The Mayflower Park Hotel started life as the Bergonian Hotel on July 16,
1927. One of Seattle's first uptown hotels, it was designed by architect
B. Dudley Stuart and built by Stephen Berg at a cost of $750,000. In the
midst of the Great Depression, the hotel was sold and renamed Hotel
Mayflower. In 1948, Washington State legalized cocktail lounges, and the
Hotel Mayflower became Seattle's first hotel to open one. In the ensuing
decades, Seattle prospered, and it hosted the 1962 World's Fair with its
symbolic Space Needle. By the 1970s, Seattle was in a deep recession,
and the hotel had become sadly neglected. In 1974, Birney and Marie
Dempcy formed a limited partnership to purchase the hotel and renamed it
the Mayflower Park Hotel. Restoration started immediately, and after 40
years, the Dempcys remain dedicated to the tradition of making the
Mayflower Park Hotel Quite Simply, One of a Kind.