Prince of Wales Hotel
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The Prince of Wales Hotel is located in Waterton Lakes National Park in Alberta, Canada, overlooking Upper Waterton Lake, near the Canada-United States border. Constructed between 1926-1927, the hotel was built by the American Great Northern Railway to lure American tourists during the prohibition-era south of the border. The hotel was named after the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII), in a transparent attempt to entice him to stay in the hotel on his 1927 Canadian tour, but the Prince stayed at a nearby ranch instead .
The Prince of Wales Hotel enjoys the distinction of being the sole establishment among Canada's grand railway hotels to have been built by an American, as opposed to a Canadian, railway company. The hotel was designated a national historic site by the Canadian government in 1995.
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[edit] References
- Chisholm, Barbara, ed., Castles of the North: Canada’s Grand Hotels (Toronto: Lynx Images Inc., 2001) (ISBN 1-894073-14-2)
Canada's grand railway hotels |
City Hotels: The Empress | Hotel Vancouver | Hotel Macdonald | Palliser Hotel | Hotel Bessborough | Hotel Saskatchewan | Fort Garry Hotel | Royal York | Château Laurier | Queen Elizabeth Hotel | Windsor Hotel | Place Viger | Château Frontenac | Hotel Nova Scotian | Lord Nelson Hotel | Hotel Charlottetown | Hotel Newfoundland |
Resort Hotels: Jasper Park Lodge | Château Lake Louise | Banff Springs Hotel | Prince of Wales Hotel | Château Montebello | The Algonquin |