THE HISTORIC PIEDMONT HOTEL
The Piedmont in the early 1900s
by Richard Pilcher
In 1873 Mr. Alvah Smith started purchasing property for a hotel he planned
to build near the new railroad in Gainesville, GA. He wanted an entire city block
for his hotel, but there were difficulties acquiring parts of that block. However,
as soon as he had the land needed for the footprint of the buildings he started
construction. The Piedmont Hotel was to be a three story structure of two wings with
forty five guest rooms. Within the complex there would be separate structures for the
kitchen and dining room, stables and the privy.
Construction continued in fits and starts through 1874 and into 1875 as Mr. Smith
struggled financially. Finally in 1875 work stopped altogether as Alvah Smith faced
several liens against the property, the largest of which was filed by his own sister,
and at least one court judgment. At this point he started seeking a partner in the project
and the new partner he found was General James Longstreet. They agreed that Longstreet
would buy 1/2 interest in the hotel for $6,000 and with that money Smith would settle
the liens and judgment and together they would finish and operate the hotel. Longstreet
agreed that if Smith could raise the $6,000 plus interest within six years he could buy
back the hotel. It never happened. In fact, Longstreet’s $6,000 was not enough to
settle the outstanding debts. At this point Smith signed over his interest in the hotel
to James Longstreet and Longstreet assumed all remaining debt.
Construction resumed and continued through the rest of 1875 and into 1876. During this
time the General assembled most of the property needed, failing only to acquire a 100
foot strip at the north end of the block and on June 13, 1876 the Piedmont Hotel finally
opened for business with John Garland Longstreet, the General’s son, managing the business
and with James Longstreet actively involved. The General owned the hotel until his death in 1904.
The Piedmont was Longstreet's political base throughout his long career as a Georgia
Republican during which time he served as Minister (Ambassador) to Turkey, Gainesville
Postmaster, US Commissioner of Railroads and US Marshal for the Northern District of
Georgia. The hotel was Longstreet's social base as well. Guests included editor and
author Henry Grady, known as the voice of the new South and Joel Chandler Harris,
author of the Uncle Remus Tales. Grady and Harris did some ghost writing for the
General. General Joseph Johnston, whom Longstreet considered the most capable of
Confederate commanders stayed at the hotel too as did Union General, New York Mayor
and New York Congressman Daniel Sickles, who was the first person to successfully use
the "temporary insanity" defense after he killed his wife's lover in a fit of rage.
Future US President Woodrow Wilson and his wife Ellen Axson Wilson were frequent guests
and their daughter Jesse Woodrow Wilson was born at the Piedmont in 1887. Ellen Wilson
died a year into the Wilson presidency and Jesse was married in the White House.
Drawing by George Evans, 1999
©Gainesville-Hall Trust for Historic Preservation
There was much local lore surrounding the General and his hotel. He was noted for his love
of children and the story is often told that in his later years he climbed three flights
of stairs to take an apple to a young guest. He is said to have walked down to the train
station to meet arriving travelers and drum up business for his hotel and dining room.
When his home burned in the night in 1889, someone arrived at the hotel on horseback to
alert the Longstreets and the General climbed to the cupola to look across town and watch
the flames. Even after his death the stories continued. Locals claimed that when the night
train stopped at the station, a figure resembling General Longstreet would be seen standing
in the steam from the locomotive, but when the train pulled out and the steam cleared there
was no one there. Abit Massey, Executive Director of the Georgia Poultry Federation, makes
the claim that southern fried (batter fried) chicken was first served at the Piedmont
which was famous for all its chicken dishes.
After the hotel's heyday it was leased to Rev. J.A. Bell in September 1899 as a boys
boarding school under the name Piedmont High School, changed to the Georgia Military
Institute in February 1900. After the school closed it was used as a boarding house.
We often hear the claim, which we have not been able to verify, that after that use
the building was a brothel. In 1918 the family decided to raze the now run down building.
A last minute decision saved the ground floor of one wing and this section went on to
serve as home to several family members at different times.
Jamie Longstreet Paterson's home, the old section of the hotel, 1969
Paterson Photo
The two remaining houses on Maple Street were owned by Fitz Randolph Longstreet, the general’s
youngest son. Randolph Longstreet made the houses his residence until his death in 1951.
After Randolph’s death in 1951, one house, built from material taken from the razed portion
of the old hotel, was left to Mrs. F.R.Longstreet, the other, the present “Piedmont”, was left
to Jamie Longstreet Paterson, Randolph’s daughter. When the former became too dilapidated in
the early 1970’s, Mrs. F.R. Longstreet moved into the present “Piedmont” house owned by Mrs. Paterson,
and lived there until her death in 1984. Mrs. Paterson then sold the property which was turned into
a rental duplex until 1994.
Mrs. F. R. Longstreet's home, 1969
Paterson Photo
In 1994 a property on Maple Street in Gainesville was identified by Garland Reynolds as the site of
the old Piedmont Hotel, which General Longstreet owned from 1875 until his death in 1904. Garland
asked several of us to meet at the property where we discussed buying the place and bulldozing the
dilapidated buildings on the site, the largest of which was collapsing, to building a Longstreet
museum or memorial.
Renovations begin, 1995
Mr. Charles Ector, a WWII Tuskegee Airman and a respected elder member of the community who
accompanied Reynolds and fellow LS founders Jim Syfan and Richard Pilcher made a startling
discovery. Mr. Ector walked over to the largest building, pulled open the door and peered
down a long hall. He turned to the rest of us and said, "This is part of the old hotel. Look
down this hallway." Of course, the Longstreet descendants in the Society knew it was there
all along, but we hadn't thought to ask the right question and they didn't realize that we
didn't know. Without this stunning discovery by Mr. Ector the Piedmont could have been
bulldozed and gone forever.
The Longstreet Society members
check out the work in progress!
In 1995 the Longstreet Society was a new organization with just $400 in the bank, not enough
money to buy an old hotel. But seventeen people with interests in history and in General
Longstreet each agreed to sign a $10,000 loan guaranty agreement with the Gainesville Bank
and Trust and with this $170,000 the hotel was saved. We bought the property, had everything
from the ceiling up replaced and restored the veranda which had once encircled each floor of
the original building. Even today we speak with a degree of reverence of the Seventeen Signers
who saved the building from destruction. They are: William Burchanal of Big Canoe, GA;
J. Clark Irvin, Dr. John McHugh, Dr. J. Del Mixon, W.L. Norton, Jr., Richard Pilcher,
Evelyn Reynolds, W. Garland Reynolds, Reed Skinner, Bob Stevens (deceased), Jim Syfan,
Allen Waters, Charles Thurmond (deceased), all of Gainesville, GA; Mary Pate of Fort Myers,
FL; Bill and Jamie Paterson of Bowie, MD (Bill deceased 2006) ; Dr. Robert West of Cleveland,
GA and Dr. John Witek of Tucson, AZ .
Near completion in 2006.
Photo by Clark Thornton
Over the next four years the Longstreet Society struggled to pay taxes, insurance, a minimal amount
of maintenance, the interest on the loan and a modest reduction of the principal, but we were
not making substantial progress. At this point LS board member Judge William L. Norton, Jr.
proposed that we form a separate organization with the purpose of restoring the hotel and
possibly developing other historic sites and buildings. This offered the Longstreet Society
help in getting the hotel restored and would free up the Society to do its other work. Early
in 1999 the Piedmont Hotel property was deeded to the Gainesville-Hall Trust for Historic
Preservation for its restoration with the agreement that the hotel would serve as Longstreet
Society headquarters and the Society would manage the building. To date the Longstreet
Society has invested nearly $100,000 in this effort.
Keeping the project alive, LS project chairperson, Margie Johnson and some dedicated volunteers
worked countless hours on the building and the Longstreet Society continued to invest in the
project. We had security lighting and a temporary electrical pole and panel placed. New wiring
and plumbing were installed, sheet rock and painting work continued and the Society paid skilled
craftsmen when they were needed. When termites were found in the building the Society paid for
a very expensive termite treatment and we still pay for recurring inspections and treatments. A
local garden club took on the project of researching plants and shrubs which would have been used
on the premises in 1875 and have volunteered to plant and maintain them. The mayor of a nearby
town has taken a cutting from one of muscadine vines at the General's homeplace on Parkhill Drive
and has it growing, ready for planting at the Hotel when the construction is complete.
The Piedmont today!
Photo by Clark Thornton
Garland and Bonnie Reynolds, after the death of their son Matthew in an automobile accident,
made a memorial donation in his name which made possible the purchase of a much needed adjoining property.
Finally Judge Norton and the Gainesville-Hall Trust for Historic Preservation provided the
major funding needed and completed the project in 2007. We of the Longstreet Society are proud
of the part we have played and we are most grateful to Judge Norton and the Trust and to many
other people who have contributed in one way or another to the success of this project.
Those interested in making a contribution towards restoring this important part of Georgia and
Southern history can send a donation to The Longstreet Society, P. O. Box 191, Gainesville,
GA 30503, notating the Piedmont Hotel project.
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