1999):29.</ref> and also housed offices and shops.<ref name="Ren, 2006"/> According to Fiona Shen, "part hotel, part apartment block, it also catered to that fixture of Shanghai economic life during the Concession period - the young, single [[expatriate]] - with its 99 stylish and compact [[bachelor pads]]."<ref name="publishing.yudu.com"/> Broadway Mansions Hotel was the first hotel in Shanghai that had an indoor parking facility, a structure that had four levels with 80 spaces.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> The phone system was built at the time of its construction, and its phone number (46260) has remained unchanged.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> |
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==Reviews== |
==Reviews== |
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[[File: |
[[File:Waibaidu Bridge Shanghai.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Broadway Mansions (behind) is situated next to the Garden Bridge.]] |
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The Broadway Mansions is considered "one of the finest architectural examples in Shanghai, and the ideal starting point for an art deco walking tour of the city, |
The Broadway Mansions is considered "one of the finest architectural examples in Shanghai, and the ideal starting point for an art deco walking tour of the city, ... an unashamedly Gotham-esque structure with a commanding location to the north of the Bund."<ref name="thejakartaglobe.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/life-times/article/12417.html |access-date=8 May 2009 }}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> Soon after its opening, the Mansions was described as a "prominent, tall white structure",<ref>''Business Week'' Nos. 370-382 (1936):45.</ref> Professor Lancelot Forster was enthusiastic in his assessment of the newly completed Broadway Mansions in 1936. After describing its contemporary, the Cathay Hotel, which "seems to point to loftier things, ... defying the smug security of the earth as it soars upwards, and yet not so blatantly as the new Broadway Mansions which, abandoning all restraint ... lifts its optimistic head from its broad substantial shoulders and shouts to the settlement."<ref>Lancelot Forster, ''The New Culture in China'' (Allen & Unwin, 1936): 207, 208.</ref> |
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Canadian Gordon Sinclar, described the Mansions "as posh an apartment house as anything in [[Toronto]] or [[Montreal]]."<ref>Gordon Sinclair, ''Signposts to Adventure'' (McClelland & Stewart, 1947):342.</ref> One travel guide described the Mansions as "a 22-story brick [[ziggurat]]".<ref>Christopher Knowles, ''Fodor's Exploring China'', Vol. 4 (Fodor's Travel Publications, ):186.</ref> Harold Conant, who lived in Shanghai for ten years from 1931, depicted the Mansions: "The Broadway Mansions, which seems to be so constructed that the wind always whistles through it (which is very cheering on a hot summer day), seems to have been shown quite frequently in American newspapers".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/5814/harc1-8a.htm |title=Chapter 8 : Shanghai (1931–1941) |website=Webcitation.org |access-date=5 December 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091021042722/http://geocities.com/Tokyo/5814/harc1-8a.htm |archive-date=21 October 2009}}</ref> Gary Jones wrote, "the 22-floor ocher-brick structure is now dwarfed by twinkling skyscrapers that have sprung up in recent years, and yet still exudes a menacing solidity and here-to-stay confidence.<ref name="thejakartaglobe.com"/> |
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==Notable people== |
==Notable people== |
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===Guests=== |
===Guests=== |
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According to its official website, Broadway Mansions Hotel has accommodated hundreds of leaders and government delegates from different nations around the world.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> Some of these include: |
According to its official website, Broadway Mansions Hotel has accommodated hundreds of leaders and government delegates from different nations around the world.<ref name="broadwaymansions.com" /> Some of these include: |
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* New Zealand-born [[William L. Holland|William Lancelot Holland]] (28 December 1907 - May 2008), |
* New Zealand-born [[William L. Holland|William Lancelot Holland]] (28 December 1907 - May 2008), Research Secretary and later Executive Secretary of the [[Institute of Pacific Relations]] (1928–1960), and editor of its periodical, ''Far Eastern Survey'' and ''Pacific Affairs'', stayed at the Broadway Mansions for several months from July 1937;<ref>William Lancelot Holland and Paul F. Hooper, ''Remembering the Institute of Pacific Relations: The Memoirs of William L. Holland'' (Ryuukeisyosya, 1995):20.</ref> |
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* American aviator [[Royal Leonard]] (1905–1962), the personal pilot of [[Chiang Kai-shek]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cnac.org/leonard01.htm |title=CNAC Captain Royal Leonard |website=Cnac.org |date= |
* American aviator [[Royal Leonard]] (1905–1962), the personal pilot of [[Chiang Kai-shek]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cnac.org/leonard01.htm |title=CNAC Captain Royal Leonard |website=Cnac.org |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> was staying at the Broadway Mansions during the initial days of the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]], and was able to then fly to [[Hong Kong]] after the regular air service had been terminated due to aerial combat between Japanese and Chinese forces;<ref>Royal Leonard, ''I Flew for China'' (Doubleday, Doran and Company, 1942):114, 119, 165.</ref> |
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* Canadian [[socialist]] [[James Gareth Endicott]] (1898–1993), a controversial former [[United Church of Canada]] [[missionary]], |
* Canadian [[socialist]] [[James Gareth Endicott]] (1898–1993), a controversial former [[United Church of Canada]] [[missionary]], former advisor to [[Chiang Kai-shek]], but from 1945 a supporter of the [[Chinese Communist Party]] and friend of [[Zhou Enlai]], and founder in 1949 of the [[Canadian Peace Congress]], and a 1952 winner of the [[Lenin Peace Prize|Stalin Peace Prize]], stayed at the Shanghai Mansions on a return visit to China in 1952 with his wife, Mary Austin Endicott;<ref>Mary Austin Endicott, ''Five Stars Over China: The Story of our Return to New China'' (Published by the Author, 1953):249.</ref> |
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* Swiss photojournalist [[Fernand Gignon]], one of few non-Communist reporters permitted to enter the People's Republic of China in the early 1960s,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,938802-2,00.html |title=Red China: The Loss of Man | |
* Swiss photojournalist [[Fernand Gignon]], one of few non-Communist reporters permitted to enter the People's Republic of China in the early 1960s,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,938802-2,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081207073057/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,938802-2,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=7 December 2008 |title=Red China: The Loss of Man |magazine=Time |date=1 December 1961 |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> stayed on the 3rd floor of the Shanghai Mansions, "le plus grand complexe locatif de la métropole."<ref>"The greatest rental complex of the metropolis." Fernand Gigon, ''Et Mao prit le pouvoir'', 20th ed. (Flammarion, 1969):241.</ref> |
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* American businessman and human rights campaigner [[John Kamm]] spent a week at the Shanghai Mansions in January 1976 when he was a representative of the National Council for US-China Trade. His account was published as a part of a series in the [[Hong Kong Economic Journal]].<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite web|url=http://www.hkej.com/template/blog/php/blog_details.php?%20blog_posts_id=65488 |title=信報網站 - 信報論壇 就事論事講道理,包容不同意見,匯聚民間智慧 |language=zh |website=Hkej.com |date= |
* American businessman and human rights campaigner [[John Kamm]] spent a week at the Shanghai Mansions in January 1976 when he was a representative of the National Council for US-China Trade. His account was published as a part of a series in the [[Hong Kong Economic Journal]].<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite web|url=http://www.hkej.com/template/blog/php/blog_details.php?%20blog_posts_id=65488 |title=信報網站 - 信報論壇 就事論事講道理,包容不同意見,匯聚民間智慧 |language=zh |website=Hkej.com |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> |
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===Residents=== |
===Residents=== |
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* [[Cornelius Vander Starr]] (15 October 1892 – 20 December 1968), an American businessman and [[Office of Strategic Services]] operative who founded the [[American International Group]] (AIG) insurance corporation in Shanghai in 1919, occupied the penthouse of the Broadway Mansions until the outbreak of [[World War II]];<ref name="talesofoldchina1"/> |
* [[Cornelius Vander Starr]] (15 October 1892 – 20 December 1968), an American businessman and [[Office of Strategic Services]] operative who founded the [[American International Group]] (AIG) insurance corporation in Shanghai in 1919, occupied the penthouse of the Broadway Mansions until the outbreak of [[World War II]];<ref name="talesofoldchina1"/> |
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* American journalist [[Hallett Edward Abend]] (born 15 September 1884 in [[Portland, Oregon]]; died 28 November 1955 in [[Sonora, California]]),<ref>"Hallett Abend, Newsman, Dead: Former Times Correspondent in Far East Was Editor of Marshallton, Iowa, Paper", ''The New York Times'' (28 November 1955):31.</ref> correspondent for ''[[The New York Times]]'', had a long |
* American journalist [[Hallett Edward Abend]] (born 15 September 1884 in [[Portland, Oregon]]; died 28 November 1955 in [[Sonora, California]]),<ref>"Hallett Abend, Newsman, Dead: Former Times Correspondent in Far East Was Editor of Marshallton, Iowa, Paper", ''The New York Times'' (28 November 1955):31.</ref> correspondent for ''[[The New York Times]]'', had a long-term lease,<ref>Hallett Abend, ''Chaos in Asia'' (I. Washburn, inc., 1940):272.</ref> and lived and worked from Apartment G, "a luxurious penthouse", on the 16th floor,<ref>Esson McDowell Gale, ''Salt for the Dragon: A Personal History of China, 1908–1945'' (Michigan State College Press, 1953):211; Richard Porter Butrick, ''American University Men in China'' (Comacrib press, 1936):183.</ref> from 1935 until July 1940. On the evening of 19 July 1940, Abend was robbed and tortured<ref>"New York Times Man Robbed and Tortured", ''The New York Times'' (20 July 1940):6; "Doubt on Abend Assault, But Quickly Retracts When His Part Is Made Known", ''The New York Times'' (25 July 1940):6.</ref> by two Japanese men in his room,<ref>Hallett Abend, ''The God from the West: A Biography of Frederick Townsend Ward'' (Doubleday, 1947):ix; Hallett Abend, ''My Life in China 1926-1941'' (Reprint: Read Books, 2007):337; Paul French, Carl Crow, ''A Tough Old China Hand: The Life, Times and Adventures of an American in Shanghai'' (Hong Kong University Press, 2007):213.</ref> who "next morning again wore the uniform of officers of the [[Imperial Army of Japan]]".<ref>Ronald Cecil Hamlyn McKie, ''Echoes from Forgotten Wars'' (Collins, 1980):26.</ref> The next morning Abend moved "to another apartment in an area supervised by the Americans and British.<ref>Eric Downton, ''Wars Without End'' (Stoddart, 1987):313.</ref> In August 1937, after all tenants had been evacuated from the Mansions by Japanese forces, Abend's apartment was searched by men believed to be associated with the Japanese consulate;<ref>"Americans Leaving Zones Under Fire; British Are Considering Mass Evacuation of Settlement--Japanese Watch Hotels" ''The New York Times'' (15 August 1937):1; "Shanghai Offices of Times Searched; Chief Correspondent to Make a Protest to Japan - His Apartment Also Visited" ''The New York Times'' (19 August 1937):2.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geocities.com/tchen33/abend.doc |format=DOC |title=Hallett Abend in China: 1926 – 1941 |website=Webcitation.org |access-date=5 December 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5knp3eNMu?url=http://www.geocities.com/tchen33/abend.doc |archive-date=26 October 2009 }}</ref> |
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* Italian [[Amleto Vespa]] (1888 |
* Italian [[Amleto Vespa]] (1888 – c. 1940), a [[mercenary]] and [[secret agent]] for [[Manchuria]] and later reluctantly for the [[Empire of Japan]], lived at the Mansions from 1937;<ref>Amleto Vespa and H. J Timperley, ''Secret Agent of Japan: A Handbook to Japanese Imperialism'', 2nd. ed. (Little, Brown, 1938):285.</ref> |
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* Japanese ultra-nationalist [[yakuza]] figure and convicted Class A [[war criminal]] [[Yoshio Kodama]] (児玉誉士夫 18 February 1911 – 17 January 1984), stayed at the Broadway Mansions during the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]];<ref>Yoshio Kodama, ''I Was Defeated: A Translation from the Japanese'' (1951; reprint: Radiopress, 1959):72.</ref> |
* Japanese ultra-nationalist [[yakuza]] figure and convicted Class A [[war criminal]] [[Yoshio Kodama]] (児玉誉士夫 18 February 1911 – 17 January 1984), stayed at the Broadway Mansions during the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]];<ref>Yoshio Kodama, ''I Was Defeated: A Translation from the Japanese'' (1951; reprint: Radiopress, 1959):72.</ref> |
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* American [[Robert Shaplen]], [[foreign correspondent]] for ''[[The New Yorker]]'',<ref>{{cite news|author=Robert D. McFadden|title=Robert Shaplen, 71, Writer for New Yorker, Dies|newspaper= |
* American [[Robert Shaplen]], [[foreign correspondent]] for ''[[The New Yorker]]'',<ref>{{cite news|author=Robert D. McFadden|title=Robert Shaplen, 71, Writer for New Yorker, Dies|newspaper=The New York Times|date=16 May 1988|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1988/05/16/obituaries/robert-shaplen-71-writer-for-new-yorker-dies.html|access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> resided at the Broadway Mansions for two years immediately after the conclusion of [[World War II]];<ref>Robert Shaplen, ''A Turning Wheel: Three Decades of the Asian Revolution as Witnessed by a Correspondent for The New Yorker'' (Random House, 1979):xiii.</ref> |
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* American [[Jack Birns]], one of ''[[Life (magazine)|Life]]'' magazine's staff [[photo journalist]]s, resided at the Broadway Mansions from 15 December 1947;<ref>Jack Birns, Carolyn Wakeman, and Ken Light, ''Assignment, Shanghai: Photographs on the Eve of Revolution'' (University of California Press, 2003):xiii.</ref> |
* American [[Jack Birns]], one of ''[[Life (magazine)|Life]]'' magazine's staff [[photo journalist]]s, resided at the Broadway Mansions from 15 December 1947;<ref>Jack Birns, Carolyn Wakeman, and Ken Light, ''Assignment, Shanghai: Photographs on the Eve of Revolution'' (University of California Press, 2003):xiii.</ref> |
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* French photographer [[Henri Cartier-Bresson]] (22 August 1908 – 3 August 2004), considered to be the father of modern [[photojournalism]], and co-founder of [[Magnum Photos]], an international photographic cooperative, lived in the Broadway Mansions for a year from the middle of 1949, covering the fall of the Nationalist government and the creation of the People's Republic of China;<ref>Russell Miller, ''Magnum: Fifty Years at the Front Line of History'' (Grove Press, 1999):69.</ref> |
* French photographer [[Henri Cartier-Bresson]] (22 August 1908 – 3 August 2004), considered to be the father of modern [[photojournalism]], and co-founder of [[Magnum Photos]], an international photographic cooperative, lived in the Broadway Mansions for a year from the middle of 1949, covering the fall of the Nationalist government and the creation of the People's Republic of China;<ref>Russell Miller, ''Magnum: Fifty Years at the Front Line of History'' (Grove Press, 1999):69.</ref> |
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===Further reading=== |
===Further reading=== |
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{{ |
{{Refbegin|colwidth=30em}} |
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* Allen, Rewi. ''The People Have Strength''. The Author, 1954. |
* Allen, Rewi. ''The People Have Strength''. The Author, 1954. |
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* Brown, Jeremy and Paul Pickowicz. ''Dilemmas of Victory: The Early Years of the People's Republic of China''. Harvard University Press, 2007. |
* Brown, Jeremy and Paul Pickowicz. ''Dilemmas of Victory: The Early Years of the People's Republic of China''. Harvard University Press, 2007. |
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* Henriot, Christian and Wen-Hsin Yeh. ''In the Shadow of the Rising Sun: Shanghai under Japanese Occupation''. Cambridge University Press, 2004. |
* Henriot, Christian and Wen-Hsin Yeh. ''In the Shadow of the Rising Sun: Shanghai under Japanese Occupation''. Cambridge University Press, 2004. |
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* Johnston, Tess and Dongqiang Er. ''A Last Look: Western Architecture in Old Shanghai''. 3rd ed. Old China Hand Press, 1993. Page 106. |
* Johnston, Tess and Dongqiang Er. ''A Last Look: Western Architecture in Old Shanghai''. 3rd ed. Old China Hand Press, 1993. Page 106. |
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* Kamm, John. "Shanghaied at the Feather and Down Minifair |
* Kamm, John. "Shanghaied at the Feather and Down Minifair", ''[[Hong Kong Economic Journal]]'' 2 April 2011.<ref name="autogenerated1"/> |
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* Landman, Amos. ''Profile of Red China''. Simon and Schuster, 1951. |
* Landman, Amos. ''Profile of Red China''. Simon and Schuster, 1951. |
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* Lee, Leo Ou-fan. ''Shanghai Modern: The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China, |
* Lee, Leo Ou-fan. ''Shanghai Modern: The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China, 1930–1945''. Harvard University Press, 1999. |
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* Malloy, Ruth Lor. ''Travel Guide to the People's Republic of China''. Morrow, 1975. Page 75. |
* Malloy, Ruth Lor. ''Travel Guide to the People's Republic of China''. Morrow, 1975. Page 75. |
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* Moorad, George. ''Lost Peace in China''. E. P. Dutton, 1949. |
* Moorad, George. ''Lost Peace in China''. E. P. Dutton, 1949. |
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* Nideros, Eric. "Wartime Shanghai: A Tycoon Triumphs Over the Emperor". |
* Nideros, Eric. "Wartime Shanghai: A Tycoon Triumphs Over the Emperor". ''World War II'' magazine (September 2006).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historynet.com/wartime-shanghai-a-tycoon-triumphs-over-the-emporer.htm |title=Wartime Shanghai: A Tycoon Triumphs Over the Emperor | History Net: Where History Comes Alive – World & US History Online | From the World's Largest History Magazine Publisher |date=5 January 2007 |publisher=History Net |access-date=5 December 2015}}</ref> |
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* Pan, Lynn. ''Shanghai Style: Art and Design Between the Wars''. Long River Press, 2008. |
* Pan, Lynn. ''Shanghai Style: Art and Design Between the Wars''. Long River Press, 2008.* Pan, Lynn; Li-yung Hsüeh; Liyong Xue; and Zonghao Qian. ''Shanghai: A Century of Change in Photographs, 1843–1949''. Hai Feng Pub. Co., 1993. |
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* Pan, Lynn; Li-yung Hsüeh; Liyong Xue; and Zonghao Qian. ''Shanghai: A Century of Change in Photographs, 1843-1949''. Hai Feng Pub. Co., 1993. |
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* Perry, Elizabeth J. and Xun Li. ''Proletarian Power: Shanghai in the Cultural Revolution''. Westview Press, 1997. Page 122. |
* Perry, Elizabeth J. and Xun Li. ''Proletarian Power: Shanghai in the Cultural Revolution''. Westview Press, 1997. Page 122. |
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* Purvis, Malcolm. ''Tall Stories: Palmer & Turner, Architects and Engineers: The First 100 Years''. Hong Kong, Palmer & Turner, 1985. |
* Purvis, Malcolm. ''Tall Stories: Palmer & Turner, Architects and Engineers: The First 100 Years''. Hong Kong, Palmer & Turner, 1985. |
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* Roth, Cecil and Mira Wilkins. ''The Sassoon Dynasty''. London: R. Hale, 1941. |
* Roth, Cecil and [[Mira Wilkins]]. ''The Sassoon Dynasty''. London: R. Hale, 1941. |
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* Rowan, Roy. ''Chasing the Dragon: A Veteran Journalist's Firsthand Account of the 1946-9 Chinese Revolution''. The Lyons Press, 2008. |
* Rowan, Roy. ''Chasing the Dragon: A Veteran Journalist's Firsthand Account of the 1946-9 Chinese Revolution''. The Lyons Press, 2008. |
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* Schell,Orville. ''"Watch out for the Foreign Guests!": China Encounters the West''. Pantheon Books, 1980. |
* Schell, Orville. ''"Watch out for the Foreign Guests!": China Encounters the West''. Pantheon Books, 1980. |
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* Tang, Zhenchang, Yunzhong Lu, and Siyuan Lu, Ssu-yüan Lu. ''Shanghai's Journey to Prosperity, |
* Tang, Zhenchang, Yunzhong Lu, and Siyuan Lu, Ssu-yüan Lu. ''Shanghai's Journey to Prosperity, 1842–1949''. Commercial Press, 1996. |
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* Tata, Sam and Ian McLachlan. ''Shanghai: 1949 : The End of an Era''. Batsford, 1989. |
* Tata, Sam and Ian McLachlan. ''Shanghai: 1949 : The End of an Era''. Batsford, 1989. |
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* Theroux, Paul. ''Riding the Iron Rooster: By Train Through China''. Putnam's, 1988. |
* Theroux, Paul. ''Riding the Iron Rooster: By Train Through China''. Putnam's, 1988. |
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* Wu, Liang and Foster Stockwell. ''Old Shanghai: A Lost Age''. Trans. Mingjie Wang. Foreign Language Press, 2001. |
* Wu, Liang and Foster Stockwell. ''Old Shanghai: A Lost Age''. Trans. Mingjie Wang. Foreign Language Press, 2001. |
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* Yeh, Wen-Hsin. ''Wartime Shanghai''. Taylor & Francis, 1998. Page 115 for photo in context of the other major buildings on The Bund. |
* Yeh, Wen-Hsin. ''Wartime Shanghai''. Taylor & Francis, 1998. Page 115 for photo in context of the other major buildings on The Bund. |
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{{ |
{{Refend}} |
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===Notes=== |
===Notes=== |
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{{Commons category|Broadway Mansions}} |
{{Commons category|Broadway Mansions}} |
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* [http://www.broadwaymansions.com/ Broadway Mansions Hotel] |
* [http://www.broadwaymansions.com/ Broadway Mansions Hotel] |
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* [http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=broadwaymansions-shanghai-china Broadway Mansions - Emporis] |
* {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20070422012646/http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=broadwaymansions-shanghai-china Broadway Mansions - Emporis]}} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230338/http://www.talesofoldchina.com/reading/fortune.php January 1935 ''Fortune'' article on "The Shanghai Boom"] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230338/http://www.talesofoldchina.com/reading/fortune.php January 1935 ''Fortune'' article on "The Shanghai Boom"] |
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* [https://www.paulleestudio.com/shanghai High-resolution photographs of other historical Shanghai architecture] |
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{{Shanghai Bund}} |
{{Shanghai Bund}} |
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{{Portal bar|Architecture |
{{Portal bar|Architecture}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{Coord|31|14|40|N|121|29|10|E|region:CN-31_type:landmark_source:kolossus-dawiki|display=title}} |
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[[Category:Art Deco architecture in Shanghai]] |
[[Category:Art Deco architecture in Shanghai]] |
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[[Category:Hongkou District]] |
[[Category:Hongkou District]] |
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[[Category:Hotels in Shanghai]] |
[[Category:Hotels in Shanghai]] |
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[[Category:Ziggurat style modern architecture]] |
[[Category:Ziggurat style modern architecture]] |
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[[Category:Hotels established in 1934]] |
[[Category:Hotels established in 1934]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Hotel buildings completed in 1934]] |
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Latest revision as of 03:47, 17 November 2024
This article has an unclear citation style. (December 2015) |
Broadway Mansions | |
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百老汇大厦 | |
General information | |
Status | Completed |
Type | Hotel, apartments |
Location | 20 Bei Suzhou Road, Hongkou District, Shanghai, China |
Construction started | 1930 |
Completed | 1934 |
Cost | $10 million (Mexican) (approximately US$3.4 million) |
Owner | Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集)[1] since at least 1985.[2][3] |
Height | |
Roof | 78.0 m (255.9 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 19 |
Floor area | 24,596 square meters (264,750 sq ft) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | B. Flazer, Palmer and Turner |
Developer | Shanghai Land Investment Company |
Structural engineer | John William Barrow, Palmer and Turner |
Main contractor | Ye Guang Estate Property Company |
References | |
broadwaymansions |
The Broadway Mansions (simplified Chinese: 百老汇大厦; traditional Chinese: 百老匯大廈; pinyin: Bǎilǎohuì Dàshà, Shanghainese: Pahlowe Dusa) is a nineteen-floor Art Deco five-star hotel in Shanghai, China.[4][5][6] and was for over five decades one of the primary symbols of Shanghai.[7][8]
Completed in 1934, the same year as the 19 feet taller Park Hotel. Upon its completion it became the tallest apartment building in Shanghai and remained so for several decades.[9] Located near the confluence of Suzhou Creek and the Huangpu River, as well as the northern end of The Bund, it was built by the architectural and engineering firm of Palmer and Turner, and its completion in 1935 heralded the commencement of the high-rise building era in Asia.[10] It was Shanghai's "closest approach to a modern American skyscraper".[11] It commands possibly the best view of the Bund and Huangpu.[12]
Originally called "The Broadway Mansions", it was renamed "Shanghai Mansions" by the Shanghai Municipal Council in 1951, but reverted to its original name after China opened up again to the West. The Broadway Mansions has been owned and operated by the Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集团) since at least 1985.[2]
Location
[edit]The Broadway Mansions Hotel is located at 20 Bei Suzhou Road (formerly 1 Broadway),[13] Shanghai, in the North Bund area of the Hongkou District.[2] It is at the northern end of the Waibaidu Bridge (Garden Bridge). It is at the corner of Bei Suzhou Road, Huangpu Road, and Daming Road (formerly Broadway), and is less than 30 meters (98 ft) from the Suzhou Creek,[14] close to its confluence with the Huangpu River. It is also bounded by Haining Road at the rear, and Wusong Road South on the west. It is across Daming Road from the Astor House Hotel.[15] Before the mansions were constructed, a building owned by the British firm Shanghai electric construction company stood on its site.
History
[edit]Broadway Mansions (1934–1951)
[edit]Construction for the Broadway Mansions was started in 1930, and completed by October 1934, and cost $10 million (Mexican) (approximately US$3.4 million at that time).[16] The Mansions was "originally built in 1934 as an exclusive residential hotel by the British".[17] The Mansions was built by Ye Guang Estate Property Company,[18][19] for the Shanghai Land Investment, Company[20] controlled by Sir Victor Sassoon.[21] Additionally, Sassoon owned the Cathay Mansions, another apartment building in the French Concession.[22] Along with the two other tallest buildings in Shanghai, (the Palace Hotel and Sassoon House), these skyscrapers were all owned by Baghdadi Jews.[23] The chairman of the board was Harry Edward Arnhold (born 16 January 1879 in Hong Kong), a Briton of German ancestry who had been educated in Britain,[24][25][26] the chairman of the Sassoon-controlled Arnhold & Company,[27] a former Chairman of the British Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai (1923);[28] and the sometime chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Council (SMC).[29] The primary developer and financer of the Broadway Mansions was Dr. Maurice Benjamin who had "financed and built much of the Shanghai coast".[30] Benjamin, who was one of the more prominent landowners and businessmen in Shanghai, considered an expert on real estate,[31] was also a leading board member of the Shanghai Land Investment Company,[32] and a former member of the Shanghai Municipal Council (1920–1921),[33] According to Maisie Meyer, "Broadway Mansions was hailed as Maurice Benjamin's masterpiece."[31]
In the years before the Second Sino-Japanese War, "Honkew's only outstanding building was the Broadway Mansion."[34] On its completion, "this monumental pyramid was one of Shanghai's two tallest buildings."[35] From its inception, it "had been a headquarters for Japanese commercial activity",[36] due to its proximity to Shanghai's Little Tokyo, comprising the Yangpu and Hongkou districts. In 1932, Little Tokyo comprised 4.25 square miles (11 km2) out of the entire 8.3 square miles (21 km2) of the International Settlement, and had about 30,000 Japanese residents,[37] while there about 20,000 other foreigners in both the International Settlement and French Concession combined.[38] The area was dominated and controlled by the Japanese military.[39] After the surrender of non-foreign Shanghai in November 1937, the International Settlement north of the Suzhou Creek, became almost exclusively Japanese in population.
Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945)
[edit]The Japanese military commandeered the Broadway Mansions at 11.00am on 17 August 1937, with all non-Japanese residents were ordered to evacuate from the Broadway Mansions by Japanese military sailors, often at the point of a bayonet.[40] Soon the Japanese flag fluttered over the Broadway Mansions, to the great delight of Japanese admiral Isoroku Yamamoto who toured Shanghai in April 1938.[41] The Mansions became a de facto Japanese possession. The Journal of the American Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines in discussing accommodation in Shanghai indicated: "Broadway Mansions? No. That's out. It is ... mostly empty and in darkness. Some Japanese military are there, that is all. It is a British property, Shanghai's newest and best apartment hotel. Another indemnity is accumulating."[42] Within a year most of the Mansions was rented to Japanese tenants.[43] According to testimony presented to a US Congress sub-committee, "Broadway Mansion is the "brain" of all Japanese control in Shanghai. Here most of the important combined policy meetings are held."[44] The Mansions was used as the headquarters of the Japanese Army Liaison Office.[45] Before December 1941, the Japanese military government held weekly (and later bi-weekly) press conferences at the Broadway Mansions,[46] and had offices there, including its transportation office.[47] Foreigners who transgressed the Japanese rules of the territory occupied by Japan were held for questioning in the Mansions.[48]
After December 1938, as a result of a meeting of Japanese military authorities and the Japanese-appointed puppet regime Reformed Government of the Republic of China[49] led by Liang Hongzhi in Nanjing, which led to the formation "the Jiangsu-Zhejiang-Anhui Opium Suppression Bureau (Su Zhe Wan jinyanju) on the fifth floor of the Broadway Mansions. ... They were empowered to control the import and distribution of opium, to enforce licensing conditions for opium hongs and smokers, and to collect revenues from opium sales. ... All fifty-eight licensed opium hongs in Shanghai ... had to pick up their opium requisitions from the bureau on the fifth floor of the Broadway Mansions."[50] The Reformed Government (and its successor, the Reorganized Government of Wang Jingwei) had its Foreign Affairs Bureau on the fourth floor of the Broadway Mansions.[51]
Sale of Broadway Mansions (March 1939)
[edit]In an unsuccessful attempt to increase the number of Japanese ratepayers and thus gain a majority on the Shanghai Municipal Council, which governed the International Settlement,[52] a Japanese joint stock company purchased the Broadway Mansions in 21 March 1939 at a considerable loss to its owners for $5,000,000, with the considerable hesitation of H.E. (Harry) Arnhold, the chairman of the board.[53] At that time The China Weekly Review reported: "One of the most luxurious hotels in Shanghai, Broadway Mansions has 156 hotel suites, 56 apartments, and eight offices and stores."[54] Many non-missionary foreigners were interned at the Broadway Mansions after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941.[55]
Highlights (1945–1949)
[edit]US Military occupancy (1945–1949)
[edit]After the Japanese surrender in August 1945, and the subsequent evacuation of its Japanese tenants and occupants, the Shanghai Municipal Council assumed ownership of the Broadway Mansions.[56] The Council leased part of the Mansions to the foreign correspondents and the remainder to the United States military,[57] where it became the headquarters for the American Military Mission that advised Chiang Kai-shek and the Nationalist government of the Republic of China.[58] The first five or six floors of the Broadway Mansions was occupied by officers of the U.S. Military Aid Group in China (MAGIC) and their dependents,[59] with 400 billets being provided at the Mansions.[60] The ground floor hosted a small American army hospital.[61] American fighter pilot Bill Dunn, one of the first to occupy the Mansions in August 1945, recalled: "In Shanghai we were billeted at the Broadway Mansions, a beautiful European-style hotel. There was only one problem: the rooms had no beds. Japanese officers had been billeted there, and they didn't use our type of bed, just sleeping mats. We got in touch with the hotel manager, who soon had a flock of Chinese setting up beds for us."[62] About this time the manager was Michael Alexis Melgunow, a White Russian émigré, who had previously been the head chauffeur.[63] After the alleged rape of two Chinese girls by American marines, approximately 5,000 anti-American Chinese university students marched on 1 January 1947 on the Broadway Mansions, at that time home for 200 U.S. servicemen and their dependents, demanding the American military (which they likened to the British imperialists and the Japanese aggressors) leave China.[64] The American-owned China Weekly Review attributed the cause of the Chinese hostility to the "outrageous conduct" of American military police and other Army and Marine" personnel.[65]
Foreign Correspondents' Club of China (1945–1949)
[edit]Also immediately after World War II, the Mansions hosted the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China,[66] which had been founded in Chongqing on 18 May 1943,[67] in its upper four floors,[68] and billeted its members and their families,[69] until soon after the establishment of the People's Republic of China in October 1949.[5][56] American journalist John Robinson Beal explained: "It's easy to understand why the correspondents prefer Shanghai. One lives comfortably at the Broadway Mansions, ... one of the Far East's finest hotels, waited on hand and foot by servants",[70] making it "the most decorous press club in Asia".[71] Journalist Richard Hughes joked that "Most of the correspondents lived there, incestuously".[72]
The bar was located in the penthouse on the 17th floor.[73] The parties held in the Foreign Correspondents' Club were notorious. While there was intense fighting in the rural areas of China during the escalating Chinese Civil War, this "did not prevent the parties in the foreign correspondents' club atop the eighteen-story Broadway Mansions, where dancing went on under gaily colored lights."[74] "on its top floor foreigners and their White Russian mistresses used to dance the sultry Shanghai nights away."[75] At these parties, "White Russian mistresses mingled with the American wives and black market speculators with military personnel",[76] who all cursed the Chinese, including both the Communists and Chiang Kai-shek.[74] Along with the decline in value of the Chinese currency, both gambling and opium-smoking increased, as did concerns about what to do with their White Russian mistresses should the Communists triumph and evict them from China.[77] The Mansions also hosted a popular brothel in this period of American occupancy.[78]
While Edward Ward in 1947 considered the Mansions to be "one of the most modern luxury blocks of flats",[79] Harrison Forman, noticing the changes in the Mansions since its halcyon days before the war, reflected on his return, "Now it looked rundown and motheaten."[80] American Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Keyes Beech[81] described the Broadway Mansions as "a steel and concrete apartment hotel that shot eighteen stories up from the bank of Soochow Creek, an American pillar of plenty",[82] but indicated that "the best thing about the Broadway Mansions was the view".[82] In May 1949 the Broadway Mansions was still the tallest apartment building in Shanghai,[9] but described as a "building with dull red brick".[83]
The Battle of Broadway Mansions (25–27 May 1949)
[edit]From 25 May 1949, during the Chinese Civil War, one of the few significant battles in Shanghai was, what foreign residents called, "The Battle of Broadway Mansions", where for two days there was fierce fighting in the vicinity of the Broadway Mansions between the forces of the Kuomintang and the People's Liberation Army.[84] From 30 April 1949 retreating Nationalist soldiers took possession of the Broadway Mansions, the nearby Central Post Office and the Embankment apartment complex.[85] One hundred regulars from the army of the Republic of China commanded by a major, occupied the Broadway Mansions, as part of the Kuomintang's defense of Shanghai against the invading People's Liberation Army.[86] Eventually, just over one thousand Nationalists defended the Broadway Mansions,[87] where they had entrenched themselves on the upper floors, where they could shoot from the windows and from the roof.[88] From the roof of Broadway Mansions, just above the Foreign Press Club, the Kuomintang snipers could rake the approaches to the Waibaidu Bridge by the advancing Communist forces.[89] There about two hundred foreigners trapped within the Mansions during the battle,[90] who were terrified for their safety. Peter Townsend recalls: "When you go out on the parapet of Broadway Mansions a bullet whistles above your head and you duck and crawl back on your hands and knees."[91]
Journalist Edwin Palmer Hoyt, whose apartment was in the Broadway Mansions, described the defeat of the Kuomintang: "The rot of the Kuomintang was definitely showing, nowhere more tragically than on Soochow Creek, just below the windows of the Broadway Mansions Hotel, the press hotel for the correspondents. From the windows of their comfortable apartments, they could look out at the steaming mass of humanity crowded beneath."[92] Townsend reported during the final stages of the battle, "They're hanging on at Broadway Mansions ... for nothing."[93] According to Brown and Pickowicz, "The thousand or so Nationalists defending Broadway Mansions could have been subdued by the Communists in an hour if the latter had wanted to do so."[94] The hoisting of the red flag with five yellow stars of the People's Republic of China on the roof of the Broadway Mansions on 27 May 1949 signified the final conquest of Shanghai by the People's Liberation Army.[7]
Highlights (1949–1951)
[edit]After the surrender of Shanghai to the People's Liberation Army on 27 May 1949, and especially after the declaration of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, the circumstances changed dramatically for the residents of the Broadway Mansions. According to Ross Terrill, "Foreign journalists drifted out of China to other assignments. The Foreign Correspondents Club in Broadway Mansions unraveled. Its Chinese staff were paid off; waiters were given leftover mustard. ... Today there are no dances, but you can get a good view" from the roof.[95] On 20 June 1949 the remaining 11 foreigners residing in the Broadway Mansions were ordered to leave to make room for political and military workers.[96] By 1950 the Shanghai branch of the Chinese Government Information Office, had its headquarters in the Broadway Mansions.[97]
Shanghai Mansions (1951–1969)
[edit]On 1 May 1951, the Shanghai Municipal Council, who had assumed ownership in 1945, renamed the Mansions as "'Shanghai dasha' or the Grand Building of Shanghai",[98] or as more popularly known in English, "the Shanghai Mansions".[99] Apparently, in 1957, the Mansions was also known as the 'Golden River Hotel',[100] which The Times journalist James Bertram (1910–1980) described as "an elaborate Western-style hotel-cum-apartment-house that has survived the war years and the Japanese occupation without visible change."[101] In 1956 British novelist and film producer Rubeigh James Minney,[102] who visited Shanghai in 1956, referred to the Shanghai Mansions' store on the ground floor: "On the ground floor there is a very superior general store",[103] where, "the atmosphere was much more elegant: by contrast one might say it was on the Harrods level."[104]
In 1965, the Mansions was described as "the huge ugly building in Shanghai".[105] Belgian journalist Jacques Marcuse concurred with that assessment, describing the Mansions in 1967 as "that tall yet squat ugly building".[106] while in the same year, Sally Backhouse, after describing "slab-like buildings that towered above the rest, holed by myriad windows and grimy with dirt, like dry old discolored cheese", indicated that "the largest of these was the famous 'Broadway Mansions', in capitalist days a block of luxury flats and rented buildings."[107] Another resident described the Mansions in the mid-1960s as a huge hotel, but "Shanghai Mansion is not the most luxurious hotel in Shanghai."[108]
Shanghai Mansion Incident (23–24 February 1967)
[edit]On 23 February 1967, a "grave incident" occurred at the Shanghai Agricultural Department,[109] that became known as the Shanghai Mansions Incident.[110] During the period of the Shanghai Revolution (or January Revolution) of January 1967, which led to the short-lived Shanghai People's Commune,[111] on 20 February, men "were sent to the Shanghai mansion to urge the [striking] workers to go back to their agricultural production posts."[109] On 23 February 1967, an "expatriate rebel group which had set up headquarters in the Shanghai Mansions, staged an assault on the Revolutionary Committee's economic department".[112] On 24 February 1967, the evening the Shanghai Commune was renamed the Shanghai Municipal Revolutionary Committee at the instigation of Mao Zedong, "the committee sent some 'representatives' on a 'fact-finding investigation' to ... the Shanghai Mansion, the site of an apparently large but undetermined colony of returnees from the countryside."[113] These 'counter-revolutionary" forces were suppressed, and the ring leaders were punished.[114] However, after this incident "they continued to deploy large numbers around the Shanghai Mansions day and night, beating up public security personnel."[115]
Anti-Imperialism Building (c. 1969-1972)
[edit]During the Cultural Revolution, the Mansions was renamed the Anti-Imperialism Building by Chinese Red Guards.[116]
Shanghai Mansions Hotel (c. 1972 to c. 1996)
[edit]By 1973, the Mansions was renamed in English the Shanghai Mansions Hotel,[117] but retained its Chinese name. By 1973 the Mansions was the third-choice accommodation provided for Overseas Chinese: "If there isn't enough room at these two hotels, then Overseas Chinese are put into the sky scraping Shanghai Mansions Hotel overlooking the Bund.[118] During the 1970s the Mansion was also the primary residence for "foreign experts".[119] Edoarda Masi, an Italian language teacher, who lived at the Mansions for a year between 1976 and 1977,[120] described the Mansions as "a mastodon among the low buildings that surround it; walls, plumbing, closets are all solid."[121] Referring to the Mansion's popularity, Masi indicated: "Depending on the time of year, this large room is half empty or crowded with tourists. The Dasha, which is known in English as Shanghai Mansions, for long stopovers.[122] By 1978 the Mansions was used increasingly as a hotel for visitors from Third World countries,[123] thus improving the accommodation situation in Shanghai.[124]
An American academic who stayed at the Mansions in the summer of 1982, said: "With its somewhat shabby decor, the hotel lobby at Shanghai Mansions was a hangout in the evenings for the African and Middle Eastern students of Shanghai."[125] By 1984, "The Shanghai Mansions, consisting of a main and a side building, is a hotel accommodating foreign tourists, businessmen, overseas Chinese."[126] At that time the Mansions had 370 guest rooms (including some deluxe suites) and 1,468 beds.[127] In 1985 one visitor referred to the "Thirties fortress of Shanghai Mansions, its thick brick walls pocked by black windows.[128] The General Manager of the Mansions from 1985 to at least 1999 was Tao Pei Tai (born 1 August 1946), who was also Deputy General Manager of Hengshan Group Holding Co., the owner of the Mansion.[129] In 1989 a double room in the Mansions was US$50 per night.[130] One 1991 Chinese travel guide extolled the service ethic of the Mansion: "The Shanghai Mansions adheres strictly to the guideline of "guests first, service first, courtesy first and tidiness first".[131] However, after September 1993 the Mansions was no longer the dominant landmark in the Shanghai landscape:
The announcement of the metropolis has also changed. It is no longer the magnificent art deco silhouette of the Shanghai Dasha [Shanghai Mansions] or the Waibaidu metallic bridge which marks the beginning of the center city and the Bund but, much further upstream, the Yangpu stayed-girder bridge. Completed in 1993, it has become the huge waterway entrance into the city, as role reclaimed, the Nanpu Bridge located downstream.[132]
While acknowledging that "the view to the river from the rooftop terrace ... is breathtaking", one 1993 guidebook warned, "Unfortunately, its location can become a drawback in the evening, as the sonorous horns of the river barges pose a constant challenge to sleep."[133] In 1995 the Shanghai Mansions was evaluated by the State Tourism Bureau, and named one of the twelve national best star hotels.[134]
Broadway Mansions Hotel (c. 1996 to today)
[edit]By 1996, the Mansions was again renamed - this time a reversion to a name similar to its original name - the Broadway Mansions Hotel, reflecting the increased openness to the West as a result of the reforms of Deng Xiaoping, and the shift from providing long-term residential apartment accommodation to that of a hotel. At that time the Mansions was described as "rather dull compared to other Shanghai hotels".[135]
The Hotel was partially renovated in 2003.[56][136]
Ownership
[edit]The Broadway Mansions has been owned and operated by the Shanghai Hengshan (Group) Holdings Company (上海市人民政府直属的上海衡山集)[1] since at least 1985.[2][3] The current president is Mr. Mu Xiangyang.[137] The Hengshan Hotels and Resorts owns five other hotels in Shanghai, including the Astor House Hotel, across the road from the Broadway Mansions.[1]
Amenities
[edit]The Broadway Mansions was the first hotel in Shanghai to have a restaurant on the top of the building.[7] Today the Broadway Mansions Hotel has six restaurants,[138] and is famous for its Huaiyang cuisine.[7]
Architecture
[edit]According to Professor Anne Warr,
Despite the uncertainties of the 1930s, in particular the increasing Japanese control over Chinese territory, the growing influence of the Communist Party, and the corruption of the Nationalist Government, Shanghai boomed. The first American style Art Deco skyscraper appeared on The Bund just as the American economy collapsed and Shanghai was about to enter its most dynamic decade. At the end of the 1920s as Europe and America went into financial depression, shiploads of unemployed foreigners arrived in Shanghai seeking their fortune. In three years, Shanghai’s foreign population almost doubled, from 36,500 in 1930 to 70,000 in 1933. Architects abandoned the Beaux-Arts styles of earlier decades and whole-heartedly embraced Art Deco and Modernism. ... During this period, clashing concepts of nationalism, imperialism and internationalism were reflected in the architecture. Internationalism from New York permeated Shanghai in the form of skyscrapers and the latest Hollywood movies, while Japanese imperialism filtered into every corner.[139]
The Broadway Mansions was designed by Mr. B. Flazer,[140] and the structural engineer who supervised construction was John William Barrow,[141] both of the architectural firm of Palmer & Turner.[142] Palmer & Turner, who designed many of Shanghai's major buildings (13 buildings on the Bund alone),[143] was one of the oldest architectural firms in the world,[144] and was founded by British architect William Salway (1844–1902) in Hong Kong in 1868.[145] British architect Clement Palmer (1857–1952) joined the firm in 1883,[146] while structural engineer Arthur Turner (born 1858) joined the next year. Palmer and Turner became partners in 1891. In 1912 they established a branch in Shanghai managed by British architect, George Leopold "Tug" Wilson (1881–1967).[35][147][148][149][150] Palmer & Turner designed many of the buildings on The Bund, including the Neo-Renaissance style Union Building (1916), its first work in Shanghai, and the first building in Shanghai to use a steel structure;[151] the Neo-Renaissance Mercantile Bank of India, London and China building (1916); the Yokohama Specie Bank Building (1920s); and the neo-classical HSBC Building (1921–1923);[152] the adjacent Greek Revival neo-classical Customs House (1927).[153] Wilson had supervised construction of the majority of British buildings along The Bund until their new client, Sir Victor Sassoon tilted them towards Art Deco and Modernism at the end of the 1920s,[150] and such buildings as the Art Deco Sassoon House (1926–1929);[154] the Yangtze Insurance Building; the Broadway Mansions (1934); and subsequently the Old Bank of China Building, Shanghai (1937).[155]
The Broadway Mansions is "a brick patterned Art Deco apartment block ...[that] would not have looked out of place in Manhattan",[156] and is an example of the Art Deco or Streamline Moderne style of architecture that emerged in the 1920s and flourished in the 1930s[157] The Broadway Mansions is a steel-framed red brick building "in the stepped skyscraper mode",[158] that is 78 meters (256 ft) in height,[159] with a total floor space of 24,596 square meters (264,750 sq ft). Steel-framed structures were used in Shanghai from 1916 onwards, originally for eight- to ten-story buildings, but by the 1930s, for up to twenty-four stories.[160] The building's floor plan was modeled after the Chinese character for the number eight,[161] which is a symbol of luck and prosperity.[162] The facade of the Broadway Mansions was one of its distinctive features. The design of the Mansions was "influenced by modernism", and like "most apartment buildings in Shanghai featured a simple and modern style of exterior".[163]
According to Peter Rowe and Seng Kuan, after describing the Metropole Hotel and Hamilton House, also designed by Palmer & Turner about the same time: "A similar approach to both architecture and place making was taken almost simultaneously by B. Flazer, with the curved symmetric stepped-back facade of the Broadway Mansions. ... The firm of Palmer and Turner was to continue with curvilinear plan forms in the organic layout of the large Embankment Building of 1933.[157] The Mansions had a roof top garden, and even a squash court.[31] Initially the Mansions had 370 guest rooms,[164] and also housed offices and shops.[161] According to Fiona Shen, "part hotel, part apartment block, it also catered to that fixture of Shanghai economic life during the Concession period - the young, single expatriate - with its 99 stylish and compact bachelor pads."[35] Broadway Mansions Hotel was the first hotel in Shanghai that had an indoor parking facility, a structure that had four levels with 80 spaces.[7] The phone system was built at the time of its construction, and its phone number (46260) has remained unchanged.[7]
Reviews
[edit]The Broadway Mansions is considered "one of the finest architectural examples in Shanghai, and the ideal starting point for an art deco walking tour of the city, ... an unashamedly Gotham-esque structure with a commanding location to the north of the Bund."[165] Soon after its opening, the Mansions was described as a "prominent, tall white structure",[166] Professor Lancelot Forster was enthusiastic in his assessment of the newly completed Broadway Mansions in 1936. After describing its contemporary, the Cathay Hotel, which "seems to point to loftier things, ... defying the smug security of the earth as it soars upwards, and yet not so blatantly as the new Broadway Mansions which, abandoning all restraint ... lifts its optimistic head from its broad substantial shoulders and shouts to the settlement."[167]
Canadian Gordon Sinclar, described the Mansions "as posh an apartment house as anything in Toronto or Montreal."[168] One travel guide described the Mansions as "a 22-story brick ziggurat".[169] Harold Conant, who lived in Shanghai for ten years from 1931, depicted the Mansions: "The Broadway Mansions, which seems to be so constructed that the wind always whistles through it (which is very cheering on a hot summer day), seems to have been shown quite frequently in American newspapers".[170] Gary Jones wrote, "the 22-floor ocher-brick structure is now dwarfed by twinkling skyscrapers that have sprung up in recent years, and yet still exudes a menacing solidity and here-to-stay confidence.[165]
Notable people
[edit]Guests
[edit]According to its official website, Broadway Mansions Hotel has accommodated hundreds of leaders and government delegates from different nations around the world.[7] Some of these include:
- New Zealand-born William Lancelot Holland (28 December 1907 - May 2008), Research Secretary and later Executive Secretary of the Institute of Pacific Relations (1928–1960), and editor of its periodical, Far Eastern Survey and Pacific Affairs, stayed at the Broadway Mansions for several months from July 1937;[171]
- American aviator Royal Leonard (1905–1962), the personal pilot of Chiang Kai-shek,[172] was staying at the Broadway Mansions during the initial days of the Second Sino-Japanese War, and was able to then fly to Hong Kong after the regular air service had been terminated due to aerial combat between Japanese and Chinese forces;[173]
- Canadian socialist James Gareth Endicott (1898–1993), a controversial former United Church of Canada missionary, former advisor to Chiang Kai-shek, but from 1945 a supporter of the Chinese Communist Party and friend of Zhou Enlai, and founder in 1949 of the Canadian Peace Congress, and a 1952 winner of the Stalin Peace Prize, stayed at the Shanghai Mansions on a return visit to China in 1952 with his wife, Mary Austin Endicott;[174]
- Swiss photojournalist Fernand Gignon, one of few non-Communist reporters permitted to enter the People's Republic of China in the early 1960s,[175] stayed on the 3rd floor of the Shanghai Mansions, "le plus grand complexe locatif de la métropole."[176]
- American businessman and human rights campaigner John Kamm spent a week at the Shanghai Mansions in January 1976 when he was a representative of the National Council for US-China Trade. His account was published as a part of a series in the Hong Kong Economic Journal.[177]
Residents
[edit]- Cornelius Vander Starr (15 October 1892 – 20 December 1968), an American businessman and Office of Strategic Services operative who founded the American International Group (AIG) insurance corporation in Shanghai in 1919, occupied the penthouse of the Broadway Mansions until the outbreak of World War II;[38]
- American journalist Hallett Edward Abend (born 15 September 1884 in Portland, Oregon; died 28 November 1955 in Sonora, California),[178] correspondent for The New York Times, had a long-term lease,[179] and lived and worked from Apartment G, "a luxurious penthouse", on the 16th floor,[180] from 1935 until July 1940. On the evening of 19 July 1940, Abend was robbed and tortured[181] by two Japanese men in his room,[182] who "next morning again wore the uniform of officers of the Imperial Army of Japan".[183] The next morning Abend moved "to another apartment in an area supervised by the Americans and British.[184] In August 1937, after all tenants had been evacuated from the Mansions by Japanese forces, Abend's apartment was searched by men believed to be associated with the Japanese consulate;[185][186]
- Italian Amleto Vespa (1888 – c. 1940), a mercenary and secret agent for Manchuria and later reluctantly for the Empire of Japan, lived at the Mansions from 1937;[187]
- Japanese ultra-nationalist yakuza figure and convicted Class A war criminal Yoshio Kodama (児玉誉士夫 18 February 1911 – 17 January 1984), stayed at the Broadway Mansions during the Second Sino-Japanese War;[188]
- American Robert Shaplen, foreign correspondent for The New Yorker,[189] resided at the Broadway Mansions for two years immediately after the conclusion of World War II;[190]
- American Jack Birns, one of Life magazine's staff photo journalists, resided at the Broadway Mansions from 15 December 1947;[191]
- French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson (22 August 1908 – 3 August 2004), considered to be the father of modern photojournalism, and co-founder of Magnum Photos, an international photographic cooperative, lived in the Broadway Mansions for a year from the middle of 1949, covering the fall of the Nationalist government and the creation of the People's Republic of China;[192]
References
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Allen, Rewi. The People Have Strength. The Author, 1954.
- Brown, Jeremy and Paul Pickowicz. Dilemmas of Victory: The Early Years of the People's Republic of China. Harvard University Press, 2007.
- Boyle, John Hunter. China and Japan at War, 1937-1945: The Politics of Collaboration. Stanford University Press, 1972.
- Cameron, Clyde. China, Communism and Coca Cola. Hill of Content, 1980.
- Fletcher, Banister and Dan Cruickshank. Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture, 20th ed. Architectural Press, 1996. Pages 1558 and 1560.
- Forman, Harrison. Changing China. Crown publishers, 1948.
- Gu, Gan. Touring Metropolitan Shanghai. The Publishing House, 1984. See pages 127, 230.
- Guillain, Robert. The Blue Ants: 600 million Chinese Under the Red Flag. Secker & Warburg, 1957. Page 180.
- Hauser, Ernest O. Shanghai: City for Sale. Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940.
- Henriot, Christian and Wen-Hsin Yeh. In the Shadow of the Rising Sun: Shanghai under Japanese Occupation. Cambridge University Press, 2004.
- Johnston, Tess and Dongqiang Er. A Last Look: Western Architecture in Old Shanghai. 3rd ed. Old China Hand Press, 1993. Page 106.
- Kamm, John. "Shanghaied at the Feather and Down Minifair", Hong Kong Economic Journal 2 April 2011.[177]
- Landman, Amos. Profile of Red China. Simon and Schuster, 1951.
- Lee, Leo Ou-fan. Shanghai Modern: The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China, 1930–1945. Harvard University Press, 1999.
- Malloy, Ruth Lor. Travel Guide to the People's Republic of China. Morrow, 1975. Page 75.
- Moorad, George. Lost Peace in China. E. P. Dutton, 1949.
- Nideros, Eric. "Wartime Shanghai: A Tycoon Triumphs Over the Emperor". World War II magazine (September 2006).[193]
- Pan, Lynn. Shanghai Style: Art and Design Between the Wars. Long River Press, 2008.* Pan, Lynn; Li-yung Hsüeh; Liyong Xue; and Zonghao Qian. Shanghai: A Century of Change in Photographs, 1843–1949. Hai Feng Pub. Co., 1993.
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Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c "Hengshan Member Hotels". Archived from the original on 21 April 2009. Retrieved 7 May 2009.
- ^ a b c d "上海大厦 位于 上海 - 网上预订豪华酒店客房 外滩". Broadwaymansions.com. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ a b http://www.langhamhotels.com/pdf/pr_20071026.pdf. Retrieved 7 May 2009.
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- ^ a b Dmitri Kessel, On Assignment: Dmitri Kessel, Life photographer (Abrams, 1985):149.
- ^ Noël Barber, The Fall of Shanghai: The Communist Take-over in 1949 (Macmillan, 1979):96.
- ^ a b c d e f g "The history in Broadway Mansions Hotel". Archived from the original on 29 September 2008. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
- ^ Sidney Shapiro, An American in China: Thirty Years in the People's Republic (New World Press, 1979):55.
- ^ a b "China: The Weary Wait". Time. 23 May 1949. Archived from the original on 31 January 2011. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Georges Binder, Tall Buildings of Asia & Australia (Images Publishing, 2001):ifc.
- ^ Bruce Douglass and Ross Terrill, China and Ourselves: Explorations and Revisions by a New Generation (Beacon Press, 1971):90.
- ^ "Bright lights, old city". smh.com.au. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
- ^ "老上海的百老汇大厦(附图)-上海档案信息网". Archives.sh.cn. 13 December 2012. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Kang Yan and Robert Hale Smitheram, Deciphering Shanghai, 1990–2000 (Australian-Chinese Press, 2002):215.
- ^ "Location Shanghai Hotel - Broadway Mansions Hotel Shanghai The Bund".
- ^ "Shanghai Offices of Times Searched; Chief Correspondent to Make a Protest to Japan - His Apartment Also Visited", The New York Times (19 August 1937):2; "The unit of Chinese currency is the yuan, a silver dollar loosely called Mexican. Since it fluctuates less in terms of Chinese commodities than in terms of gold, it is the only fair measure of Chinese values. Hence the dollars throughout this article are Mexican, unless otherwise indicated. The present value of the Mexican dollar is about thirty-four cents." See "The Shanghai Boom", Fortune 11:1 (January 1935); "Tales of Old China". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2015.; Chang Huei Hsin, "Essays of the History of Chinese Currencies", (Tai Young Publication Co. 1994); "Mexican Eagle Dollars"; http://www.sycee-on-line.com/Mexico_dollars.htm
- ^ J. D. Brown and Sharon Owyang, Frommer's Shanghai, 3rd ed. (John Wiley and Sons, 2004):75.
- ^ Christian Henriot. "Broadway Mansions | none". Virtualshanghai.net. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ "Shanghai". www.chinatoday.com.cn. Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
- ^ Kenneth Frampton and Guan Zhaoye, World Architecture 1900-2000: A Critical Mosaic, Vol. 9 (Springer, 2000):59.
- ^ 犹Pan Guang (潘光), Jews in China 太人在中国: [中英文本], 3rd ed. (五洲传播出版社, 2005):1896.
- ^ Peter Shen, Villa Shen: An Old Shanghai Story (Pelanduk Pub., 1997).
- ^ Journal of Indian History [Dept. of History, University of Kerala] 68-71 (1992):129; Roman Malek, From Kaifeng--to Shanghai: Jews in China (Steyler, 2000):354.
- ^ Robert A. Bickers, Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949 (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132
- ^ Carl T. Smith, "The German Speaking Community in Hong Kong 1846-1918", 26-30.
- ^ "Hong Kong Journals Online" (PDF). Sunzi1.lib.hku.hk. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Arnhold & Co., a trading company that became a leading distributor of building materials and engineering equipment, was founded as the German-registered Arnhold & Karberg & Co. in 1866 on Shameen Island in Canton (Guangzhou) by Jacob Arnhold and Peter Karsberg, and opened branches in Hong Kong (1867) and Shanghai (1881), and had 37 branches by 1901 (see also Carl T. Smith, "The German Speaking Community in Hong Kong 1846-1918", 26-30.; http://sunzi1.lib.hku.hk/hkjo/view/44/4402104.pdf; and "About Arnhold: History'; http://www.arnhold.com.hk/en/about-arnhold/history/); including branches in Hankow, Tientsin (Tianjin), Peking (Beijing), Mukden, London and New York (see E. C. Knuth, The Empire of "The City": The Secret History of British Financial Power (Book Tree, 2006):72). From 1897 to 1910, at least one of the Arnhold family was chairman of the company's board of directors: Jacob Arnhold (1897–1900), Philipp Arnhold (1900–1905; and 1906-1910); and Harry E. Arnhold (1905–1906). (see Frans-Paul van der Putten, Corporate Behaviour and Political Risk: Dutch companies in China, 1903–1941 (Research School of Asian, African and Amerindian Studies, Leiden University, 2001):74.) Due to hostility to German companies as a consequence of World War I, and the seizure of German companies by the British and their allies, H.E. Arnhold and his brother, Charles Herbert Arnhold (born 19 September 1881 in London), "advertised themselves out of the well-known Anglo-German concern, Arnhold, Karberg & Co.". (see Edward Manico Gull, British Economic Interests in the Far East (International Secretariat, Institute of Pacific Relations, 1943):119; The Law Journal Reports 85 (E.B. Ince, 1916):133.), which had four equal partners: the two Arnhold brothers; Ernest Goetz, a Swiss born German subject; and Max Niclassen, of Berlin, Germany (see Ernest Charles Meldon Trehern and Albert Wallace Grant, Prize Cases Heard and Decided in the Prize Court During the Great War, Great Britain High Court of Justice, Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty Division, High Court of Justice Vol. 1(Stevens, 1916):644-645). Initially they formed the firm of Messrs. H.E. Arnhold (China), but on 1 October 1917, they incorporated its successor, Arnhold Brothers Limited (China), in Hong Kong, under the British ordinances, but with headquarters in Shanghai (see Asia: Journal of the American Asiatic Association 18:11 (November 1918):984), which was reconstituted as a British company after 1919. Sir Victor Sassoon became the majority shareholder in 1923 after a merger (see C.R. Maguire, China Stock and Share Handbook (Office of the North-China Daily News and Herald, ltd., 1925, 100 for list of directors). According to Stella Dong, its "most attractive asset was the Cathay Land Company, ownership of which gave Sir Victor control of a number of apartment buildings and a hotel in the International Settlement as well as choice housing estates in the French Concession". (See Stella Dong, Shanghai: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City 1842-1949 (HarperCollins, 2001):218-219). Arnhold's served as a front for Sassoon's political interests in the International Settlement. (See Robert A. Bickers, Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949 (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132). Headquartered in the Arnhold Building at 6 Kiukiang Road, Shanghai (see Allister Macmillan, Seaports of the Far East: Historical and Descriptive, Commercial and Industrial, Facts, Figures, & Resources, 2nd ed. (W.H. & L. Collingridge, 1925):57) until its relocation in 1930 to the third floor of Sassoon House at 1 Nanking Road (see Stanley Jackson, The Sassoons (Dutton, 1968):217; Ernest O. Hauser, Shanghai: City for Sale (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):284.), Arnhold & Co. flourished until 1949 when, with the change of Government in China, the headquarters relocated to Hong Kong. Mr. Maurice Green who had been associated with the company since the Sassoon takeover, acquired the controlling interest in Arnhold in 1957 (see About Us; History).
- ^ The China Who's Who ... (foreign) (Kelley & Walsh, 1924):18.
- ^ According to Ernest O. Hauser, "Arnhold was Sir Victor's lieutenant." (See Ernest O. Hauser, Shanghai: City for Sale (Harcourt, Brace and company, 1940):284), or as Bickers put it more bluntly: "Harry was his man on the SMC." (see Robert A. Bickers, Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949 (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132) Arnhold reelection as a member of the SMC in 1930 was defeated due to his "reformist" tendencies. He also attracted antisemitic and anti-German hostility. Arnhold's defeat was warmly welcomed, as the diplomats disliked him. "Not an attractive personality", noted Sir Miles Lampson, the then British Minister. However, Arnhold reemerged as a settler community leader in the 1930s, serving on the committee of serving on the committee of the British Residents' Association, and then back on the SMC from 1932 to 1937, chairing it in 1934-37. See Robert A. Bickers, Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949 (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):132.
- ^ Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, Treasures of Taliesin: Seventy-Seven Unbuilt Designs, 2nd ed. (Pomegranate, 1999):29.
- ^ a b c Maisie J. Meyer, From the Rivers of Babylon to the Whangpoo: A Century of Sephardi Jewish Life in Shanghai (University Press of America, 2003):70.
- ^ England, Vaudine (1998). The Quest of Noel Croucher: Hong Kong's Quiet Philanthropist. Hong Kong University Press. p. 45. ISBN 9789622094734.
- ^ Robert Bickers and Christian Henriot, New Frontiers: Imperialism's New Communities in East Asia, 1842–1953 (Manchester University Press ND, 2000):45.
- ^ Sigmund Tobias, Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai (University of Illinois Press, 1999):24-25.
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- ^ Jim Yoshida, The Two Worlds of Jim Yoshida (Morrow, 1972):128.
- ^ Beverley Jackson, Shanghai Girl Gets All Dressed up (Ten Speed Press, 2005).
- ^ a b "Tales of Old China". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Edna Lee Booker, News Is My Job - A Correspondent in War Torn China (New York: MacMillan, 1940):15; Christian Henriot, "Little Japan in Shanghai: An Insulated Community, 1875-1945" in Robert Bickers and Christian Henriot, eds., New Frontiers: Imperialism's New Communities in East Asia, 1842–1952 (Manchester University Press, 2000):146-169.
- ^ Peter O'Connor, Japanese Propaganda : To our American friends II, 1934–38, Vol. 9 (Global Oriental, 2005):184; United States Naval Institute, Proceedings Vol. 65 (1939):176.
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- ^ Jim Yoshida, with Bill Hosokawa, The Two Worlds of Jim Yoshida (Morrow, 1972):127.
- ^ William H. McDougall, If I Get Out Alive: World War II Letters & Diaries of William H. McDougall Jr (University of Utah Press, 2007):35; Violet Sweet Haven, Gentlemen of Japan: a Study in Rapist Diplomacy (Ziff-Davis publishing company, 1944):70; Eric Downton, Wars Without End (Stoddart, 1987):52. Philip J. Jaffe, Amerasia 3 (1940):90.
- ^ Gus Lee, Chasing Hepburn: A Memoir of Shanghai, Hollywood, and a Chinese Family's Fight for Freedom (Harmony Books, 2003):440.
- ^ Dora Sanders Carney, Foreign Devils had Light Eyes: A Memoir of Shanghai 1933-1939 (Dorset Pub., 1980):222.
- ^ "Reorganized National Government of the ROC". Flagspot.net. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Frederic E. Wakeman, The Shanghai Badlands: Wartime Terrorism and Urban Crime, 1937–1941 (Cambridge University Press, 2002):13; see also Shuxi Xu, Japan and the Third Powers No. 11 (Kelly & Walsh, 1941):202.
- ^ Frederic E. Wakeman, The Shanghai Badlands: Wartime Terrorism and Urban Crime, 1937–1941 (Cambridge University Press, 2002):62.
- ^ Electoral gerrymandering, sanctioned and aided by London, prevented the Japanese achieving a majority on the SMC in 1940. See Robert A. Bickers, Britain in China: Community Culture and Colonialism, 1900–1949 (Manchester University Press ND, 1999):157.
- ^ Madeleine Constance Munday, Rice Bowl Broken (National Book Association, 1947):113; The China Weekly Review 88-89 (11 March 1939):109; The China Weekly Review 88-89 (1 April 1939):131.
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- ^ Hlavacek, 172.
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