8ALTIM0REiS(iREATC0NV£NT10NtlAll FIFTH REGIMENT ARMORY FLAG OF THE CITY OF BALTIMORE COPYRIGHT, 1915 BY THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE BALTI/AORE The Convention City This Booklet, Issued at the instance of Hon. James H. Preston, Aayor, and Robert E. Lee, Director, Convention Bureau, Ballimore, Ad., ...by... Wilbur F. Coyle, City Librarian, Contains pictorial reproductions of a few of Baltimore's many splendid buildings; its spacious parks; its impressive monuments; its fine hotels and theatres, as well as certain interesting facts concerning the City MEYER & THALHEIMER 1915 .T ^jm>r J ^^ \ 0^ X M L w^ 1 M ^^ jB^ N, JAMES H. PRESTON Mayor of Baltimore. ©CI,A4oii54 MAY 19 1915 Vi Baltimore's bureau of Conventions HE City of Baltimore has a regularly organized Bureau of Conventions, under a director, with headquarters at the City Hall, The object of this Bureau is to get, and keep, in touch with the officers and the personnel of organizations of every character, no matter where located, and to have them come to Baltimore. The Bureau does more than extend a perfunctory invitation. It will co-operate with organizations in the fullest sense. It will render any assistance possible. It is in a position to give ex- haustive information concerning the City, and to answer any of the multiplicity of questions presented organizations when their next convention is under consideration. Do these organizations want to know hotel rates? Write the Bureau. Do they want to know anything pertaining to hotel accommodations? Write the Bureau. Do they want to know concerning railroads; about Baltimore's great convention halls; its street car system or anything of special interest to a given organization? Write the Bureau. The Baltimore Bureau of Conventions is a labor-saving de- vice. It will save organizations a lot of trouble, responsibility, and, what is more valuable than all — TiME. No financial obli- gation is incurred. There are no consultation charges. There is no cost. The Bureau has no private purpose to serve — UsE It. Baltimore wants conventions because she is amply able to properly entertain and house them. She has the "plant" ; hence she feels that in extending this invitation she is in a position to assume the agreeable responsibilities of host and to make her guests comfortable and contented, as well as welcome. Baltimore '^he Convention City ALTIMORE has long been known as The CON- VENTION City — not a Convention City, but the Convention City; hence to acquire the reputation it enjoys in this connection it must have something exceptional to recommend it, for a city is not selected for a convention merely because it is a city, but because it has some peculiarity which makes it pre-eminently desirable. All cities have buildings of one kind or another, many have certain things in common, yet all do not attract with equal force. Oh! Baltimore has its massive public buildings, its big hotels, splendid theatres, its skyscrapers, great tribute to the archi- tectural genius of the age ; Baltimore has all a big, modern city is supposed to have, and — then it has more. It has what the builders cannot build ; what the architects cannot plan ; what the divinity of the sculptor's art cannot create, namely, that indefin- able quality, called character; charm; individuality; personality, if you will. In an individual it might be referred to as personal magnetism — a something that cannot be described, yet one is definitely conscious of its pleasing influence. Here is a city teeming with all the confusing activities of business and strenuous industrial enterprise, yet one realizes that this is not its all in all. There is something more to Baltimore than the interminable strife for the almighty dollar. True it is that in material things Baltimore is full of aggressive energy, but this energy has not had a throttling or sordid influence upon its social life. In the rush of things Baltimore has time to tarry and extend the hand of friendship and hospitality to the stranger. Yet this is the mere expression of habit; a habit of nearly two hundred years ; a habit handed down from generation to generation ; a habit that is more than a habit since it becomes a fixed law — the law of courtesy. 5 ii o o > -J a J^ u ^ O o ^ n 'Z. S t= OH c VI p [IJ CO '= > |S--H ^' S^ "^ < °^ £ i/i -^ ^