THE PLAZA NEWYORK AND THE COPLEY PLAZA BOSTON ' - fa (of % L to; ? " THE HOTEL PLAZA. NEW YORK NIQUE among all the great modern hotels of New York in v-/ respect to its location and environment, the Hotel Plaza is, and will ever remain, a noted hotel landmark of this great city. Sixteen stories in height, architecturally beautiful as well as imposing, no feature of hotel luxury has been omitted in its con- struction and equipment. Facing Fifth Avenue and fronting upon Central Park Plaza, the broad open square immediately before it is certain never to be encroached upon by other structures, but will remain a fitting foreground for this noble structure. The Fifty * ninth Street front overlooks the superb vistas of Central Park — New York's two and one-half mile long garden of loveliness. Nearby, also, are the fashionable shops of the town, stretching along Fifth Avenue for more than a mile and a half, while within the park, or very near it, are the Metropolitan Museum of Art and hundreds of New York's most luxurious homes. Add to these attractions of location and environment the fact that Fifty-ninth Street and Fifth Avenue is the geographical center of the Island of Manhattan, and it will be seen that reasons more than sufficient have been adduced for the placing here of this splendid modern hotel. , The Hotel Plaza is under the personal supervision of Mr. Fred Sterry, Managing THE GRILL THE HOTEL PLAZA. THE CORRIDOR THE HOTEL PLAZA. UNDER THE SAME MANAGEMENT AS THE PLAZA. NEW YORK. THE COPLEY- PLAZA.BOSTON FRONTING on Copley Square, Dartmouth Street and Trinity Place, in the center of the very aristocratic Back Bay district, the new Copley- Plaza is Boston's finest and best located hotel. In point of equipment and furnishings it is superlative in its excellence. The building is of gray stone, seven stories in height, and contains, in addition to the public apartments of the ground floor and basement, some five hundred private rooms, each bed- room connected with a private bath. There are four principal entrances : two upon Copley Square and one each on Dartmouth Street and Trinity Place. It is but a half block from the Back Bay Station, which makes it unusually accessible for railroad travelers, while through Copley Square run the principal east and west trolley and automobile thoroughfares of the city. The Public Gardens, the Common, and the leading stores, shops and theaters of Tre- mont and Washington Streets are quickly and easily reached, via Boylston Street, eastward — which passes directly in front of the hotel. Massachusetts Avenue, which crosses the Harvard Bridge over the Charles River, is but five blocks west from the Copley -Plaza, and gives direct access to Cambridge, Somerville, Charleston and other outlying suburban districts. As the name implies the Copley- Plaza is affiliated with the Hotel Plaza, New York. , Mr. J. C. La Vin, Manager. FRANK PRESBREY CO NEW YORK i£x IGtbrtfi SEYMOUR DURST -f' Tort nieuw iAtnflerd Je Manhatans FORT NEW A^5 TKHJ).^V^^|^^^ (NEW YORK 1651. When you leave, please leave this book Because it has been said " Ever thing comes t' him who waits Except a loaned book." Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library Gift of Seymour B. Di rstOld York Library