Built in lavish Victorian style in 1886 atop Bacon Hill, the Raymond
Hotel was the most regal feature on the skyline in the San Gabriel River
Valley--a sundown silhouette of the wealth and prominence that had
coalesced in the Pasadena area. It became the base of activities for
Eastern tycoons' families enjoying the balmy Southern California
climate, even fostering the development of the winter mansions on Orange
Grove Avenue. After the original 200-room hotel with 80 chimneys burned
down on Easter Sunday in 1895, the second 300-room Raymond Hotel opened
in 1901. The pioneering orange groves on the sprawling grounds gave way
to a golf course. Pres. Theodore Roosevelt and Charles Chaplin are just
two examples of the early-20th-century celebrities who stayed there.
This visually stunning collection of images is a mere sample of the
vintage professional photography that exists of South Pasadena's iconic
landmark.