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Take a journey into the last 80 years of La Valencia History. For a comprehensive history, through photos then and now, postcards from every era, consider purchasing the La Valencia history book.
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La Valencia opened its doors as an apartment hotel on December 15, 1926. While its first name, Los Apartmentos de Sevilla, was not widely
used, the new apartment hotel was designed to integrate the finest elements of various styles of the Spanish school of architecture.
The architect, Reginald Johnson, was a local man known for his integrity and knowledge of classic Spanish architecture. La Valencia's
owners, MacArthur Gorton and Roy Wiltsie went out on a financial limb to build it, for approximately $200,000, with an uncertain future
and a great potential for failure. Nonetheless, the apartment-hotel was opened and in a very short time things seemed to be coming up
roses.
The grand opening of La Valencia Hotel was a lavish affair. It was the beginning of a golden era in Hollywood, and its co-owner,
MacArthur Gorton, had moving picture connections; he knew the value of Hollywood's endorsement of the hotel. To Hollywood, La Jolla
was really and undiscovered, unspoiled "jewel," and its beaches and cliffs were often used for location shots. Hollywood's stars,
the nation's Gods and Goddesses of the day, used (and still do) La Valencia as a hideout from the hectic Hollywood pressures.
Imagine yourself at the main gate of La Valencia on that sunny Saturday, December 1926. As you enter, you cross the lobby and pass
newly fitted offices and the Living Room with its colorful ceiling and tiled fountain. Cozy appointments and a huge seaward window
appear at the bottom of the stairs railed with wrought iron. Lounges and chairs, tables topped in black marble and richly toned
carpets decorate the room, every one of them designed for La Valencia to enrich and enhance the flavor of her design. Above the
Living Room, today called La Sala, reached by the tiled stairs, was the mezzanine with the Galeria and social rooms. These card
and reading rooms were all planned with the comfort of La Jollans and traveling guests in mind.
The new sleeping rooms were arranged singly or en suite and a number of them could have been combined to accommodate a larger family
party. The furnishings were said to be the best in the world and were harmonious with the Spanish design. There were quaint and
comfortable easy chairs, brown wood dressers with tiled tops, and wall mirrors, all of which combined art and convenience, the
keynote of La Valencia. Every room was advertised to have a sea view. One guest extolled `...even the poorest room still had a
view that would satisfy anyone.' This was La Valencia in 1926.
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Officially named La Valencia in 1928, the late twenties and early thirties proved to be bleak years as the nationwide depression deepened.
In 1930 McArthur hired Gethin Williams as La Valencia's General Manager. Williams was the second of what would be only five General
Mangers in La Valencia's eighty year history to date, including MacArthur Gorton himself.
During World War II, because of La Jolla's proximity to San Diego, La Valencia and her guests were very much a part of the war effort.
Many local La Jollans spent long hours perched in the windswept tower scanning the skies and seas for enemy planes or ships. Frequently
guests, who did not care to let the war interfere with their traditional winter vacations at La Valencia, also took their two-hour-a-day
turns, in good weather and bad, with diligence. The hotel also became the temporary home to hundreds of young officers, often milling
about in the lobby, either waiting to go overseas or enjoying leave. Young brides tended to stay and wait for their husbands at the
hotel or in the charming cottages nearby, which then could be rented very inexpensively.
The Whaling Bar and Café La Rue restaurant, opened and instantly became, then as now, the centerpiece of the hotel for guests both guests
and La Jolla residents alike. Today it is impossible to imagine La Valencia without the Whaling Bar. The décor invokes a sense of
timelessness, with its pewter candleholders, antique wooden shutters, and displays of carved ivory scrimshaw. These create the
perfect complement to the dramatic murals that adorn the walls to this day, including The Whale's Last Stand, painted in the 1930's
by local artist Wing Howard.
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In 1946, La Valencia entered her period of greatest expansion when Dick Irwin became her third General Manger. The three floors
(numbered four, five and six) below the seventh floor lobby were completed in 1949. The pool was built in 1950 with the gym,
sauna putting green and shuffleboard court were put in shortly afterwards. Above all, under Irwin, the Hotel Cabrillo, located
next door, was acquired, and its 30 rooms brought La Valencia's room count to 100. The Hotel Cabrillo, currently referred to as
the West Wing is as rich in history as the main building.
The Cabrillo, Hotel, built eighteen years before La Valencia in 1908, was at that time a notable achievement in local construction.
It opened on June 26, 1909 and became very popular at once; the register book, signed by the likes of future President Woodrow Wilson,
is treasured to this day and remains well preserved at the La Jolla Historical Society. The Cabrillo only changed ownership twice
until 1956, when La Valencia Hotel took possession and management started the remodeling job necessary to tie it in with the 1925
building. It was now entirely La Valencia. The two hotels were one, and with that fait accompli, many fascinating chapters had been
written into the Pink Lady's colorful history.
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The La Jolla Playhouse era was one of the hotel's most glamorous. From the start, Hollywood had claimed La Valencia as a hideaway.
Now the hotel became the gathering place of choice for those who launched, and performed in the famous La Jolla Playhouse including:
Gregory Peck, Dorothy McGuire, Mel Ferrer, Jose Ferrer, Joseph Cotton, Richard Basehart, Charlton Heston, Ginger Rogers, Jennifer
Jones, Lorne Green, David Niven and many others to numerous to mention over that seventeen year period.
Playhouse founder, artistic director, and La Jolla resident Gregory Peck often played host to the new cast at the Whaling Bar.
Even La Jolla resident Raymond Chandler, famous mystery writer of the forties and fifties, used La Valencia under a thinly
disguised fictitious name as a backdrop for the thriller, "Playback."
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In the late sixties, Dick Irwin introduced the Sky Room. Formerly a sun balcony for guests on the hotel's tenth floor, the Sky Room
opened as a restaurant, offering just twelve tables, all of them with 180-degree views of the Pacific Ocean. The restaurants'
romantic ambiance and exquisite cuisine continues to delight hotel guests and locals alike to this day.
As the 1960's gave way to the 1970's and 1980's, the hotel, like the town, remained a destination for visitors looking for a change in
climate and scene, as well as a magnet for those who lived and worked in La Jolla. During her sixtieth birthday year, La Valencia
welcomed her fourth general manager, Patrick Halcewicz. That same year, La Valencia was chosen to join the select company of Preferred
Hotels Worldwide. This association represents a handful of luxury hotels that meet only the highest standards of amenities and service,
MacArthur Gorton's original goal.
In 1995, Michal Ullman became the fifth of La Valencia's General Managers, and only the third in the last sixty years. A spa treatment
room and business center have been added under Ullman's direction, and the Whaling Bar, Sky Room and fitness center have been renovated
as well a the Mediterranean Room restaurant and the West Wing. Additionally, The Ocean Villas opened in 2000, increasing La Valencia's
total room accommodations to 115.
All of these improvements were undertaken with scrupulous attention to incorporating La Valencia's old-world ambiance with today's
amenities. La Valencia has stood in a class by herself for decades. In a time when new hotels are competing with each other for
the opulence of their design, she retains a timeless elegance that gives her a personality all her own. At once hospitable and lively,
iconic and serene, she inspires a following of both locals and guess from around the world. Such is the storied La Valencia Hotel,
La Jolla's own Pink Lady.
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